The Jordan in Song
Sidebar to: Bible Lands
Many rivers have inspired songs, but none more so than the Jordan. While we have songs about many rivers—“The Blue Danube,” “Ol’ Man River,” “Song of the Volga Boatman,” “On the Banks of the Wabash Far Away,” “Swanee River,” “Beautiful Ohio”—the Jordan has found its way into tens, if not hundreds, of American folk songs, spirituals and hymns.a In particular, African Americans saw in the Jordan a symbol of deliverance and freedom:
“Roll, Jordan, roll; roll, Jordan, roll.
I want to go to heaven when I die
To hear the Jordan roll.”
“Roll, Jordan, Roll” was the first spiritual in America to appear in sheet music. It was published in Philadelphia in 1862. The incomparable voice of Marian Anderson carried this spiritual into the hearts of millions of people throughout the world.
Another moving spiritual is “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot”:
“I looked over Jordan and what did I see,
Coming for to carry me home?
A band of angels coming after me,
Coming for to carry me home.”
This same sense of spiritual transition can be found in “Wayfaring Stranger,” sung by early settlers in DeKalb County, Tennessee:
“I’m just a poor wayfaring stranger
a-trav’ling through this world of woe;
But there’s no sickness, toil nor
danger in that bright world to which I go.
I’m going there to see my father,
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