Begone, unbelief!
- Genesis 22:14
- Exodus 15:23-25
- Judges 13:23
- 1 Chronicles 28:20
- Psalms 118:8-9
- Psalms 143:3
- Psalms 146:3
- Psalms 48:14
- Psalms 88:6-7
- Psalms 93:3-4
- Proverbs 3:5-6
- Isaiah 2:22
- Matthew 13:38
- Matthew 14:24-33
- Matthew 8:23-27
- Mark 10:30
- Mark 16:14
- Mark 4:35-41
- Mark 6:45-52
- Mark 6:6
- Mark 9:24
- Luke 12:32
- Luke 8:22-25
- John 10:28-29
- John 10:35
- John 15:20
- John 16:33
- John 16:8-9
- John 6:16-21
- Acts 14:22
- Romans 10:11
- Romans 12:12
- Romans 8:28
- Romans 9:33
- 1 Corinthians 1:8
- Philippians 1:6
- Philippians 4:19
- 1 Thessalonians 2:14-16
- 1 Thessalonians 3:3-4
- 2 Timothy 3:12
- Hebrews 12:11
- James 2:5
- 1 Peter 2:6
- Revelation 15:3-4
- Revelation 7:14-17
- 875
Begone, unbelief!
My Saviour is near
and for my relief
will surely appear:
by prayer let me wrestle
and prove that he saves;
with Christ in the vessel
I smile at the waves.
2. Though dark be my way,
since he is my guide,
then I must obey
and he will provide;
with human trust broken,
when mortals all fail,
the word he has spoken
shall surely prevail.
3. His love in time past
forbids me to think
he’ll leave me at last
in trouble to sink;
and can he have taught me
to trust in his name
and this far have brought me
to put me to shame?
4. Why should I complain
of want or distress,
temptation or pain?
He told me no less;
the heirs of salvation,
I know from his word,
through much tribulation
must follow their Lord.
5. Since all that I meet
shall work for my good,
the bitter is sweet,
the medicine is food;
the pain felt at present
will cease before long;
and then, O how pleasant
the conqueror’s song!
© In this version Praise Trust
John Newton 1725-1807
Downloadable Items
Would you like access to our downloadable resources?
Unlock downloadable content for this hymn by subscribing today. Enjoy exclusive resources and expand your collection with our additional curated materials!
Subscribe nowIf you already have a subscription, log in here to regain access to your items.
The story behind the hymn
John Newton the sailor became Newton the preacher, pastor and hymnwriter—but the sea and its storms and ships have a habit of returning to his thoughts and writings. This item from the 1779 Olney Hymns comes in a ‘Conflict’ section but is headed ‘I will trust and not be afraid’. It is the best kind of sea-shanty, and makes a startling but not untypical juxtaposition with the next hymn (876) from the same book. The 2nd half of the original 4th stz (‘and can he have taught me …’ is here joined to the 1st half of the 3rd (‘His love in time past …’); omitted lines are the highly autobiographical, ‘Determined to save,/ he watched o’er my path,/ when Satan’s blind slave,/ I sported with death …’) and the difficult ‘each sweet Ebenezer/ I have in review …’ Newton’s stz 6 is also dropped: ‘How bitter the cup,/ no heart can conceive,/ which he drank quite up,/ that sinners might live!’ One regret could be the loss of what follows, ‘His way was much rougher/ and darker than mine …’ Of the retained lines, 1.6,8 were ‘and he will perform … / I smile at the storm’; 2.3–6 read ‘’Tis mine to obey,/ ’tis his to provide/ tho’ cisterns be broken,/ and creatures …’; and in 5.5 the syntax was not entirely clear (‘Tho’ painful at present,/ will cease …’). This text, wrote the reforming journalist William T Stead (1849–1912), ‘can lay no claim to pre-eminent merit as poetry’, but it was ‘the hymn which helped me most’; see J Telford, The New Methodist Hymn Book Illustrated (1934), p261. As well as the Gospel reference in stz 1, it memorably uses Acts 14:22 with Hebrews 1:14 in 4.5–8. If we lose Jeremiah 2:13 with the ‘cisterns’ and 1 Samuel 7:12 with the ‘Ebenezers’, the revised 2.5–6 bring to mind Psalm 146:3 and Isaiah 2:22, among other texts.
Both the set tune HOUGHTON by Henry J Gauntlett (767) and the alternative PADERBORN (584) are favourites for 104, O worship the King, the former having been composed for it. As the metre is a favourite with John Newton, it is no surprise to find it also used with his Though troubles assail.
