Saturday, June 7, 2014

Only in Thee – Thomas Obadiah Chisholm



He was 39 years old, and had recently been forced to change his vocational path because of his health. He’d been a minister, but Thomas Obadiah Chisholm found this venture in Kentucky didn’t last long, and so he and his family had moved to Indiana (see picture of this region of the country). It was during this disorder in his life that Chisholm wrote out the words for “Only in Thee”. What goes through someone’s soul and mind in a life-challenge like Chisholm’s? ‘Why me, God?’, someone moans. ‘What do I do now?’ Did Thomas Chisholm mouth these complaints? Maybe he did, but he must have come out on the other side of this period’s valley. Consider what he composed, and how it gives us a picture of this fellow.

Thomas O. Chisholm had been a lifelong Kentuckian from 1866 until about the time that he composed “Only in Thee”. His humble background began with his birth in a log house and life on the family farm. He was educated in a rural schoolhouse, where he became the teacher while still a teenager. So, though a modest environment nurtured Chisholm, he showed promise evidently. He wrote poems that were published in local newspapers (the Franklin Favorite, and the Louisville Courier Journal, among others) , and worked for these or other newspapers along the way.  If someone had asked him what he imagined himself doing for the rest of his life, would it have surprised anyone that he might have said ‘journalism’ or ‘writing’? His conversion to the faith also played a part in his development, obviously, and he ultimately was ordained as a minister. But, an undefined health issue forced a rather abrupt change in venue. Not only a change in career, but also scenery, came upon Chisholm and his family. They left Kentucky for Indiana, where this poet made insurance his vocational pastime, an endeavor that continued later as they moved to New Jersey. But, it was this change in direction, both physically and vocationally, that may have been on the mind of this 39-year-old hymn-writer. One would imagine he must have had support from his family during the change. His words indicate he had God’s support, too, for peace (verse 1), guidance (verse 2), and eternal confidence (last verse).  As mid-life (usually around 40 for fellas) appeared on his horizon, Thomas had the focus on something—rather, someone, namely God—that would not just hold him up, but lift him above the temporal. He called out as vain the ‘pleasures of Earth’ and ‘life’s trackless sea’ in his thoughts in 1905. It didn’t matter if he was in Kentucky or Indiana, whether he was a minister or a journalist or in the insurance business. He’d discovered that he only needed Him.

What might T.O. Chisholm readily say to you or me if he were still around today? Stability…that’s Him, as we look to Him as our Rock and Anchor..only in Him. But, He’s the one who helps us evolve, to change. We must, or we grow stale or decompose. What if Chisholm had been stubborn and decided he couldn’t leave Kentucky, that the Lord had called him to ministry even if it cost him his health, permanently? It seems that Thomas had realized what could change and what should stay the same as he approached 40. His life’s turn in 1905 and his testimony in the words he wrote are a good reminder which ones are which.    

See following for all four original verses: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/o/n/i/oninthee.htm

See these sites for composer’s biography:  
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=43600909

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