292. Living for Jesus

1 Living for Jesus a life that is true,
striving to please him in all that I do,
yielding allegiance glad hearted and free
this is the pathway of blessing for me.

Refrain (may be sung after stanza 3 only):
O Jesus, Lord and Savior,
I give myself to you,
for you in your atonement
did give yourself for me.
I own no other master
my heart shall be your throne:
my life I give, henceforth to live,
O Christ, for you alone.

2 Living for Jesus, who died in my place,
bearing on Calvary my sin and disgrace:
such love constrains me to answer his call,
follow his leading, and give him my all. Refrain

3 Living for Jesus wherever I am,
doing each duty in his holy name,
seeking the lost ones he died to redeem,
bringing the weary to find rest in him. Refrain

Text Information
First Line: Living for Jesus a life that is true
Title: Living for Jesus
Author: Thomas O. Chisholm (1917, alt.)
Refrain First Line: O Jesus, Lord and Savior
Meter: 10 10 10 10 with refrain
Language: English
Publication Date: 1987
Topic: Biblical Names & Places: Calvary; Commitment & Dedication; Deliverance (6 more...)
Tune Information
Name: LIVING FOR JESUS
Composer: C. Harold Lowden (1915)
Meter: 10 10 10 10 with refrain
Key: E♭ Major


Text Information:

Composer C. Harold Lowden stated the following about this hymn:

In 1915 I wrote a "light and summery" type of gospel song entitled 'The Sunshine Song" for children's services. It became quite popular, and many pastors wrote to me that the music should be saved, and more general words wedded to it. I came across a copy of it in my files in 1917 and played it over. The rhythm and tempo suggested the words "Living for Jesus." . . . I decided to ask T. O. Chisholm to write the words. I mailed him a copy of the music and suggested the title and the type of refrain which I thought it deserved. In a day or so, Mr. Chisholm returned it to me, saying he didn't have the slightest idea as to the method used in writing words to music. I sent the material back to him immediately, telling him I believed God had led me to select him, and suggesting that he permit God to write the poem. Within a couple of weeks he had completed the writing of the words.

Thus the author, Thomas O. Chisholm (b. Franklin, KY, 1866; d. Ocean Grove, NJ, 1960), wrote "Living for Jesus" in 1917. Although he had little formal education, Chisholm served at various times as a teacher, editor, and pastor. He also wrote more than twelve hundred poems and hymn texts. Chisholm's accomplishments included being associate editor of his hometown newspaper, The Franklin Advocate, and editor of the Pentecostal Herald. He was ordained in the Methodist Church but served only briefly as a pastor in Scottsville, Kentucky, because of poor health. After that he sold life insurance in Winona Lake, Indiana, and Vineland, New Jersey. His devotional poetry and hymn texts were published primarily in religious periodicals.
His wrote his text to fit Lowden's tune in four stanzas and a refrain. Stanza 3 in the Psalter Hymnal collates phrases from stanzas 3 and 4 of Chisholm's original text. The text and tune were first published together in Uplifting Songs (1917), a hymnal compiled by Lowden and Rufus W. Miller.

This is a hymn of total consecration and dedication in which we commit to "living for Jesus" in all that we do (st. 1) and wherever we are (st. 3) in response to Christ's sacrifice (st. 2; refrain). "Living for Jesus" is well known in the Christian Reformed Church as the theme song of the Calvinist Cadet Corps, a church-related organization for young boys.

Liturgical Use:
Most often as a post-sermon hymn; also as a hymn of dedication or commitment at a suitable place in the worship service.

--Psalter Hymnal Handbook

Tune Information:

LIVING FOR JESUS is a gospel hymn tune distinguishable by its dactylic rhythm for the stanzas and its straightforward iambic refrain. The guitar chords avoid some of the chromaticism of the original harmony; when using guitar, do not use keyboard. Singing the refrain only once–at the end of stanza 3–will constitute a fine climax. Singers may want to observe a ritardando or a fermata in the final phrase of the refrain.

C. Harold Lowden (b. Burlington, NJ, 1883; d. Collingwood, NJ, 1963) wrote his first songs when he was only twelve years old. He continued to write hymns for the rest of his life and edited a number of hymnals. A musical editor for the Evangelical and Reformed Church board, Lowden taught music at the Bible Institute of Pennsylvania (now Philadelphia College of Bible). He capped his career by serving for twenty-eight years, until his retirement in 1961, as minister of music of the Linden Baptist Church in Camden, New Jersey.

--Psalter Hymnal Handbook


Media
MIDI file: MIDI
MIDI file: MIDI Preview
(Faith Alive Christian Resources)
More media are available on the text authority and tune authority pages.

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