A look at the author
Newton, John
b Wapping, E London 1725, d City of London 1807. His early life ‘might form the groundwork of a story by Defoe, but that it transcends all fiction’—Ellerton. When he was not quite 7 his godly mother died; his father, a merchant navy captain, found the new situation, and his son, hard to handle but took him to sea when he was 11. Back on shore at 18 or 19 John was press-ganged for the royal navy, and recaptured and flogged after desertion. A life of increasing godlessness and depravity on board ship was relieved only by his love for Mary Catlett of Chatham, Kent, whom he had met when he was 17 and she was 14. But he had to sink as low as to be ‘a servant of slaves’ (JN) on the W African coast, and have many brushes with death, when the only book he had was a copy of Euclid’s geometry. Strangely still a non-swimmer, he was almost drowned during a storm at sea before (even more surprisingly) he dipped into The Imitation of Christ by Thomas à Kempis and eventually ‘came to himself’. After a series of providential events he finally arrived on the Irish coast. Now 23, he renewed his attachment to Mary before another African voyage as ship’s mate; this time he was laid low by fever, but during that time made his decisive Christian commitment—or rather, simply cast himself on the mercy of God in Christ. In 1750 John and Mary were married. He accompanied or captained several ships on the notorious Atlantic slavetrade, and came with what seems surprising slowness to see the inconsistency of this with his growing Christian faith. Eventually he was to be a supporter of Wm Wilberforce, Thos Clarkson, Granville Sharp and James Stephen; while he came to oppose slavery itself, he was not as consistent or prominent a campaigner as they, and did not list the trade among Britain’s national sins. Further illness in 1754 compelled him to give up his seafaring career and he spent 9 years as Liverpool’s tide surveyor, including leading a large team of inspectors for contraband. He made a friend of Wm Grimshaw, vicar of Haworth, and of Lord Dartmouth who read his story in ms (see also under Fawcett and Haweis). With Dartmouth’s help and after many difficulties he was admitted to ordination (CofE) and in 1764 became curate, effectively incumbent, of Olney, Bucks.
Here Newton became the means of enlightening his neighbour clergyman Thos Scott, whose cynical rationalism was transformed through Newton’s patient and courteous witness into clear evangelical faith. Scott became a noted Bible commentator and published his testimony (re-issued in the 20th c) as The Force of Truth. More famously, Newton became the close friend of William Cowper (qv); he compiled the Olney Hymns (1779) partly with a view to helping Cowper to regain a sense of purpose and use his poetic gifts for the gospel; JN’s Preface claims that ‘I am not conscious of having written a single line with an intention, either to flatter or to offend any party or person on earth’. While many of Newton’s hymns on prayer are searching and lasting (and ‘grace’ is a favourite word), his positive, objective cheerfulness generally provides an excellent foil to Cowper’s sometimes wistful and questioning introspection. Comparisons of the two men’s contributions are common; Montgomery is typical in elevating Cowper, but Lord Selborne speaks for others in balancing Newton’s ‘manliness’ with his friend’s ‘tenderness’, and in clear biblical doctrine they were one. One unexpected result of the book and a sign of its wide and enduring influence was the spur it gave to the RC convert F W Faber (1814–63), as he acknowledged, to try to emulate it for his fellow-Romans some 75 years later. Some extraordinary ‘invective’ (Dr W T Cairns’s word, HSB16, July 1941) has been directed against Newton, by David Cecil and others, for his supposedly malign influence on Cowper. His article examines the evidence for and against such assertions, observing incidentally that ‘neither Cowper nor Newton seems to have been conscious of the alleged unfortunate effect of this association’. JN features more positively in some lines from Wordsworth’s major autobiographical poem The Prelude (begun 1798, final posthumous version 1850), Bk 6.
In 1779 Newton became Rector of St Mary Woolnoth in the City of London, where at that time evangelical incumbents were almost unknown. He ministered there until his death, having lost much of his hearing and sight, surviving his beloved Mary by 17 years. Among other publications, some posthumous, were his sermons and even more remarkable letters to many friends (Cardiphonia, partly republished in the 1960s). A memorial tablet in the city church outlines his story, which has often been made the subject of popular biographies. Among recent books are Brian Edwards’ Through Many Dangers (1975, revised edn 1980), Bernard Braley’s study in Hymnwriters 2 (1989), and Steve Turner’s Amazing Grace (2002; see Introduction to the present book); all of which are complemented by Adam Hochschild’s eloquently disturbing Bury the Chains: the British struggle to abolish slavery (2005). Until fairly recently brief biographical notes on Newton made no mention of Amazing grace; for many now it seems to be the most important fact about him. The John Newton Project currently aims to promote evangelical renewal through the study and appreciation of Newton’s contribution to gospel work and the ending of the slave trade 2 centuries ago. In 2000 Marilynn Rouse, founder leader of the Project, published her edited and annotated edn of Richard Cecil’s 1808 biography. Nos.276, 299, 313*, 326, 570, 600, 602, 603, 607, 717, 767, 772, 791, 875, 903, 958.