His Truth Is Marching On

A Nation Divided Then and Now

There are seasons in a nation’s life when the fractures become impossible to ignore, when the ideological divides grow so deep they begin to feel like canyons, when political tensions, cultural confusion, racial wounds, and spiritual drift all converge into a single heavy fog that settles over the land. We are living in such a season now, and in many ways it mirrors another moment in our history, a moment when America was not merely divided by opinion but torn apart by war, a moment when brother fought against brother and the future of the Republic trembled under the weight of its own contradictions. It was into that moment, into the darkness of 1861, into the early days of the Civil War, that God stirred the heart of Julia Ward Howe and gave her a hymn that would outlive the war, outlive the century, and outlive the nation itself. It was not a patriotic anthem. It was not a celebration of national pride. It was a prophetic declaration of divine justice, a reminder that the Lord of Hosts still walks among the nations, and that His truth does not falter, does not waver, and does not bow to the rise and fall of earthly kingdoms.

His truth is marching on.


The Birth of a Prophetic Hymn

Julia Ward Howe had visited Union Army camps near Washington, D.C., where soldiers were singing a rough marching tune called John Brown’s Body. A minister suggested that she might write better words for that melody, something worthy of the moment, something that lifted the eyes of weary soldiers beyond the battlefield and toward the throne of God. In the quiet hours before dawn, she awoke with a stirring she could not ignore, reached for a pencil, and wrote the entire hymn in one uninterrupted flow. What she wrote was not a song of America. It was a song of the coming King. It was a hymn saturated with Scripture, drawn from the imagery of Isaiah 63:1–3, where the Lord treads the winepress of judgment; from Revelation 19:11–16, where the Rider on the white horse comes with eyes like fire; and from Joel 3:12–14, where the nations gather in the valley of decision. It was a hymn of warning, a hymn of justice, a hymn of truth.

And in the middle of that hymn, she wrote the line that still carries prophetic weight today: “Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord.” It was not the march of an army, but the march of truth. It was not the triumph of a political cause, but the triumph of the Lamb who was slain and who lives forevermore.

His truth is marching on.


The Scriptural Backbone of the Hymn

The Scriptures speak clearly about the unshakable nature of divine truth. “The grass withers, the flower fades, but the word of our God shall stand forever.” (Isaiah 40:8). Nations rise and nations fall, but the Word of the Lord does not bend beneath the weight of cultural change or political upheaval. “Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people.” (Proverbs 14:34). The moral fractures we see today are not new; they are the same fractures that have appeared in every nation that forgets God. And yet, even in the midst of these fractures, even in the midst of this cultural fog, even in the midst of this national shaking, one truth remains unshaken.

His truth is marching on.


The Battle We Face Today

The battles we face today are not fought with muskets or cannons, nor are they waged on open fields or marked by lines of infantry. They are fought in the unseen realm, in the spiritual trenches where truth and deception collide, where righteousness and unrighteousness contend, where the love of God confronts the love of the flesh. Scripture tells us plainly, “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.” (Ephesians 6:12). The cultural battles we see are merely the surface ripples of a deeper spiritual war.

Paul writes, “For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other.” (Galatians 5:17). And again, “Be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind.” (Romans 12:2). The great divide in our nation is not merely political or ideological; it is spiritual. It is the clash between truth and deception, between holiness and rebellion, between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of darkness.

And yet, even in this battle, even in this conflict, even in this spiritual war that rages beneath the surface of our culture, one reality remains unchanged.

His truth is marching on.


True Liberty vs. National Liberty

The Fourth of July reminds us of the cost of earthly freedom, but the gospel reminds us of the cost of eternal freedom. One was purchased with the blood of patriots. The other was purchased with the blood of Christ. One can be lost. The other cannot. One depends on the stability of a nation. The other depends on the sovereignty of God. One rises and falls with the tides of history. The other stands unshaken from everlasting to everlasting.

America celebrates independence, but the believer celebrates deliverance. America celebrates freedom from tyranny, but the believer celebrates freedom from sin. America celebrates the birth of a nation, but the believer celebrates the resurrection of a Savior. “If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.” (John 8:36). Political liberty may falter. Spiritual liberty does not. Political freedom may be threatened. Spiritual freedom cannot be touched.

His truth is marching on.


A Prophetic Word for a Fractured Nation

President Reagan once warned, “If we ever forget that we are One Nation Under God, then we will be a nation gone under.” We are watching that warning unfold in real time, not because God has abandoned the nation, but because the nation has abandoned God. But the believer does not lose hope, because the believer knows that the march of truth does not depend on the stability of earthly kingdoms. It depends on the sovereignty of God.

The hymn Julia Ward Howe wrote was not a patriotic anthem but a prophetic declaration. It was a reminder that Christ is coming, and that His truth does not bow to the rise and fall of nations. It was a warning to a divided America then, and it is a warning to a divided America now.

His truth is marching on.


The March Toward the Coming King

And so we return to the hymn, not as a patriotic song but as a prophetic proclamation. We return to the line that has carried the weight of generations. We return to the truth that outlives nations and outlasts empires. We return to the reminder that Christ is coming, and that His truth is still marching on. Nations rise and nations fall. Empires flourish and empires crumble. Foundations crack and foundations collapse. But the Word of the Lord endures forever, and the truth of God marches forward with a cadence that cannot be silenced by the noise of culture or the chaos of politics.

In a divided America, in a fractured society, in a nation forgetting the God who once blessed it, His truth is still marching on. It marches through the pages of Scripture. It marches through the hearts of believers. It marches through the testimony of the redeemed. It marches through the gospel preached in pulpits and whispered in quiet prayers. It marches through the darkness with a light that cannot be extinguished. It marches through the fog with a clarity that cannot be blurred. It marches through the chaos with a peace that cannot be shaken. And it marches toward the day when the glory of the coming of the Lord will be seen not in a hymn, not in a vision, not in a prophecy, but in the sky itself as the King of Kings returns in triumph.

His truth is marching on.


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