Saturday, February 2, 2019

The Unclouded Day (Oh, They Tell Me of a Home) -- Josiah K. Alwood


He was obviously paying attention to what was going on above his head one night, that there was something special up there. What captured the attention of Josiah K. Alwood one night was a storm and the spectacle he witnessed because of it, and these stayed with him the following morning, causing him to think of “The Unclouded Day” – actually a place where he would see many more spectacles one day. He was near the Ohio-Michigan border (see picture) late at night, as he had been on probably numerous occasions, having been engaged in a discussion about God and His purposes. So, his mind was already prepared to receive a special nudge, something unique that he just needed to put into words and fuse it with some music.  

Josiah Kelly Alwood’s “The Unclouded Day” is perhaps the only song attributed to this 19th Century travelling preacher, making the incident that spurred its creation just that much more interesting. This 51-year-old was caught in a storm one night in August 1879, but the inconvenience of being alone, probably a little wet, and tired at one o’clock in the morning did not distract him from viewing an unusual rainbow that was set against a large cloud as he neared his home in southern Michigan. Unusual, because it was the dead of night, so a visible rainbow was indeed rare for that time of day. His own account of the incident (see the link below) indicates he was entranced by this episode, such that he arose the following morning still thinking about what he’d experienced. It wasn’t long before he’d penned the words to four verses and plunked out the notes on an organ. He must have thought about the place and time that awaited, where he expected to see wonders perpetually like the rainbow of the previous evening. What kinds of visions did he imagine on the unclouded day? Most of all, perhaps, he thought of calling this place ‘home’ (vv.1-2, refrain). Was it an accident that he was on his way toward home in Morenci, Michigan, when he saw something that made him dream of another more long-term home? What does one expect to find at home? Josiah thought of friends already there, and about how the God-provided sustenance – the tree of life – would nourish the place and its inhabitants (v. 2). And, of course Alwood thought of the sovereign in the home above, and how he would marvel at his appearance and the trappings of that place (v.3). Finally, Josiah could inwardly smile, knowing that everyone is happy there in the Divine One’s presence (v.4). This was some rainbow, to make Josiah reflect and record what his mind’s eye beheld!

Rainbow = promise. That’s what Noah could tell us about the one he encountered (Genesis 9:13-16). Is that what Josiah maybe was thinking when he saw that rainbow in August 1879, a sign that God was going to keep His promise? That would be a reasonable conclusion, since Josiah writes of the promise of heaven with palpable conviction. There’s other biblical rainbow talk, though, closer to the end of what God has to say to us. John saw and wrote about it (Revelation 4:3; 10:1), seeing the rainbow not as a promise, but as adornment of God and his servants. Maybe that’s part of what Josiah sensed too – a bit of God’s home breaking into view, a foretaste of what’s to come. A promise and a glimpse of Him. Keep looking for that rainbow.           

     
See more information on the song story in this source: The Complete Book of Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs by William J. Petersen and Ardythe Petersen, Tyndale House Publishers, 2006.

Also see this link, showing all the song’s words and the song story: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/u/n/c/uncloudd.htm
Brief information about the author is here: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/a/l/w/alwood_jk.htm

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