On
June 17, 1775, the Battle of Bunker Hill raged as the British
Redcoats sought to take Breed�s Hill from the entrenched
American Rebels. At the bottom of the hill and just across
the water from Boston, the four hundred houses of Charlestown
roared in flame. In response to sniper fire from the town,
the British had bombarded it with red-hot cannon balls. By
the end of the day, the British would have control of the
hill, but their loss of 1,150 soldiers compared to only 411
colonists will
give the moral victory to the Americans.
In 1786, only five years after the surrender
of the British at Yorktown and a year before the U.S. Constitution
will be drawn up, the town of Charlestown is still recovering
from its personal tragedy. Workers are needed to restore the
destroyed city. One man who found his way to the city is a
21-year-old carpenter named Oliver Holden. Holden,
a fifth generation American who traced his descent from a Richard
Holden, a 1634 emigrant from England, moved to Charlestown
from Shirley, Massachusetts in that year.
But Oliver Holden was not a simple working
man. He had interests other than carpentry. In time, he opened
a general store and later dealt broadly in real estate. As
his wealth grew, he became involved in politics and served
several terms in the Massachusetts House of Representatives.
Neither was Holden just a man of the world.
He knew and loved the Lord and earnestly lived as a Christian
and a Baptist. He joined the First Baptist Church of Boston
in 1791, but the evidence shows him to have been a Baptist
before this date. Another known interest during these years
was his love for music. He admitted that his only musical instruction
consisted of two month�s instruction in a Singing School in
1783, but this did not stop him from being one of the premier
early American hymnists.
Soon after joining the First Baptist Church
of Boston, he became the leader of the church choir. This choir
has the distinction of being the first Baptist church choir
in America and was in operation as early as 1771. Holden�s
interest in music led him to publish a number of collections
of sacred hymns, producing at least seven works between 1792
and 1800. Most likely, he wrote much of this music and the
music sung by the church choir. Holden also wrote the words
to a number of hymns.
Oliver Holden�s dedication to missionary
work and holiness can be seen in his church affiliations. In
April of 1801, he was one of 14 members of the Boston Church
who were given their church letters so that they might start
the First Baptist Church of Charlestown. Holden left the musical
opportunities of the much larger Boston Church in order to
start a new church across the river. In 1802, he further revealed
his heart when he became one of the 12 original trustees for
the Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Society. This was several
years before American Baptists sent out their first foreign
missionaries. He was clearly willing to sacrifice the glory
of the moment at the head of America�s only Baptist choir in
order to take the gospel to new places.
Holden�s stand for holy living can been
seen in a later church problem. In 1809, Holden and a few other
members split off from the First Baptist of Charlestown and
formed the Second Baptist Church. They left the first church
because of its laxness in disciplining its members. Holden
served as the pastor of the new church which was derogatorily
referred to at Holden�s �Puritan Society.� We could use such
stands on holiness and biblical church discipline today.
Of all the things Oliver Holden did during
his lifetime, his famous work is his composition of the hymn
tune called CORONATION. It was composed in 1793 and is used
today whenever we sing Edward Perronet�s hymn,
�All Hail the Power of Jesus Name.� He called it CORONATION
because of the references to the crowning of Jesus in the refrain.
Hamilton C. MacDougall, in his Early New England Psalmody,
said: �Out of the hundreds of tunes written in New England
from 1770 to 1823�, CORONATION is the only one now in general
and approved use in the United States.� And
this surviving hymn tune from early America was written by
the Baptist Oliver Holden.
The following hymn written by Holden was
still in use in a number of 19th century hymn books.
It first appeared in 1793 and speaks of the importance of secret
prayer since God is present everywhere.
All those who
seek a throne of grace,
Are sure to find
in every place;
To those who
love a life of prayer,
Our God is present
everywhere.
The shady grove
or burning plain,
The blooming
field or swelling main,
Alike are sweet
in secret prayer,
For God is present
everywhere.
In pining sickness,
rosy health,
In poverty or
growing wealth,
The humble soul
delights in prayer,
And God is present
everywhere.
When Zion mourns,
and comforts fall,
And all her foes
do scoff and rail,
�Tis then a time
for secret prayer,
For God is present
everywhere.
When some backslide
and other fall,
And few are found
who strive at all,
The faithful
find in secret prayer,
That God is present
everywhere.
Come, then, my
soul, in every strait,
To Jesus come
and on him wait,
He sees and hears
each secret sigh,
And brings his
own salvation nigh.
By David F. Reagan
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