Saturday, January 30, 2021

It Is No Secret – Carl Stuart Hamblen

 


Somebody could say this cowboy’s life was not a secret, both before and after he allowed God to work on him. Carl ‘Stuart’ Hamblen was a brazen sinner, if ever there was one – party animal might accurately describe this fellow, who fit right in with the Hollywood crowd, that exclusive Los Angeles club of ‘stars’. In Stuart’s case, he must have thought “It Is No Secret” that his life was in fact an exposé. And, with that thought, he attended an event at which a well-known preacher was speaking, perhaps because he wanted something to change. And, when he decided to do a 180-degree turnaround, a switch that got the attention of the ‘star’ crowd, Stuart did not shy away from his new ‘secret’. He embraced it, and what he wrote suggests he thought others might too, if he did what came naturally to his musician’s sense.

 

It was 1949, and Stuart Hamblen might have been living the dream life of an actor, singer-songwriter, and radio host in the Mecca of the American entertainment scene. But, he was also in mid-life – so, was he in a crisis that he didn’t even know was upon him, until an encounter with a young preacher – Billy Graham – changed him forever? Drinking, gambling, and generally being what some might have called a ‘hell-raiser’ was the Stuart Hamblen that his associates knew. Stuart’s wife, according to some accounts of events, coaxed her husband to attend one night of Graham’s crusade that was ongoing in L.A. Other accounts indicate the two men were also on Stuart’s radio show, or that they’d met at the home of a Hollywood bible teacher. Perhaps it was a combination of many things, but the result was Hamblen surrendered his life to Christ, something he wasn’t reluctant to admit publicly, including on his radio broadcast. Even John Wayne’s attention was captured apparently, and perhaps this famous movie star did as much as anyone to spark Stuart’s musical response to his life change. Wayne reportedly suggested that Stuart’s own admission to him – that his conversion was no secret, and that God was capable of doing anything in someone’s life – was a song waiting to be written. So, later that night, just about midnight when his living room clock began to sound the hour – the ‘chimes of time ring out the news’ (v.1) – Stuart’s inspiration was making its way onto a musical score sheet. According to one version, the song was done 17 minutes later, to Hamblen’s astonishment. The Billy Graham crusades to preach across America also got a shot in the arm, consequently, as news of the conversion of the former ‘hell-raiser’ and its apparent authenticity spread. Stuart’s own words indicated that he felt he’d been pardoned (chorus).  

 

Was there a latent desire within Stuart Hamblen to know God before he met Billy Graham? Hamblen’s upbringing had been in the family with a father who was a Methodist preacher in Texas, so perhaps the seed was already planted that finally sprouted in Stuart’s early 40s. And, it was not a temporary episode for this radio personality-actor-singer. For example, he subsequently spurned beer commercials on his shows, even to the point of becoming a candidate for U.S. president for the Prohibition Party in 1952. Though he never became president, Stuart continued writing songs, eventually becoming a member of the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 1994, along with many other awards as his life progressed. Perhaps looking back, one might say Stuart’s Christianity was lying just below the surface, though well-hidden in 1949. It just needed someone to light a match to make it burn. Is there an ember in your life that could jump into flame, with just a bit of fuel?

 

   

See more information on the song story in these sources: The Complete Book of Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs by William J. Petersen and Ardythe Petersen, Tyndale House Publishers, 2006; and Then Sings My Soul, by Robert J. Morgan, Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2003.

 

Also see this link, showing all three verses:

 

Also see this link for author’s biography: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/h/a/m/b/hamblen_cs.htm

Also see here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuart_Hamblen

Also see the story here: https://www.staugustine.com/living/religion/2016-07-29/story-behind-song-it-no-secret

Saturday, January 23, 2021

‘Tis Set the Feast Divine -- Lloyd O. Sanderson


Maybe he thought the communion songs he’d heard and sung needed something more. Was that what moved Lloyd Otis Sanderson to write something brand new, his own thoughts or maybe words he’d heard spoken about “‘Tis Set the Feast Divine” ? He was 47 and living probably in Memphis, Tennessee, and had been a music lover his whole life when he penned his two verses about this special meal. Many believers might say that this meal – admittedly sparse in its physical content, in comparison to any other meals we could imagine – is the most significant part of a first-day-of-the-week routine. Maybe Lloyd thought it had indeed become too routine, and that a reminder of just what was going on during this customary activity was needed. As a sometime preacher, Lloyd may have had a lot more to say (including when he used a hymn writer’s pseudonym Vana R. Raye [an alteration of his wife’s name, Re­na Ray]) than what he voiced in condensed version in these two verses. Look forward to talking to Lloyd more about the feast, and enjoy for now what his words continue to share.

