I visited my mom, and my sister and her family in Huntsville, Alabama over the New Year's holiday. One evening we went to see the movie "True Grit." The original movie won John Wayne an Acadmey Award...which many folks thought was awarded not so much for his work in that particular movie but for his life-long work in films. It was, to my thinking, an OK movie, but nothing to write home about. The new re-make of the movie was, to my thinking, much better than the first. It was more pithy, more tense, more true to what I suppose life would have been like in the time in which the movie was set. And it most certainly was more true to the human nature I have any speaking acquaintance with, than was the original.
The background music, woven throughout the movie, was the old gospel song, "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms." I didn't expect that...in fact it took me some time to recognize the song as it played...sort of sparse-like, and in a country-music bluegrass style. A lady named Iris DeMent sings the song...what a wonderful voice she has.
I remember singing that song (and others like it...gospel songs) in the little-town church I grew up in. I was informed in seminary that my appreciation for these kinds of songs showed my low-brow taste in church music. Hymns are about "we" while gospel songs are about "me," I was told, and that would be a problem for someone going into church ministry.
That may be. But I took a very pleasant trip back in time during my watching of "True Grit." I watched the movie but let my memory travel back to small-town norhtern Indiana in the 1950s and early 60s.
I don't want to actually go back to "the good old days" (if they really ever were that), but I do admit that hearing "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms" while watching a good movie was a most pleasant surprise. Like good comfort food, I think.
Come to find out, the song was used in another movie, a 1943 film titled "The Human Comedy", starring Mickey Rooney. Like the new "True Grit," it was nominated for several Academy Awards.
What a fellowship, what a joy divine,
Leaning on the everlasting arms;
What a blessedness, what a peace is mine,
Leaning on the everlasting arms.
Refrain
Leaning, leaning, safe and secure from all alarms;
Leaning, leaning, leaning on the everlasting arms.
You know you started humming or singing that song when you saw those lyrics!
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