Revelation 2:25 That which you have,
hold fast til I come!
BE GRATEFUL...
Yesterday is gone; thank God for today!
The battle rages but hold the fort!
Yesterday is gone; thank God for today!
The battle rages but hold the fort!
We all have those days when life
gets too difficult to bear. Thank God for a new day where things seem brighter
and better. This morning a very good friend of mine, Charisse, whom I have
known for over thirty years, left me a message. In that messages she wrote HOLD
THE FORT…it brought to mind this song.
Below is an article along with the
words to the song Hold the Fort.
If you are struggling this morning,
life has kicked you just a little too hard … remember…Hold the Fort For I am
coming Jesus signals still…wave the answer back to heaven…by thy grace we will!
Philip P. Bliss, 1870. Bliss wrote this song after hearing Daniel Whittle relate the following incident from
the American civil war:
Just
before [William Tecumseh] Sherman began his famous march to the sea in 1864,
and while his army lay camped in the neighborhood of Atlanta on the 5th of
October, the army of Hood, in a carefully prepared movement, passed the right
flank of Sherman’s army, gained his rear, and commenced the destruction of the
railroad leading north, burning blockhouses and capturing the small garrisons
along the line. Sherman’s army was put in rapid motion pursuing Hood, to save
the supplies and larger posts, the principal one of which was located at
Altoona Pass. General Corse, of Illinois, was stationed there with about
fifteen hundred men, Colonel Tourtelotte being second in command. A million and
a half rations were stored here and it was highly important that the earthworks
commanding the pass and protecting the supplies be held. Six thousand men under
command of General French were detailed by Hood to take the position. The works
were completely surrounded and summoned to surrender. Corse refused and a sharp
fight commenced. The defenders were slowly driven into a small fort on the
crest of the hill. Many had fallen, and the result seemed to render a
prolongation of the fight hopeless. At this moment an officer caught sight of a
white signal flag far away across the valley, twenty miles distant, upon the
top of Kenesaw Mountain. The signal was answered, and soon the message was
waved across from mountain to mountain:
Hold
the fort; I am coming. W. T. Sherman.
Cheers
went up; every man was nerved to a full appreciation of the position; and under
a murderous fire, which killed or wounded more than half the men in the
fort—Corse himself being shot three times through the head, and Tourtelotte
taking command, though himself badly wounded—they held the fort for three hours
until the advance guard of Sherman’s army came up. French was obliged to
retreat.
Sankey,
pp. 150-1
Philip P. Bliss (1838-1876)
Ho, my comrades! see the signal waving in the sky!
Reinforcements now appearing, victory is nigh.
Reinforcements now appearing, victory is nigh.
Refrain
Hold the fort, for I am coming, Jesus signals still;
Wave the answer back to Heaven, By Thy grace we will.
Wave the answer back to Heaven, By Thy grace we will.
See the mighty host advancing, Satan leading on;
Mighty ones around us falling, courage almost gone!
Mighty ones around us falling, courage almost gone!
Refrain
See the glorious banner waving! Hear the trumpet blow!
In our leader’s name we triumph over ev’ry foe.
In our leader’s name we triumph over ev’ry foe.
Refrain
Fierce and long the battle rages, but our help is near;
Onward comes our great commander, cheer, my comrades, cheer!
Onward comes our great commander, cheer, my comrades, cheer!
Refrain
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