THE BIRTH OF THE SONG “PRECIOUS LORD”
Submitted by Dick McClure
(Though many may have read the following account, the message is ever new
and ever meaningful,)
Back in 1932, I was 32 years old and a fairly new
husband. My wife Nettie and I were living in a little apartment on
Chicago's south side. One hot August afternoon, I had to go to
St. Louis where
I was to be the featured soloist at a large revival meeting. I didn't want
to go. Nettie was in the last month of pregnancy with our first child. But
a lot of people were expecting me in St.
Louis. I kissed Nettie good-bye,
clattered downstairs to our Model A and, in a fresh Lake Michigan breeze,
chugged out of Chicago
on Route 66.
Outside the city, however, I discovered that in my anxiety at leaving, I had
forgotten my music case. I wheeled around and headed back.
I found Nettie sleeping peacefully. I hesitated by her bed; something was
strongly telling me to stay. But eager to get on my way, and not wanting to
disturb her, I shrugged off the feeling and quietly slipped out of the room
with my music.
The next night, in the steaming St.
Louis heat, the crowd called on me
to sing again and again. When I finally sat down, a messenger boy ran up
with a Western Union
telegram. I ripped open the envelope. Pasted on the yellow sheet were the
words: YOUR WIFE JUST DIED.
People were happily singing and clapping around me, but I could hardly keep
from crying out. I rushed to a phone and called home. All I could hear on
the other end was “Nettie is dead. Nettie is dead.”
When I got back, I learned that Nettie had given birth to a boy. I swung
between grief and joy. Yet that same night, the baby died. I buried Nettie
and our little boy together in the same casket. Then I fell apart.
For days, I closeted myself. I felt that God had done me an injustice. I
didn't want to serve Him anymore or to write gospel songs. I just wanted to
go back to that jazz world I once knew so well. But then, as I hunched
alone in that dark apartment those first sad days, I thought back to the
afternoon I went to St.
Louis. Something kept telling me
to stay with Nettie. Was that something God? Oh, if I had paid more
attention to Him that day, I would have stayed and been with Nettie when she
died.
From that moment on I vowed to listen more closely to Him. But still I was
lost in grief. Everyone was kind to me, especially one friend. The
following Saturday evening he took me up to Malone's
Poro
College, a neighborhood music school. It was quiet; the late evening sun
crept through the curtained windows; I sat down at the piano, and my hands
began to browse over the keys. Something happened to me then. I felt at
peace. I felt as though I could reach out and touch God. I found myself
playing a melody, once into my head the words just seemed to fall into
place: “Precious Lord, take my hand, lead me on, let me stand, I am tired, I
am weak, I am worn, through the storm, through the night, lead me on to the
light, take my hand, precious Lord, lead me home.”
That night, not only did the Lord give me these words and the melody, but
also He healed my spirit. That night, I learned that when we are in our
deepest grief, when we feel farthest from God, this is when He is closest
and when we are most open to His restoring power.
And so I go on living for God, willingly and joyfully, until that day comes
when He will take me and gently lead me home.
Tommy Dorsey-
For those too young to know who he is, Tommy Dorsey was a band leader in the Thirties and Forties