Did he
have a memorable boating experience, or know sailors whose stories he just
couldn’t forget? Or, was he thinking of the climate where he lived, and from
that drew an analogy for some of the youngsters who were in his care? Vernon
John Charlesworth might have penned some words for “A Shelter in the Time of
Storm” in 1880 for both reasons when he composed that year. Could it have been
that he was also thinking of one or more episodes from his own life that
reaffirmed his need for spiritual protection? He’d been a caretaker in a church for many
years prior to this time too, and so he may have felt this message would resonate
universally amongst people he knew. It still does.
Vernon
Charlesworth was an Englishman who’d been ministering to people of all ages by
his 42nd year. He’d co-pastored a church for over a decade in one
London area congregation while in his 20’s in the mid-19th Century,
so hearing of the challenges facing members of his spiritual family and trying
to minister to them must have become a well-beaten path for Charlesworth by the
time he reached his early 30’s. It was then that he switched gears and became
the headmaster of the Stockwell Orphanage (commonly known as Spurgeon’s [Child
Care], seen here in the picture)
in 1869, where he spent the bulk of his adult
life – the next 46 years. He was a bit more than a decade into this new role
when he wrote the words about the “Shelter” upon whom he’d come to depend. With
so many youngsters in his charge, Charlesworth must have taken seriously his
role to educate them, not only scholastically but holistically. These were kids
who already had a strike against them – absence of parents or other adult
relatives. So it wouldn’t be surprising if this composer-headmaster’s primary audience
for his poetry were the children he saw every day, and to whom he probably wasn’t
shy when it came to recommending the eternal brotherhood of Jesus. This would
have been crucial for those who lacked earthy relatives and the moral and
physical support they provide. This Englishman also must have had an intimate
familiarity with storms, too, and undoubtedly that’s why his words would strike
a chord with so many fishermen on the island nation’s northern coast. Its popularity
with the locals and its resulting publication in a London newspaper captured the
attention of a songwriter—Ira Sankey—whose music paired with the words further helped
expose Charlesworth’s thoughts to the public. The rest, as someone has said, is history.
Think
about Vernon Charlesworth’s poem the next time you’re stuck beneath an
umbrella, in traffic with the wiper blades flapping back and forth, or staring
out a window pane at the leaden sky. No one stands in the rain unprotected, or
strolls calmly along as the lightening and thunder crashes, do they? So why do
some people stand in a spiritual tempest and try to make believe they’re OK? One wonders if Charlesworth may have come across
some folks who acted as if they were immune, sparking his words in an effort to
jolt such people into reality. That might be a conversation worth having with
someone, the next time the raindrops fall. Maybe you and I should think about
that, as we open up the umbrellas the next time.
The
following website has a soundtrack for the song: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/s/h/e/sheltime.htm
See more
information on the song discussed above in The Complete Book of Hymns –
Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs by William J. Petersen
and Ardythe Petersen, Tyndale House Publishers, 2006. Also, see Amazing Grace: 366 Inspiring
Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions by Kenneth W. Osbeck, Kregel Publications,
1990.
See a very
brief biography of composer here: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/c/h/a/r/charlesworth_vj.htm
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