The song became highly popular for decades after McKinley’s service. The tune and lyrics have been praised as “beautiful,” At the same time,
John D. Rockefeller was endorsing its use in church. In 1927,
William Henry O'Connell, the Catholic
Archbishop of Boston, banned the use of the tune in funerals, calling the hymn "inane" and "trashy." Cardinal O'Connell was concerned it was among a group of songs composed by authors whose "maudlin sentiment" overshadowed their faith. He threatened organists and choir directors who performed the piece with loss of their positions. Several Boston protestant ministers joined in criticizing the song at that time. Defenders of the hymn stated that descriptions of paradise were necessarily allegorical, and worried the ban would spread to other favorite hymns. A 1928
Lutheran publication used O'Connell's exact words when it described the song as a "sob-producer" that was a "flagrant outrage to faith and the ritual." In 1953,
Donald H. V. Hallock. the
Episcopal Bishop of Milwaukee, banned the use of this and other "popular" songs from use at
Episcopal services as they did not conform to the
rubric of the church. Some Christian theologians have taken issue with the song because it describes Heaven in nebulous terms. Criticisms aside, others have noted that this sentimental song is a "joy to sing." ==Recordings==