Tuesday 6 July 2021

Were You There? (When They Crucified My Lord)

 "Were You There (When They Crucified My Lord)" is an American spiritual that was first printed in 1899.

"Were You There" was likely composed by enslaved African-Americans in the 19th century. It was first published in William Eleazar Barton's 1899 Old Plantation Hymns. In 1940, it was included in the Episcopal Church hymnal, making it the first spiritual to be included in any major American hymnal. As reported in Howard Thurman's autobiography, the song was one of Mahatma Gandhi's favorites. The song has been recorded by artists including Paul RobesonMarion WilliamsJohnny CashRoy AcuffPhil KeaggyMax RoachDiamanda GalásHarry BelafonteThe Seldom SceneDiamond Version (with Neil Tennant), Bayard RustinRajaton, and Chris Rice. A critic from the Indianapolis News wrote about Paul Robeson's rendition of Were You There, saying that "It was as startling and vivid a disclosure of reverent feeling of penetrating pathos as one could imagine."

“Were You There” utilizes a system of coded language in its lyrics like most, if not all, African-American spirituals. Metaphors, especially those involving Old Testament figures, as well as Jesus, are often central to the meanings of spirituals. “Were You There” tells the story of the Crucifixion of Jesus. Underneath this narrative, however, is a metaphor likening Jesus's suffering to the suffering of slaves. In some versions of the song, the singer asks “Were you there when they nailed Him to the Tree?” Replacing Jesus’ cross with a tree further strengthens the metaphor between Jesus’ suffering and slaves’ suffering. African-Americans during the antebellum period, and all the way into the Jim Crow era, would have drawn a connection between Jesus nailed to a tree and the frightening prevalence of lynchings in their own lives. This expression of likening one's experience to Jesus' is underscored by the first-person, present-tense perspective of “Were You There”; the singer personally witnesses the crucifixion. The use of first person pronouns in the spiritual reflects a sense of “communal selfhood” formed by African-American slaves in the face of oppression. It should also be noted that this particular hymn and the use of the first person perspective lends support to the idea of reincarnation. From a lyrical analysis standpoint this can be concluded that the author, may have been asking the question in the literal sense and thus everyone should remember the event as the listener should have been there.

To download the easy alphanotes and chords sheet music, look here. Enjoy!


Were you there when they crucified my Lord? (Were you there?)
Were you there when they crucified my Lord?
O sometimes it causes me to tremble! tremble! tremble!
Were you there when they crucified my Lord?

Were you there when they nail'd him to the cross? (Were you there?)
Were you there when they nail'd him to the cross?
O sometimes it causes me to tremble! tremble! tremble!
Were you there when they nail'd him to the cross?

Were you there when they pierced him in the side? (Were you there?)
Were you there when they pierced him in the side?
O sometimes it causes me to tremble! tremble! tremble!
Were you there when they pierced him in the side?

Were you there when the sun refused to shine? (Were you there?)
Were you there when the sun refused to shine?
O sometimes it causes me to tremble! tremble! tremble!
Were you there when the sun refused to shine?




















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