William Orcutt Cushing Explained

William Orcutt Cushing
Birth Date:31 December 1823
Birth Place:Hingham, Massachusetts, United States
Death Place:Searsburg, New York, United States
Church:Unitarian
Religion:Christian
Writings:300 Hymns
Offices Held:Unitarian minister
Pastor
Spouse:Hena

William Orcutt Cushing (31 December 1823 – 19 October 1902) was an American Unitarian minister and hymn writer from Hingham, Massachusetts.

Personal life

Cushing was born in 1823 in Hingham to Unitarian parents.[1] When he was a teenager and started to read The Bible alone, he became a follower of the Orthodox Christian school of thought. When he was 18, he stated that he felt that God wanted him to become a minister.[2]

Cushing remained true to Christian principles throughout his life. He once gave all of his life savings of $1,000 (approximately $ in 2013) to a blind girl in order for her to receive an education.[3]

Ministry

Cushing started his training to become a Unitarian minister based along his parents' theology.[4] His first posting as an ordained minister was to Searsburg, New York, west of Trumansburg. There he met his future wife, Hena,[5] and they were married in 1854. In the same year, Cushing wrote his first hymn, "When he Cometh", based on Malachi 3:17, for children in his Sunday School.[6]

Cushing then later went on to minister in a number of locations around New York until 1870 when Hena died, requiring Cushing to return to Searsburg. Shortly afterwards, Cushing suffered from a "creeping paralysis" that caused him to lose his voice, requiring him to retire from the ministry after 27 years in it.

Hymn writing

After having to retire from the ministry, Cushing asked God for something to do to occupy his time. He discovered he had a talent for hymn writing and made that a way to keep busy after work in the ministry. Throughout the rest of his life, Cushing wrote 300 hymns including "The Name of Jesus" and "Home at Last". In 1880, he co-wrote "Follow On" with Robert Lowry and W. Howard Doane. This hymn became popular and was associated with The Salvation Army; its tune was adopted by Scottish association football club, Rangers as the basis for their club anthem, "Follow Follow".[7]

Death

Cushing died on 19 October 1902 in Lisbon Center, New York. He was buried in the Jones Cemetery, near Searsburg.

References

  1. Web site: William Orcutt Cushing . Cyber Hymnal . 2013-04-05.
  2. Web site: William O. Cushing Sought to Follow Christ . Christianity.com . 2013-04-05.
  3. Book: Hooper, Wayne . Companion to the Seventh-Day Adventist hymnal . Review and Herald Publishing . 1988. 0828004250 . 253.
  4. Book: Hall, Jacob Henry . Biography of Gospel song and hymn writers . AMS Press . Pennsylvania . 1971. 0404072267 . 51.
  5. Book: Rogal . Samuel J. . Sing Glory and Hallelujah! Historical and Biographical Guide to Gospel Hymns Nos. 1 to 6 Complete . 1996 . Bloomsbury Academic . Cornell University Law Library, Management Library . 9780313296901 . 48.
  6. Book: Osbeck, Kenneth W. . Amazing Grace: 366 Inspiring Hymn Stories for Daily Devotions . Kregel Publications . 2 . 2002. 0825493528 . 94.
  7. Web site: Ibrox disaster memorial service . BBC Sport . 2011-01-03 . 2013-04-05.