Philip Paul Bliss is the second most famous Christian song
writer in history. Had he lived as long as his peers, Fanny Crosby,
Charles Wesley and Ira Sankey, he may have
surpassed them all, as the greatest song writer of all time and the most
widely used singer of all time, but a tragic accidental train wreck snuffed
out his life in his 38th year.
Should anyone challenge this conclusion, let us check out
his contributions. For twelve years, he wrote both words and music to
such hymns as the following: Almost Persuaded, Dare to Be a
Daniel, Hallelujah 'Tis Done!, Hallelujah, What a Saviour!, Hold the
Fort, Jesus Loves Even Me, Let the Lower Lights Be Burning, Once for
All, The Light of the World Is Jesus, Whosoever Will, and
Wonderful Words of Life. He wrote only the words for My
Redeemer and wrote only the music for I Gave My Life for
Thee, It Is Well with My Soul, and Precious
Promise. How is that for a starter! There were and are hundreds
more. Some of his songs widely used back when he wrote them, are not
so well known today. They are: Are Your Windows Open Toward
Jerusalem, Only an Armour-Bearer, More Holiness Give Me, Pull for the
Shore, and Will You Meet Me at the Fountain?. None of his
songs were ever copyrighted.
Mr. Bliss was born with a melody in his heart, in a log
cabin home in a mountain region. His father, Mr. Isaac Bliss, was a
dedicated Christian man. The first spiritual recollections that Bliss
had of his father were the daily family prayers. These prayers were
ingrained upon childhood memory, ever to follow him throughout
life.
His father was a lover of music and it was through his
father that he developed a passion for singing. They attended the
Methodist Church.
When Philip was about six the family moved to Trumbull
City, Ohio, but three years later returned to Pennsylvania, settling
in Tioga City. During the first ten years of his life, the lad had
little schooling, save his father's singing and his mother's
teachings. The Holy Bible became an ever-growing influence in his
life.
At the age of ten, he heard the piano for the first time
and it deepened his burden to become a musician. The occasion is
worth telling. At times, he was allowed to go in to town to sell
vegetables from door to door. This was a means of helping the family
budget but it also put him in contact with others.
One Saturday, with his basket of vegetables, the
barefooted, gawky, ten-year old boy was to hear the sweetest music
that he had ever listened to. The only things that he could play
melodies on were reeds plucked from the marshes. Almost unconscious
of what he was doing, he climbed the garden fence of a country estate
and entered [the] home unobserved. Standing in the door of the parlor, he
listened to a young lady playing the piano, the first he had ever
seen. When she stopped, impulsively, he exclaimed, "O lady, please
play some more!" Somewhat startled, the woman wheeled and saw the
awkward, barefooted boy standing before her and immediately
exclaimed, "Get out of here with your big, bare feet!" The boy was
unaware that he had trespassed, and he went back to the streets
crestfallen.
When Philip was eleven years old, in 1849, he left home to
make a living for himself. He was to spend the next five years
working in logging and lumber camps and sawmills. Having a strong
physique, he was able to do a man's work. The next several years took
him to many places and tutored him in many trades.
At the age of twelve, in 1850, he made his first public
confession of Christ and joined the Baptist Church of Cherry Flats,
Pennsylvania. He does not recall a time when he did not love Christ,
but this was the official time of his conversion.
In 1851 he became assistant cook in a lumber camp at $9 per
month. Two years later, he was promoted to a log cutter. The
following year he became a sawmill worker. Between jobs, he attended
school. Uncertain as to what vocation he wanted, he just planned to
be prepared for any opportunity that might arise. He spent some of
his money in musical education as well. Young Philip remained strong
in the Lord amongst the rowdy, laboring men of the camp, although it
was not easy, but the spiritual implants of the godly parents were
now bearing fruit. He also began to participate in Methodist camp
meetings and revival services.
At age seventeen, in 1855, he decided that he would take
the final step in preparation for his life's work. He went to
Bradford City, Pennsylvania and finished the last requirements for
his teaching credentials. The next year Philip was the new
schoolmaster at Hartsville, New York. When school was not in session,
he hired out for summer work on a farm. In 1857 he met J. G. Towner
who conducted a vocal school in Towanda, Pennsylvania. Recognizing
that young Bliss had an unusually fine singing voice, he proceeded to
give him his first formal voice training. Towner also made it
possible for him to go to a musical convention in Rome, Pennsylvania,
later that year. Here he met William B. Bradbury, a noted composer of
sacred music. By the time the convention was over, Bradbury had
talked Philip Bliss into surrendering himself to the service of the
Lord. The strong influence of these men in his life helped him to
decide to be a music teacher. While still in his teens, Philip
discovered that he had ability to compose music. His first
composition was sent to George F. Root with this strange request, "If
you think this song is worth anything, I would appreciate having a
flute in exchange for it." He received the flute.