 

Lloyd Sanderson had been engaged in various musical enterprises by 1948 when he wrote about a weekly observance called by various names. He’d probably heard it called ‘Lord’s Supper’, ‘Communion’, or ‘Eucharist’, as well as ‘Sacrament’ or ‘Mass’ in other faith traditions. Lloyd thought of it as the ‘Feast Divine’, though he too thought of it as a time to commune (v.1), or as a supper (vv.1-2). From his college training, editorial and publishing experience (Gospel Advocate and Christian Counselor, and many music guides), and travels to teach singing, Lloyd had undoubtedly gathered lots of input about this special weekly event. It’s said that he thought music should reach into a person’s soul, not to the ‘flesh’, and that a song’s worthy idea must be matched by its form. Lloyd also wanted his poetry to reflect proper English and share the truth. ‘Tis Set the Feast Divine’ must have accomplished all these objectives in Lloyd’s estimation, without undue adornment. And, nothing comes through but what Lloyd must have gathered was present in scripture – that the meal was initiated by God, and therefore ‘divine’; that the contents (bread and fruit of the vine, aka wine) were His idea; and that its effect is profound for its partakers. Besides being divine, it’s a ‘shrine’ (v.1), reflects a ‘holy concern’, and reminds us that His presence is something for which we ‘yearn’ (v.2), words that relate that Lloyd wanted members to think of the feast not as a well-worn tradition. Taking in God should not be without some renewal, a reminder of Him and His accomplishment. Lloyd did not need other words; indeed, he was taking his cues from the divine, right along with the meal that he ate with other believers. What the Lord had already given was sufficient – in fact, miraculous, a reflection of Himself. No doubt, Lloyd already knew this, so savoring the morsel of bread and the sip of wine to its maximum effect was probably what Lloyd was after. The operative word is ‘divine’.

 

This God we see in Lloyd’s song also served other divine meals. And, they were no less miraculous than the one I eat weekly. Bible stories tell us he fed thousands (Matthew 14 and 15), turning scant supplies into bounty. And, there will be a feast in Eternity (Rev. 19), one which Lloyd and the rest of us are preparing to eat someday. One suspects that Lloyd had absorbed that these other meals were or will be served by the divine hand’s inspiration. Divine means it just cannot be ordinary, or is even comparable to the best meals prepared by human hands. Maybe it was a Thanksgiving or some other holiday meal, but eventually, all that food vanished. Think of how His compares. He can make food in His meals appear out of nowhere. Do you think His food will ever run out in heaven? Let’s you and me, and Lloyd go find out!.         

 

See the following site for very brief biography of the author-composer: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/s/a/n/d/sanderson_lo.htm  

 

Also see the following book for more information: Our Garden of Song, edited by Gene C. Finley, Howard Publishing Company, West Monroe, LA, 1980.

Saturday, January 16, 2021

Let Him Have His Way with Thee -- Cyrus S. Nusbaum

 


Cyrus Silvester Nusbaum was a 26-year old first-time pastor who was probably wondering if he had chosen the right path. He wasn’t making much, and he felt even less reward spiritually and emotionally for the work about which he was engaged in 1887 in southeastern Kansas (including around Wichita, see its flag here). And so, he asked himself a series of questions in one late-night prayer, and then answered “Let Him Have His Way with Thee” when he was through. Perhaps Cyrus had put on the scales what he thought he’d received, versus what he’d given, and decided that the relative weights of those things were not so out of balance after all. In fact, he must have decided that he was getting much more than he’d given, and that some of what was in his credit column he’d not even set eyes upon yet. Let’s see what turned around Cyrus’ calculations.   

 

Pastor Nusbaum was trying to look after no less than seven different groups of believers in his first year of ministry, a challenge that must have weighed heavily upon his wife and himself. They had hoped for better news when they attended the church’s (Methodist) conference that year, but instead they were called upon to remain in the arduous task where they were. So, Cyrus did what any good pastor, nevertheless feeling discouraged and frankly rather defiant, would do: he prayed. It was around midnight, hours after he had heard the news that he had hoped would be better, and his wife was already asleep. Alone, he evidently thought about how much he owed God and what he was willing to give of himself, and these came out in a series of questions, nine in all. The three poetry verses that Nusbaum authored showed he weighed the advantages and disadvantages in each stream of thought. He determined that following Jesus, and the pursuit of purity and goodness along the straight and narrow was a price he could pay, if God would be there to help him with the heavy load (v.1). By verse 2, Cyrus was seeing the gifts from Him more readily – the spiritual freedom, peace, and salvation were his if he just surrendered and allowed Him to do his will upon Cyrus’ life. Finally, Cyrus saw that a rest and the divine guarantees were immutable rewards that were his when he lived a life of giving his very best back to this God (v.3). So, delayed gratification was part of what helped Cyrus transform his approach, with the thought of incalculable riches that awaited in Eternity. And, he could count upon this God to not make the burdens of his ministry unbearable; in fact, those adverse things he could chalk up as part of the landscape of his chosen life of acquiring peace through complete sacrifice. This was a life in which Jesus’ power, blood, and love (refrain) could outflank all other enemies that might afflict Cyrus Nusbaum.  

  

Cyrus’ season of difficulty in southeastern Kansas did not continue forever. Though he spent most of the rest of his life in Kansas, Nusbaum went on to other legs of service in the Kingdom, including serving at a college, and later as a Red Cross inspector in France in World War I. But, because he continued in various roles in Kansas and elsewhere (including evangelism campaigns in Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Texas) one can assume that the lessons he learned in his initial foray into professional ministry stuck with him until the end, in 1937. He can probably tell you and me, when we meet him, that to let Him have His way, no matter where this submission took him, was the best choice he could have made.    

See more information on the song story in these sources: The Complete Book of Hymns – Inspiring Stories About 600 Hymns and Praise Songs by William J. Petersen and Ardythe Petersen, Tyndale House Publishers, 2006; and 101 More Hymn Stories, by Kenneth W. Osbeck, Kregel Publications, 1985.

 

Also see this link, showing all three original verses: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/htm/h/i/s/w/hiswaywt.htm

 

Also see this link for author’s brief biography: http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/n/u/s/nusbaum_cs.htm