Sunday, December 23, 2018

I Am Resolved -- Palmer Hartsough


He sounds like a man on a mission, with the words of his conviction forthrightly in the title of what he crafted at the age of 52. In fact, perhaps it was really someone else’s mission that spurred Palmer Hartsough to pen most of what he had to say in “I Am Resolved” in the latter years of the 19th Century. Palmer had only recently moved to Cincinnati to work hand-in-hand with a publisher, when in 1896, his boss asked him to stretch his creative muscles, to go further than he had with the song’s original words, evidently with a plan in mind to use the newest words in a wider way. Palmer initially may have had some folks in mind at a mission or a church whose music he guided, but perhaps it was the experience of a lengthy train ride that gave Palmer’s boss the idea for something more wide-ranging. After all, does a person have more than one resolution in life -- perchance multiple sub-resolutions that flow from one that is paramount?

Palmer Hartsough had been a music professional for all of his adult life when he spelled out his convictions in “I Am Resolved”, a musical pledge that someone could say eventually took him deeper into devotion some 10 years later. Hartsough may also have had some musical bloodlines that helped fix his calling in life, even as he progressed through his later years. Another Hartsough, Lewis T. (14 years Palmer’s senior), was active in music-writing and as a Methodist minister in 19th Century New York, Utah, Wyoming, and finally Iowa; whether Palmer and Lewis T. were related is unclear, however. Palmer’s calling at the time he wrote “I Am Resolved” was music direction at a Baptist church and the Bethel Mission in Cincinnati, concurrent with his association with the Fillmore Music Company in the city. The company’s owner apparently coaxed Palmer's creativity toward some additional words for the song after accompanying several travelers who sang the original song on the way to San Francisco for a convention. This request no doubt posed no serious predicament for the music veteran Palmer, who’d been a travelling music teacher and music studio owner in the Midwest for many years before arriving along the banks of the Ohio River in 1893. Nevertheless, did this episode stick with Hartsough, or cause him to consider a new, tangential direction in its wake? Some 10 years later, as a 62-year old, Hartsough became an ordained Baptist minister, later serving in Michigan in that role until he retired in 1927 at the age of 84. That epilogue to “I Am Resolved” tells us something about Palmer: He wasn’t a malingerer, someone who was satisfied with marking time. He examined himself, and wasn’t afraid of a resolution that challenged his direction – even if it was one that he’d spent decades pursuing.

What was it Palmer resolved, or persuaded others to resolve in 1896? Don’t loiter about with insignificant pursuits in the world (v.1); keep the Savior Jesus in sight, with Him as your guide and end goal (vv. 2-3); doing these will get one to the only destination that really matters, despite potential opposition from others (vv.4-5). Are you set in your ways? Has the direction become a bit predictable, the air a little stale? Can you imagine Palmer Hartsough doing a little self-inspection, and implementing a course correction? Was it a 10-year process? If he could do it, can you or I do the same?       

See information on the song’s author here: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/h/a/r/t/hartsough_p.htm (Palmer Hartsough)

See the song’s verses and a brief report on the song’s use here: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/i/a/m/r/iamresol.htm

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