Published in THE SOUTHERN COMFORT, A MONTHLY PUBLICATION OF THE PVT. SAMUEL A. HUGHEY CAMP #1452, SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS AND PRESIDENT JEFFERSON DAVIS CHAPTER, MILITARY ORDER OF THE STARS AND BARS., DeSOTO COUNTY , MS. Volume 40, Issue No. 8, August, 2016. Forwarded by Bill Gill from the Wigfall Grey September 2016 issue.
Sunday, September 18, 2016
“Battle Hymn of the Republic” Refuted
The “Battle Hymn of the Republic” occupies
a prominent position not only within the program of nearly every nationalistic
celebration, but also has become a part of many Christian services. Admittedly,
the anthem sounds good, but it is far from being a “hymn” in the traditional
sense of the word. Many Christians understand its stirring words to provide an
image of a victorious Church, but that is just not so! The connotations of a
spiritualized patriotism which have endeared it to many, result from a mistaken
and cursory reading of the song. By definition, a hymn is a song which
incorporates theological truth into its text. Wonderful examples of Christian
hymns are “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God,” “Great Is Thy Faithfulness” and “How
Firm a Foundation.” But despite its author’s use of biblical phrasing, the
“Battle Hymn of the Republic” is not about Christ “marching” against sin and
the Church being “victorious” over evil. The theological truths which it
expresses are anti-Christian and anti-biblical, thus it should never be sung by
a Christian congregation. The “Battle Hymn of the Republic” was written in the
fall of 1861. While in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Mrs. Julia Ward Howe
watched troops marching off to war singing “John Brown’s Body.”She determined
to write a more inspiring war song to what was a good melody. First published
in the Atlantic Monthly, she received five dollars for her literary effort.
Born into a prominent New York City family, Julia Ward was raised in a
conservative, Christian home. As a young woman she rebelled against her
parents’ strong Calvinism and ultimately married the Boston reformer, Dr.
Samuel G. Howe. She adopted the tenants of Transcendentalism, then
Unitarianism, and it was in that light that the “Battle Hymn” was written. The
Transcendentalists became the core of the radical abolitionist movement. Dr.
Howe, as well as their Boston pastor, the Reverend Theodore Parker were two
members of the “Secret Six” who financed and armed the anti-slavery terrorist
John Brown. After his murderous rampage in Kansas and at Harper’s Ferry, Mrs.
Howe lamented, “John Brown’s death will be holy and glorious. John Brown will
glorify the gallows like Jesus glorified the cross.” The “Battle Hymn of the
Republic” can only be understood within the framework of the
Transcendentalist-Unitarian creed. The first verse reads: Mine eyes have seen
the glory of the coming of the Lord. He is trampling out the vintage where the
grapes of wrath are stored; He has loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible
swift sword. His truth is marching on. Mrs. Howe applied the apocalyptic
judgment of the Revelation (14:17-20 & 19:15) to the Confederate nation.
She pictured the Union army not only as that instrument which would cause
Southern blood to flow out upon the earth, but also the Union army as the very
expression of His Word (sword) itself. The Transcendentalist-Unitarians
believed that the evil in man could be rooted out by governmental action. The
South was evil and was thus deserving of judgment of the most extreme
nature—its own Armageddon. The second verse follows the same theme by
presenting the Union army as the abode of their vengeful God. I have seen Him
in the watch fires of a hundred circling camps; They have builded Him an altar
in the evening dews and damps; I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and
flaring lamps. His day is marching on. The third verse is so contrary of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ that many hymnals leave it out altogether. I have read
the fiery gospel writ in burnished rows of steel. As ye deal with My
contempters, so with you My grace shall deal; Let the hero born of woman crush
the serpent with his heel. Since God is marching on. Mrs. Howe proclaimed a
gospel of judgment pictured by rows of affixed bayonets. Taking God’s promise
of deliverance from Genesis 3:15, she applied it not to Christ, but to the
Union soldier who would receive God’s grace by killing Southerners. This was
certainly a different gospel; the kind of which the Apostle Paul said, “But
even if we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel to you than what
we have preached to you, let him be accursed.” (Galatians 1:8) Verse four
returns to the prose of the Apocalypse with trumpet and judgment seat imagery:
He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never sound retreat; He is sifting
out the hearts of men before His judgment seat. O be swift, my soul, to answer
Him! Be jubilant, my feet! Our God is marching on. The problem again is that
civil warfare was the instrument being promoted for determining the hearts of
men. A man’s positive response to the call for enlistment in the Union army was
the action which would reveal their standing before God. The fifth and final
verse gives the ultimate expression of the warped and anti-biblical theology
which possessed the radical abolitionists. In the beauty of the lilies, Christ
was born across the sea, With a glory in His bosom that transfigures you and
me. As He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free, While God is
marching on. To Julia Ward Howe the work of Christ was incomplete. It was up to
men through civil government to bring about a utopian society. She was quoted
in her biography, “Not until the Civil War did I officially join the Unitarian
church and accept the fact the Christ was merely a great teacher with no higher
claim to preeminence in wisdom, goodness, and power than any other man.”
(emphasis mine) The “Battle Hymn” theme has nothing to do with Christianity or
God. It is a political-patriotic song about the destruction of the South,
written in religious terminology. It is a clever product. Howe deliberately
created the idea that the North was doing God’s work. It paints a picture of a
vengeful God destroying His enemies—the South, and elevating the North’s cause
to that of a “holy war.” In doing so, Howe portrayed the South and its people
as evil and the enemy of God. Outrageous, but it worked. As a Unitarian, Julia
Ward Howe believed the Unitarian doctrine that man is characteristically good
and he can redeem himself by his own merits without any help from a saviour.
She rejected basic biblical truths such as a literal hell—“I threw away, once
and forever, the thought of the terrible hell which appears to me impossible.”
Mrs. Howe also refuted the exclusive claim of Jesus, “I am the way, the truth,
and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.” (John 14:6) by
saying, “Having rejected the exclusive doctrine that made Christianity and
special forms of it the only way of spiritual redemption, I now accept the
belief that not only Christians but all human beings, no matter what their
religion, are capable of redemption. Christianity was but one of God’s plans
for bringing all of humanity to a state of ultimate perfection.” Our challenge
is to bring a proper understanding of the nature of this battle anthem to the
leadership of the Christian church. No Christian church would intentionally
sing a song of praise to Satan’s doctrines, nor would any pastor or elder lead
their flock into rebellion against true biblical doctrine. Yet by ignorance, is
has been done on a regular basis in the American church. The “Battle Hymn of
the Republic” is apostasy. It promotes hatred and vengeful destruction. It has
no place in a worship service.
Published in THE SOUTHERN COMFORT, A MONTHLY PUBLICATION OF THE PVT. SAMUEL A. HUGHEY CAMP #1452, SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS AND PRESIDENT JEFFERSON DAVIS CHAPTER, MILITARY ORDER OF THE STARS AND BARS., DeSOTO COUNTY , MS. Volume 40, Issue No. 8, August, 2016. Forwarded by Bill Gill from the Wigfall Grey September 2016 issue.
Published in THE SOUTHERN COMFORT, A MONTHLY PUBLICATION OF THE PVT. SAMUEL A. HUGHEY CAMP #1452, SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS AND PRESIDENT JEFFERSON DAVIS CHAPTER, MILITARY ORDER OF THE STARS AND BARS., DeSOTO COUNTY , MS. Volume 40, Issue No. 8, August, 2016. Forwarded by Bill Gill from the Wigfall Grey September 2016 issue.
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