In 1858 he was appointed a teacher in the Rome,
Pennsylvania, Academy. Here he met a fine young lady named Lucy
Young, who was to become his bride. She was a poet from a musical
family and greatly encouraged him in developing his musical talents.
She was an earnest member of a Presbyterian Church, which he then
joined. In later years they were to sing beautiful duets in the
service of Christ. Not quite 21, on June 1, 1859, he married Lucy who
was also his sister's special friend. He had grown to love her
deeply and to admire her for her wonderful Christian life. The young
groom worked on his father-in-law's farm for $13 a month while he
continued to study music.
He took music pupils in the evening to supplement his
income and at 22 had sufficient knowledge of music to become an
itinerant music teacher. He went from community to community with a
$20 melodeon and an ancient horse. It was the day of the
old-fashioned singing school which was frequently conducted by a
teacher traveling from place to place. Mr. Bliss delighted in these
exercises and his musical ability began to attract the attention of
his friends. As a teacher of one of these schools, he recognized his
limitations and longed to study under some accomplished musician.
His wife's grandmother provided that opportunity in the
summer of 1860, by giving him $30 so that he could attend the Normal
Academy of Music of New York. This meant six weeks of hard study and
inspiration. Upon completion, he took the occupation of professional
music teacher in earnest. Within three years, having attended each
summer session and studying the rest of the year at home, Mr. Bliss
was now recognized as a music authority in his home area, while
continuing to travel his circuit. His talent was turning to
composition, and his first published number ... Loral Vale ... though
not a sacred number, caused him to believe that he could write songs.
This number was published in 1865, one year after it was written.
The Blisses moved to Chicago in 1864 when Philip was 26. It
was here he began to conduct musical institutes and became widely
known as a teacher and a singer. His poems and compositions flowed
out with regularity. He collaborated with George F. Root in the
writing and publishing of gospel songs. In the summer of 1865, he
went on a two-week concert tour with Mr. Towner. He was paid $100.
Amazed that so much money could be made in so short a time, he began
to dream dreams. These dreams were short lived. The following week a
summons appeared at his door stating that he was drafted for service
in the Union Army. Since the war was almost over, the decision was
cancelled after two weeks, and he was released. He then went on
another concert tour but this one was a failure. However, during the
tour he was offered a position with a Chicago Music House, Root and
Cady Musical Publishers, at a salary of $150 per month.
For the next eight years, between 1865 and 1873, often with
his wife by his side, he held musical conventions, singing schools,
and sacred concerts under the sponsorship of his employers. He was
becoming more popular in concert work, not yet directing his full
efforts into evangelical singing. He was, however, writing a number of
hymns and Sunday school melodies, and many of these were
incorporated into the books, The Triumph and The
Prize.
One summer night in 1869, while passing a revival meeting
in a church where D. L. Moody was preaching, Mr. Bliss went inside to
listen. That night Mr. Moody was without musical help for the singing
and Mr. Bliss was aware of it. The singing was rather weak. From the
audience, Philip attracted Mr. Moody's attention. At the door, Mr.
Moody got the particulars about Mr. Bliss quite quickly and asked him
to come to his Sunday evening meetings to help in the singing any
time he could. He further urged him to give up his business and
become a singing evangelist.
Another chance acquaintance came with Major Daniel W.
Whittle, when Mr. Bliss was a substitute song leader in a gospel
meeting. Impressed with his voice, Mr. Whittle recommended the young
man for the position of choir director at the First Congregational
Church in Chicago. This was in 1870. The Blisses moved into an
apartment in the Whittle home, and while living there, he wrote two
of his most popular hymns ... Hold the Fort and Jesus Loves
Even Me. Yearly, new songs were published with many of Bliss's songs
included. His fame began spreading.
In the fall of 1870, Mr. Bliss assumed the additional task
of Sunday school Superintendent at the Congregational Church, which
work lasted for three years until his busy schedule made it
impossible for him to continue. His first Sunday school book, The
Charm, was issued in 1871.
Early in 1873 Moody asked Bliss to be his music director
for some meetings in England. Bliss declined and Sankey was then
asked to go. Little did Bliss realize the opportunity he had turned
down, for it might have been "Moody and Bliss" instead of "Moody and
Sankey," for that tour bought Moody into international
prominence.
