This composer was a widower at the time of one of his early writing
efforts, with three kids and adjusting no doubt to his role as a single parent.
Elisha Albright Hoffman’s life had just taken a new turn when he wrote “Glory
to His Name” in 1878, probably a transition he hadn’t wanted to endure. How’d
he manage this experience? What would you or I do in such a situation? Is it possible
that God heard the words Elisha wrote as a pledge of loyalty, and that He
crafted a response – perhaps even a reward -- for this servant whose heart must
have been broken?
Elisha Hoffman had been a lover of music directed vertically
since his childhood, and would remain so for a lifetime, even as he was challenged
at one point. In the Pennsylvania
community in which he was reared, Hoffman learned the love of music from
parents and the church in which he was nurtured. He was the son on an
evangelical minister, so it wasn’t a surprise that he devoted his adult life to
ministry. Before his ordained ministry however, he worked for just over a
decade with a publishing house, a period which must have also spawned his
lifetime energy as an editor of songbooks (he edited some 50 songbooks over his
life). He’d been in ministry just three years when his wife died, leaving him
alone with three sons as a 37-year old in 1876, perhaps the pivotal point in
his life. It was in this period prior to his 40th birthday that he
wrote the words for “Glory to His Name”. Reading the words, it is not apparent
if he was struggling with the recent turn of events, but instead quite the opposite.
He’s clinging to the Holy Redeemer with devotion, an appreciation of his eternal
assurance. Could his wife’s death have crystallized something, perhaps bonded
him stronger still to his God, even if his upbringing, education, and ordination
had informed him of His presence as one would expect? Perhaps this time was a
crucible for Elisha, wherein he discovered the glue he had with God was deeper
and much more meaningful, an unbreakable thing. Is it just coincidental that
Hoffman wrote the words in 1878, and remarried the following year? Or, that he
went on to minister, beginning in 1880, in three churches over the next 42
years, and composed over 2,000 hymns, most of them in that four-decade stretch?
What would you say?
What is the way to respond to a personal crisis? What prepares
one for it, or does it happen randomly? Ask Job. He may have endured more than
10 believers are supposed to suffer. Elisha Hoffman must have had moments when
he too cried out in despair as his 40th anniversary on earth
approached, yet his words in 1878 sound like a man who had decided he was “all
in” with this God. Job’s and Peter’s replies sound similar -- to whom shall we
go (John 6:68)? Maybe he’d had some ventures with the secular world that
schooled him, educated him that a more reliable partner was needed. ‘Accidents
happen’, or ‘life’s not fair’, someone says, but thank Him I’m not an accident,
and He’s not unfair!
See following links for song words and a biography of the
composer:
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