It’s said
that Johnson Oatman wasn’t quite satisfied where he was (most likely in New
Jersey)
by the time he was 30-something, so he developed a therapy that seemed to
scratch the itch he felt. “Higher Ground” was something that he needed to
express in the 1890s, something that evidently rang true for so many others
that it’s still making noises in the Christian communities of our world over
100 years later. What do you do when you sense disquiet in your being, a
gnawing emptiness you don’t know how to fill? Oatman knew there was a vacuum,
so he penned some words, a method that he used over and over and over, indeed
thousands of times.
Johnson
Oatman was such a prolific songwriter that one might assume that he made his
living this way, but the opposite reality ironically may have compelled him to
write words that he might not have otherwise. He’d been ordained as a minister in New Jersey
before he was 20, so he must have wanted to become a professional at teaching and
preaching and winning souls for the Christian kingdom at one point in his life,
right? He evidently leaned that direction, but instead made his living in his family’s
mercantile business and later in the insurance field following his father’s
death. In his mid-30s, Oatman began to write songs when he wasn’t occupied in
business. And, he must have pondered quite a bit about his faith and had a deep
desire to advance God’s kingdom even while at his job, because he apparently
wrote lyrics for thousands of songs -- perhaps at least 3,000, though one
source says 5,000. That would mean he wrote at least two per week through the
rest of his life, which ended at 66 years of age in 1922! One must have a constant
spark to compose so much on a regular basis, so maybe his daily professional
life indeed played a role in his rich hymn-writing ventures. The words he wrote
in “Higher Ground”, one of his earliest compositions, suggest he longed for
something more beyond what his daily life was showing him. He sought ‘new
heights’ (v. 1) and aspired to another world (vv.3-4), evidently as sought to escape
this world’s ‘doubts’ and ‘fears’ (v. 2). Would he have been so driven to
compose if he’d been satisfied with his earthly life? Higher ground probably
wouldn’t have meant so much to a fellow who was totally content.
How many people wander about on planet Earth with
Oatman’s condition? Think of all the addictions or other unhealthy adventures
pursued, and how often is this because someone is dissatisfied with life’s
tedium? It’s OK to admit life might be dull. But, what to do with that is the
issue. What if you could talk to a guy named David who lived over 3,000 years
ago? Or others like him, with their names similarly scrawled across a musical
page? They’re not here, but you can see their formulae for life-challenging
problems. The songs aren’t necessarily always upbeat, though many or most are.
Got a problem, or have something you want to say? Try picking up a pen or
pencil…even during a spare minute at work. That was the Johnson Oatman method.
Information on the song’s composer was obtained from the
books Amazing Grace – 366 Inspiring
Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions, by Kenneth W. Osbeck, 1990, Kregel
Publications; The Complete Book of Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns
and Praise Songs, by William J. and Ardythe Petersen, 2006, Tyndale House
Publishers, Inc.; and 101
More Hymn Stories by Kenneth W. Osbeck, Kregel Publications, 1985.
See also here for four verses and refrain of hymn: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/h/i/g/highergr.htm
See also here for brief biography of the composer: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/o/a/t/oatman_j.htm
1 comment:
canaan's land or heavens land?
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