During the winter of 1873 Moody again urged him in a letter
from Scotland to devote his entire time to evangelistic singing. Mr.
Bliss was facing a time of decision. At a prayer meeting, Mr. Bliss
placed himself at the disposal of the Lord, and he decided to lay out
a fleece. He would join his friend Major Whittle, a good evangelist,
in Waukegan, Illinois, and see what would happen. That was March
24-26, 1874. At one of the services as Mr. Bliss sang Almost
Persuaded, the Holy Spirit seemed to fill the hall. As he sang,
sinners presented themselves for prayer and many souls were won to
Jesus Christ that night. The following afternoon, as they met for
prayer, Mr. Bliss made a formal surrender of his life to Jesus
Christ. He gave up everything-- his musical conventions, his writing
of secular songs, his business position, his work at the church, so
that he would be free to devote full time to the singing of sacred
music in evangelism, in particular to be Mr. Whittle's song
evangelist and children's worker. At the same time, Mr. Whittle
dedicated his life to full-time evangelism. A gospel team was born.
Little did Mr. Bliss know that he only had two and one-half years to
live.
Depending upon the Lord to take care of his wife and two
children, he joined Whittle in a successful evangelistic career. Mr.
Bliss compiled a revival song-book for use in their campaigns
entitled Gospel Songs. It was a tremendous success, bringing
royalties of $30,000, all of which he gave to Whittle for the
development of their evangelistic efforts. Another source mentions
$60,000 was made and given to charities. Later when Moody and Sankey
returned from England, Sankey and Bliss combined their respective
books, Sankey's Sacred Songs and Solos with Bliss's book. The
new compilation was called Gospel Hymns and Sacred Songs by
Bliss and Sankey. Mr. Bliss, of course, was elated at this further
exposure of his ministries. Several editions were later published
with George C. Stebbins collaborating also. Meanwhile, the
Whittle-Bliss team held some twenty-five campaigns in Illinois,
Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi, Alabama,
and Georgia. The 1875 Louisville, Kentucky, meeting was an especially
good one. Mr. Bliss especially enjoyed working with young people and
often conducted his own "praise meetings." where he would preach and
sing.
On Friday, November 24, 1876, Mr. Bliss sang at a ministers'
meeting conducted by D. L. Moody in Chicago's Farwell Hall. Over
1,000 preachers were present. A favorite song that was sung, was
Are Your Windows Open Toward Jerusalem. Also, he introduced to
the gathering a new song that he had just written the music for ...
It is Well with My Soul. He now had one month to live.
Next, he conducted a service for the 800 inmates of the
Michigan State prison. In genuine repentance, many of them wept as he
spoke of the love of God and sang, Hallelujah, What a Saviour!
The last hymn that he ever sang in a public meeting was one of his
own, called Eternity.
Mr. Bliss spent the Christmas holidays with his mother and
sister at Towanda and Rome, Pennsylvania, and made plans to return to
Chicago for work with Moody in January. A telegram, however, arrived
asking him to return sooner, in order to take part in meetings
advertised for the Sunday following Christmas. He wired a message.
"Tickets for Chicago, via Buffalo and Lake Shore Railroad. Baggage
checked through. Shall be in Chicago Friday night. God bless you all
forever." He decided to leave his two little children, Philip Paul
age 1 and George age 4, with his mother.
Then, the day that was to stun the Christian world arrived,
December 29, 1876. The train, the Pacific Express, was struggling
along in a blinding snowstorm and was about three hours late on a
Friday afternoon. Eleven coaches pulled by two engines were creeping
through the huge drifts, approaching Ashtabula, Ohio. Passing over a
trestle bridge that was spanning a river, the first engine reached
solid ground on the other side but everything else plummeted 75 feet
into the ravine below into the icy water. Later, it was determined
that flood waters had weakened the bridge.
Five minutes after the train fell, fire broke out. Fanned by
gale like winds, the wooden coaches were ablaze. Mr. Bliss succeeded
in extricating himself and crawling to safety through a window.
Finding his wife was pinned under the ironwork of the seats, he
returned into the car, and bravely remained at her side, trying to
extricate her as the flames took their toll. All that remained was a
charred mass. No trace of their bodies was ever discovered. For days
it was not known who were among the dead, as there had been no
passenger list. It was tabulated that out of 160 passengers there
were only 14 survivors. Later official sources said 92 died. In most
cases, there was nothing to recover.
