Saturday, August 11, 2018

Have You Been to Jesus? --Elisha Albright Hoffman


He asked many questions, in fact many bold queries that left little wiggle room for the listener. Is that perhaps what the minister inside Elisa Albright Hoffman thought was most effective, most provocative? His words “Have You Been to Jesus?” sound like something straight out of the pulpit, the conclusion of an address in which he was challenging his hearers to look deep inside and answer honestly, and with urgency. It was part of the Great Awakening era in America, as Elisha wrote songs in 1878 to rouse people out of their spiritual lethargy. But, was he in fact delivering this message from a pulpit, or was he thinking of another venue, or perhaps of a time in his future when he would talk to large groups to coax their commitment to God? This Cleveland resident had someone or a group of people in mind as he made his inquiries in poetic form. But, his own recent experience may have provided the most penetrating inspiration for his series of questions.

Elisha’s expressions in “Have You Been to Jesus?’ probably came pretty naturally, given his upbringing  and how his life would play out over some 90 years in the 19th and early 20th Centuries. Hoffman was the son of a minister, and no doubt must have heard his own father ask many or all of the same questions that he would pen as a 39-year old. Additionally, this was a time when he was widowed with three sons, and living in Cleveland, Ohio as an employee of the Evangelical Association’s publishing enterprise. It was a bit of a turning point in Elisha’s life, as the mortality of himself and those closest to him must have still been very palpable with the death of his first wife just two years previously. The questions he posed in “Have You Been…” were intensely relevant for this fellow. Is your eternal destiny a settled matter, and do you know how to rectify your condition if it’s still uncertain? This sums up Elisha’s outlook in the wake of events not too distant from him and his young sons. Death, especially at a young age, is a provocative event, and must have treated Elisha as he approached middle-age no differently than anyone else. How Hoffman responded speaks volumes. He remarried (in 1879), embarked upon his preaching ministry for the next 40-plus years in three states, and composed over 2,000 hymns, most of them after 1878. “Have You Been…” preceded these new avenues he traveled, giving us some insight into his grief management method. Others might have blamed God, and distanced themselves from Him. Not Hoffman, who tried to persuade others to embrace Him; and for himself, perhaps this was the only tonic that truly salved his spirit. ‘He’s it – the only way out of sin’s trap and the inevitability of life’s conclusion’, one can sense Elisha had surmised. ‘Don’t be resigned to death’s penalty. Jesus is the answer!’ Cleanse yourself of that sin-caked scum and its grip on you with a bath…in blood. Are you ready ‘...for the mansions bright... (v. 3), Elisha asked. While he may have been lifting himself with these words, this songwriter probably knew others who needed the medicine prescribed in his poetry. Don’t we all?

 “Have You Been to Jesus” is probably more commonly known as “Are You Washed in the Blood?”, an appropriate alternative title, given the number of times that Elisha Hoffman has the worshipper repeat these words. With his dead wife’s premature departure perhaps still sticking to him like a spiderweb, Elisha didn’t worry himself with that one-word—usually unanswerable—question. ‘Why?’ he probably said at least once. Yet, he didn’t stay there. Instead, he drew upon other questions that provided an answer. Washing in blood sounds unnatural, even repulsive. But, is it really, compared to what death offers? His blood is something pretty rare, capable of washing and renewing. It’ll be the only way to get that death-stink off yourself. Just ask Elisha Hoffman.        

See here for all the verses of the song: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/a/r/u/aruwashd.htm
See composer/author’s biography here: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/h/o/f/hoffman_ea.htm
Also see a more lengthy biography here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisha_Hoffman

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