All the way my Saviour leads me
- Genesis 24:48
- Exodus 17:5-6
- Exodus 33:14
- Numbers 20:7-11
- Deuteronomy 8:15-16
- Nehemiah 9:15
- Psalms 103:4
- Psalms 107:7
- Psalms 119:156
- Psalms 119:77
- Psalms 145:9
- Psalms 48:14
- Psalms 77:20
- Psalms 78:15-16
- Isaiah 49:10
- Isaiah 58:11
- Mark 7:37
- Luke 1:79
- John 10:3-4
- John 14:2-3
- John 6:51
- 1 Corinthians 15:51-54
- 2 Corinthians 5:1-4
- Galatians 2:20
- Ephesians 3:19
- Hebrews 4:16
- Hebrews 4:9
- 869
All the way my saviour leads me:
what have I to ask beside?
Can I doubt his tender mercy
who through life has been my guide?
O what heavenly peace and comfort
here by faith in him to dwell!
For whatever may befall me,
Jesus will do all things well.
For whatever may befall me,
Jesus will do all things well.
2. All the way my Saviour leads me:
cheers each winding path I tread,
gives me grace for every trial,
feeds me with the living bread.
Though my weary feet may stumble
and my soul may thirsty be,
pouring from the rock before me,
there a spring of joy I see.
Pouring from the rock before me,
there a spring of joy I see.
3. All the way my Saviour leads me:
O the fulness of his love!
Perfect rest to me is promised
in my Father’s house above.
When my spirit, clothed, immortal,
flies to heaven’s eternal day,
this my song through endless ages,
‘Jesus led me all the way!’
This my song through endless ages,
‘Jesus led me all the way!’
© In this version Praise Trust
Frances J Van Alstyne 1820-1915
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Tune
-
All The Way (extended) Metre: - 87 87D (extended)
Composer: - Lowry, Robert
The story behind the hymn
The story is told (eg by Cliff Knight) of this hymn being a direct response to a prayer by the author which was simply and immediately answered. Frances van Alstyne (Fanny Crosby) was in urgent need of 5 dollars, and a stranger arrived with the required note in his hand. Like most blind people, she never wanted to trade on her sightlessness; at the same time, our awareness of it now will inevitably enhance our appreciation of what this hymn conveys, sentence by sentence. It was published in the 1875 book Brightest and Best, headed ‘Jesus the Guide’. The original text had at 1.5 ‘Heavenly peace, divinest comfort’ (but nothing can be more or less ‘divine’) and at 1.7–8 ‘… I know whate’er befall me/ Jesus doeth …’ 2.5–8 read ‘… weary steps may falter,/ … a-thirst may be,/ gushing … / Lo! a spring …’; and 3.6, ‘wings its flight to realms of day’. If Deuteronomy 8:2 is the clue to the beginning of stz 1, then Genesis 1:31 and Mark 7:37 are clues to its end. For these concluding lines, cf S Medley’s 18th-c O for a heart prepared to sing, with its characteristic repeats of ‘my Jesus hath done all things well.’
Robert Lowry’s tune ALL THE WAY was composed for these words and first appeared with them in Ira Sankey’s Sacred Songs and Solos. For once, the built-in repetitions seem to help rather than hinder. Linda Mawson’s arrangement was made for Praise! An alternative, Smart’s BETHANY (115) was suggested by Golden Bells but (it seems) rarely used with these words.
A look at the author
Alstyne, Frances Jane Van (Fanny Crosby)
b Southeast, Putnam County, NY, USA 1820, d 1915. Born into the extensive Crosby clan, the 17th-c founders of Harvard College, in a single-storey cottage in a rural community, Puritan in faith and culture, she was blinded when 6 weeks old. This was due to a disastrous misjudgement by an unqualified doctor who prescribed a hot mustard poultice for her inflamed eyes which destroyed her sight. Her father died that same year; widowed at 21, her mother entrusted Fanny’s upbringing to the child’s godly and sensitive grandmother. Fanny soon developed a keen ear and extraordinarily retentive mind, memorizing the Pentateuch, the Gospels, Proverbs, the Song of Songs, Ruth, and many Psalms. At 12 she entered the New York School (or Institution) for the Blind, remaining until she was 24 and learning to love classic poetry as well as writing comic verse, and to which she later returned aged 27 as a teacher. In Nov 1850 came a decisive moment of commitment during the Broadway Tabernacle’s ‘revival’ meetings, when the ‘something missing’ in her busy religious activities was fully met as they sang Alas, and did my Saviour bleed (411). In 1858 she married her fellow-student and Braille instructor, the blind musician Alexander van Alstyne. Their one baby died in infancy; they lived briefly on Long Island before returning to Manhattan in 1860, but later came to live largely separate lives. Fanny’s home from 1900 was in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and ‘Van’ died in 1902.
Beginning to write verse when she was 7 or 8, Fanny began her ‘real writing of Christian hymns’ as an adult, prompted by Wm B Bradbury. She went on to write several thousand (according to Grove, 9000) gospel songs and hymns, in regular metre with a straightforward, experience-centred message, usually set to simple, instantly singable tunes, which often outsold the secular chart-toppers of the day. For many years she wrote 3 or 4 a week, usually at night, which were then copied from her memory in the morning. Some were first published anonymously or using up to 200 other names; the bulk of them date from 1864 to 1889, the 1870s (by which time she was well-known) proving a specially productive decade. From her first text onwards (We are going, we are going, to a home beyond the skies) heaven was a frequent theme. But the first to gain worldwide use was Pass me not, O gentle Saviour (1868) on a topic suggested by Wm H Doane, which was very popular in the Moody and Sankey missions as in London in 1874. Ira Sankey sang her hymns in public for some time before they met, and then became a great friend, notably after he too lost his sight. She gave away most of her earnings, to further the work of the gospel particularly among New York city’s alcoholics and homeless people in whom she also took a practical and generous interest. Though she was the guest and even personal friend of 6 US presidents, her own urban lifestyle remained simple. Among varied biographies are Fanny Crosby’s Story by S Trevena Jackson (a devotional memoir, 1915); Fanny Crosby by Bernard Ruffin (1976); Fanny Crosby speaks again (a useful summary plus 120 texts, edited by Donald P Hustad, 1977); Fanny Crosby by Bonnie C Harvey (1999) and Her Heart Can See (a major biography by Edith L Blumhofer, 2005); see also the notes to Frances Havergal. Although many of her hymns have now passed out of fashion, 10 were chosen for Hymns of Faith (1964) while GH had 12 and CH, 7. The N American Worship and Rejoice (2001) has 6. Nos.328, 670, 676, 869.