Saturday, December 8, 2018

Kneel at the Cross -- Charles E. Moody


If you use your imagination, you can just about hear this song-writer plucking this song out on his guitar, or maybe one of the other instruments he played, perhaps a banjo or a ukulele. Maybe Charles Earnest Moody even tried out his song “Kneel at the Cross” with his fellow band members in the 1920s, when they were performing, especially in Georgia and the Gordon County area (see the map). The southern drawl of the voices would have told you the geographic origin of Charles’ tune, yet the words emphasize something from another era and area of the globe, far distant from where Charles and his friends or the church where he often worshipped and guided the singing could be found. Moody’s message was very focused, a basic Christian thread that was and is common throughout the American bible belt.

The 33-year Charles Moody who wrote about kneeling at Jesus’s execution symbol had been writing and singing for many years in various venues by the time he crafted this hymn in northern Georgia. Nevertheless, Moody’s reputation may have been just developing by the time the 1920s and “Kneel at the Cross” made its way into the musical lexicon of Georgia and the South, since a popular singing group in which Moody sang may have started after he actually wrote it. Perhaps we are getting a picture of a musician still traying to ‘make his mark’ in 1924, the year the song was published. In short, he wasn’t afraid to wear his faith on his musical sleeve. In his first 30-40 years, Moody studied music in Georgia and North Carolina while directing music at a local church in Georgia at Tunnel Hill, and then later sang with a popular string band named the Georgia Yellow Hammers. He also taught in public schools, and after the Yellow Hammers split up, Moody was again directing singing at a church in Calhoun. So, there were plenty of points which might have spurred Charles to pen the words for other songs he wrote subsequently. Though the precise circumstances of ‘Kneel …’are not known, he must have still been at the Tunnel Hill church, where we can imagine that being engaged in the music program spurred Moody’s imagination routinely. (March 2021 update: See comment thread below, which suggests that Sam Hair, an itinerant pastor and grandfather of a reader of this blog, inspired Moody to write the song ‘Kneel at the Cross’ while in Tunnel Hill – thanks for reading and sharing!). Indeed, we know he authored more than 100 hymns over his lifetime, probably all of which were sung at either the Tunnel Hill or Calhoun churches. The Yellow Hammers most likely sang a number of them also during the several years they were together. ‘Kneel…’ contains the basic Christian message, which we can presume Moody and his fellow musicians embraced. Honor and identify with the sacrifice that Jesus made, and He won’t leave you out of the great redemption plan that he offers.

Charles Moody probably wouldn’t have described himself as the brightest nor the dimmest musical light for the Christian faith in his time. With one hundred hymns to his credit and ministry at two churches in his home state for many years, Charles could say he did his part to keep the Christian faith alive and renewed through new songs. Other composers and writers crafted more, but Moody was also touching many lives through the churches where he ministered. In short, he helped foster a culture that kept the heart of the Christian message beating. “Kneel at the Cross” is still around today, a mark that Charles did indeed make upon his world, something that he might have been aiming to do in the 1920s as a young fellow 33 years old. It’s safe to say that Moody was really thinking of another 33-year old who once upon a time made a difference in His world. And, He still is.                       

Biography of the author can be found here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_E._Moody


See this site for the musical group of which the author was a part: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgia_Yellow_Hammers

3 comments:

  1. I have a published copy of "Kneel At the Cross" that gives credit to Rev Sam hair for inspiring Moody to write this song. Sam hair is my grandfather who was an itinerant pastor who lived in Tunnel Hill Georgia. His history can be found in a little church in Dawnville Georgia.

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  2. I’m interested in what situation inspired the song your drifting too far from the shore

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  3. Sorry....I don't know the story of 'You're Drifting Too Far from the Shore". Sounds like a good song, though.

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