Saturday, July 25, 2020

Into My Heart -- Harry D. Clarke


Maybe he was reflecting on his own conversion some years earlier – was this the impetus for what he penned as a 36-year old musical publisher-composer? Harry D. Clarke would have had many reasons to look back and wonder to himself how his life might have been very different had circumstances evolved in other ways, and if God had not come “Into My (his) Heart” when He did. Sioux City, Iowa (see the map here) was a significant place in Harry’s world – there are several indications of this – making this one place where he could have been when asking God into his life, perhaps for the first time or on subsequent occasions for renewal. He was like so many others who examined himself honestly, and saw a yawning gap between whom he wanted to be and who he really was. He’d concluded that only One presence could make the difference.

Harry D. Clarke had come through so very much by the time that he was 36 and living a life that he hardly could have imagined two decades earlier. He was an orphan who sought escape from his youth as a seaman for 10 years in Britain in the late 19th-early 20th Century, an inauspicious beginning for any youngster’s life. Fortunately, with the aid of a brother, he made his way to London and then to North America, finally arriving in the United States after a brief interlude in Canada. Was it at this point in his life, on a new continent and far from familiar surroundings, that Harry first asked for God’s intervention, to come ‘into my heart’? Something revolutionary occurred, as the rest of Clarke’s life unfolded in a way much different than had been the case through most of his teenage years. His education at Moody Bible Institute in Chicago and his close association with the evangelists Harry vom Bruch and Billy Sunday were firm evidence that Clarke’s conversion – indeed, God’s entry into his heart – was genuine. Harry was following in the footsteps of these two men, particularly Sunday, as he launched into music as a composer-publisher, and also into evangelism by the mid-1920s. He undoubtedly had a resonant story that made his witness compelling to listeners; without parents since his early childhood, one can imagine Harry telling of his adoption into God’s family with an uncommon personal conviction. God must have indeed been Harry’s resolution for a ‘burden of sin’ (v.2), and a cleansing and illumination (v.3) for a troubled and weary soul (v.1). Perhaps like some others to whom he spoke, Harry may have remembered with overwhelming regret lots of episodes in 10 years as a seaman, as well as other incidents early in his youth. Life need not be a ‘dreary way’ (v.2), if you just ask him to come in, Harry reasoned.

Much of Harry Clarke’s life must have been spent in the Midwest around Sioux City telling others about his heart’s connection with the indwelling Spirit. He established the Billy Sunday Memorial Chapel in Sioux City, and was a pastor in the city until 1945; he was also buried there following his death in 1957. Clarke also served as an evangelist in Pennsylvania and Indiana, showing that his message was not confined to Iowa. Neither is the Spirit’s ability limited in His joining with those who need Him. As Harry may have surmised, He can enter anyone, but a certain desperation and desolation are preconditions for His movement. He won’t overpower, but He can guide, even control someone who is willing. Are you willing?   
        

See here for some biographic information on the author: https://hymnary.org/tune/into_my_heart_clarke
See a brief biography here also: https://www.hopepublishing.com/993/

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