Saturday, June 30, 2018

I'll Live in Glory -- John M. Henson


He was over halfway there, and what he said in 1936 may have been something he shared with his partner. John Melvin Henson most likely was somewhere in northern Georgia (perhaps near or in Gordon County, where he was born) when he penned the words “I’ll Live in Glory”, a belief he and his partner Homer Morris must have shared and then co-published as a song they thought would resonate with other believers. The 49-year old John had been engaged in music-writing, teaching, and publishing for many years when he wrote these words and music, one of the few hundred songs attributed to him over his 84 years on earth. His thoughts suggest he was an energetic, eager, life-loving servant, but also one who wasn’t afraid to ponder his mortality and what life’s end would mean. In fact, one might surmise that such thoughts were probably what galvanized his being, his purpose for living.   

John Henson had been an avid music professional in various forums for at least 25 years by the time he wrote “I’ll Live in Glory”. In his early 20s, he started teaching others to sing and later formed the music publishing enterprise, Morris-Henson Company, with his friend Homer. Additionally, John was routinely writing poems and sometimes the music, too, for new hymns like “I’ll Live…”. He had much over which he could reminisce in 1936, so was he pondering how things were going as he penned the first few words of his poem? He apparently enjoyed life enough to want to stick around for a while, even if it had “…uneven ways” (v.1), an intriguing reflection for someone in the midst of America’s Great Depression. How was the Morris-Henson Company faring during this economic upheaval? John makes no further asides to earthly life, except to say he wanted to be useful in God’s kingdom – “…be of service along this pilgrim way…” (v. 2). Looking forward to an unfathomably better existence would not have been unusual for anyone during the mid-1930s, so John’s enthusiasm for the ‘glory by and by’ refrain he employs is rational. (He uses this phrase at the end of each verse, as well as twice in the refrain that’s sung three times.) Who wouldn’t look forward to ‘glory’ when circumstances, for himself or others he could observe, had become depraved by comparison? This simple thought was one John must have reasoned others about him would sing with gusto. It might be more common among the elderly, whose health more likely makes life difficult or even grim, but the daily drudgery can afflict people of all ages. Henson’s upbeat tune and verses must have heartened more than a few who chose to look forward and upward as he did.

How soon’s the ‘by and by’, anyway? For John Henson, it didn’t arrive for another 35 years. His song’s first few words tell us that he probably wasn’t disappointed that ‘by and by’ didn’t arrive in 1937. At 49, one would expect he might have thought ‘I don’t want to go just yet!’ Yet, he would have gone willingly (‘…but if my savior calls me..’ v.1). One can imagine that John didn’t sit idly, waiting to see what the answer was. Although what motivated him was thinking about where he wasn’t at the moment, he didn’t waste his flesh-and-blood moments. Draw others, the more the merrier. Make the ‘by and by’ that much sweeter, with a multitude to join in a common hurrah. That’s the message of Revelation (7:9; 19:1, 6). You think John Henson might have read the same thing, before he wrote his poem?     


See site here for very brief biography of the author-composer: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/h/e/n/s/henson_jm.htm

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