Mr. Bliss's trunk reached Chicago safely. When it was
opened, it was found that the last song that he had written, before
his death, began as follows: "I know not what awaits me. God kindly
veils my eyes..." The trunk contained many hymn-poems which he had
not yet written the music for. One such was My Redeemer, which
became world famous, when music was added by James McGranahan.
McGranahan, by the way, age 36 at the time of Bliss's death, was so
moved by the tragedy that he decided to give up his miscellaneous
works and succeed Bliss as Whittle's evangelistic singer.
The funeral was held in Rome, Pennsylvania, where a monument
was erected bearing the inscription, "P. P. Bliss, author... Hold
the Fort!" Memorial services were held throughout the nation for
the beloved couple. No private citizen's death brought more grief to
the nation. On December 31st, D. L. Moody spoke at a memorial
gathering in Chicago. On January 5th, a song service was held to
honor Mr. Bliss there and 8,000 filled the hall, and another 4,000
were on the outside.
Here are the stories of a few of his hymns:
Almost Persuaded... Outside of Just as I Am, this
has been the most successful gospel invitation song ever written. In
the early 1870's, Mr. Bliss was listening to a sermon by Rev.
Brundage, a friend of his, in a little church in the east. The
preacher closed his appeal with, "He who is almost persuaded is
almost saved. But, to be almost saved is to be eternally lost!" These
words impressed Bliss so deeply that it led him to write this great
hymn.
Hold the Fort... In 1864, General Hood, during
the Civil War, was successful in harassing Colonel Sherman's Army from the
rear, thereby delaying its advance to the objective. As the situation looked
hopeless they saw a white flag waving on a distant mountain twenty
miles away signaling this message, "Hold the Fort! I am coming.
Sherman." Three hours later the enemy had to retreat as the
reinforcements came. In May, 1870, at a special Sunday School meeting
in Rockford, Illinois, Whittle's telling of this story greatly moved
Bliss. The next day in a Chicago YMCA meeting. Mr. Bliss wrote a
chorus on a blackboard and sang for them extemporaneously. The
audience joined in and the effect was electric.
Jesus Loves Even Me... One night, MR. Bliss, weary after
many days of labor in downtown Chicago, was resting at the Whittle
home at 43 South Street. His heart was overflowing with joy and he
sat meditating upon Romans 5:5. As he meditated and prayed, with
tears in his eyes, he took pencil and paper and wrote, "I am so glad
that our Father in heaven, Tells of His love in the Book He has
given..."
Let the Lower Lights be Burning... On occasion, Mr. Bliss
would travel with Moody and be a participant at his meetings.One time
Mr. Moody was telling the story of a shipwreck in one of his messages.
On a dark stormy night, a large passenger boat cautiously edged toward the
Cleveland harbor. The pilot knew that he could only
find the harbor channel by keeping two lower shore lights in line
with the main beacon. "Are you sure this is Cleveland?" asked the
captain. "Quite sure, Sir," replied the pilot. "Where are the lower
lights?" he asked. "Gone out, Sir!" was the reply. The pilot turned
the wheel, but in the darkness, he missed the channel. The boat
crashed on the rocks and many lives were lost that night. Mr. Moody's
closing words were, "Brethren, the Master will take care of the
great lighthouse; let us keep the lower lights burning." At the next
meeting with Mr. Moody, Mr. Bliss sang this song... Let the Lower
Lights Be Burning. It was published in 1874. It is said that this
was the favorite hymn of Billy Sunday.
We end this sketch noting It is Well with My Soul whose
words were written by Horatio G. Spafford. On November 22, 1873, this
preacher and good friend of Mr. Bliss lost his four children in the
depths of the Atlantic Ocean, as a result of a collision. Mr. Spafford
had sent his wife and children ahead, promising to meet them in
France, shortly. He wrote the verses in mid-Atlantic on his way over
to join his bereaved wife. He asked Mr. Bliss to write the music for
his verses. It was introduced publicly for the first time at the
previously mentioned ministers' meeting in Chicago in November, 1876.
One month later, it was well with Mr. Bliss's soul, as he was
reunited with the Spafford children.
| *The above
is one of 46 booklets by Ed Reese in the Christian Hall of Fame series.
These short biographies provide good material for Sunday School lessons,
family devotions, and reading for young people and adults. Order/information from: Reese
Publications, Attn: Kay Griffin, 8824 Northcote Avenue, Munster, IN 46321; Fax: (219) 838-4695; E-mail: Kgreese@aol.com
- Used with permission, 7/13/99. |
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