Thursday, September 11, 2014

I Know Whom I Have Believed -- Daniel Webster Whittle



What would a 43-year old Civil War veteran have to say that I would value? Especially when he admits that he doesn’t have the answers to so many questions that I might ask...or that you might even suspect that Daniel Webster Whittle asked of himself, as he composed the words for “I Know Whom I Have Believed”. Just count ‘em, all eight of the pretty fair questions that Whittle says stumped him, and yet he contends that there’s one overriding factor that pushes all of those questions into insignificance. If that factor—that dynamic, overpowering, all-consuming fact—were true, how much would its information chip be worth today? They weren’t invented in Whittle’s era, nor even dreamed of probably, but having such a valuable piece of information today would kinda be like having a silicon chip (see a sketch here),  
a device by which so many other technological challenges fade. We don’t really understand it, do we? But we know it works!


Daniel Whittle had a life-changing experience that came about in his early adult life, something that he probably reflected upon many years later and summed up in “I Know…”. He reached the rank of major in the Union forces during the Civil War during his early ‘20s, a seminal event that scarred, but also shaped him for the remainder of his days. He lost part of his right arm in battle, and was a prisoner in a hospital – lots of negative there, right? But, it was there that he found God, apparently by reading a New Testament and reluctantly praying with a dying soldier. He’d also been greatly impacted by meeting the preacher Dwight Moody. Some 20 years later, though active as an evangelist with Moody’s support, he admitted in this song he wrote in 1883 that he was still confounded in many ways. Here’s what he says he did NOT know: 1. Why God’s grace-message had come to him; 2. Why Christ had saved him; 3. How Christ had given him faith; 4. How believing God’s message had given him peace; 5. How the Spirit acts; 6. What good or dire events awaited him, despite knowing Him; 7. When the Lord would come; 8. Where he’d meet Him when He returns. But, he did have one answer, and it was revealed by finding the ‘Who’ in his life. It was in that prisoner-of-war hospital that he’d found Him, as he said years later. Whittle was known as “Major” for the rest of his life—it’s on his tombstone, even—so it’s not a stretch to imagine him sharing many thoughts from his war experience with hearers who were eager to hear Major Whittle talk about faith. It must have struck him, even two decades later, that much of what he didn’t know in that hospital encounter still mystified him. But, knowing Him was the key.
   

Whittle would not have made a very credible journalist, would he? He still had lots of, ‘What’, ‘When’, Why’, ‘Where’, and ‘How’ questions. Me too. I cannot explain in detail how most things work, including how this computer that I’m using right now works. But, it’s got those little chips and circuits, etc. that make my knowledge gaps moot. Wow! Take that techno- wonder and imagine it as the theo-logical wonder. Try tapping into that mother board!

The following sources provided background for this story:

 The Complete Book of Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs, by William J. and Ardythe Petersen, 2006, Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.

Also see these sites for biographic information on composer: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Webster_Whittle

See this site for all five original verses: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/i/k/w/ikwihb.htm

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