CHRISTIAN LIFE >> FAITH & TRUST
SDAH 525
O safe to the Rock that is higher than I,
My soul in its conflicts and sorrows would fly;
So sinful, so weary, Thine, Thine, would I be;
Thou blest “Rock of Ages,” I’m hiding in Thee.
Notes
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William Orcutt Cushing (1823-1902; see SDAH 208) was requested by Ira D. Sankey (1840-1908; see Biographies) to send something new to help him in his gospel work of singing sacred solos at evangelistic revival meetings. Cushing accepted this request as a call from God, and prayed that the Lord would give him a song that would glorify Him. He later said that this hymn, written in 1876 in Moravia, New York, was the outgrowth of many tears, heart conflicts, and soul yearnings, of which the world could know nothing. The history of many spiritual battles was behind it. Note the constant reference to Christ as the Rock—four times in three stanzas and once in the refrain, plus one reference to Him as a refuge. Cushing drew most of his allusions from the Psalms. Three more of his hymns in SDAH ate No. 208, “There’ll Be No Dark Valley”; No. 218, “When He Cometh”; and No. 529, “Under His Wings.”
The tune, sometimes called HIDING IN THEE, was composed by Ira D. Sankey and first appeared in Welcome Tidings, 1877, a collection of Gospel songs compiled by Sankey and two Colleagues.
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