Sit down beneath his shadow

Scriptures:
  • 1 Kings 18:21
  • Job 29:14
  • Psalms 132:9
  • Psalms 27:4
  • Psalms 55:22
  • Isaiah 32:2
  • Isaiah 33:17
  • Isaiah 61:10
  • Ezekiel 34:11-16
  • Zechariah 3:3-5
  • Matthew 11:28-30
  • Matthew 16:27
  • Matthew 24:30-51
  • Matthew 26:27-29
  • Matthew 26:64
  • Matthew 8:11
  • Mark 13:26-37
  • Mark 14:23-25
  • Mark 14:62
  • Mark 8:38
  • Luke 12:32
  • Luke 13:29
  • Luke 21:27
  • Luke 22:17-20
  • Luke 23:42
  • John 1:43
  • John 10:11
  • John 10:14-15
  • John 12:26
  • John 17:20
  • John 17:24
  • 2 Corinthians 5:6-8
  • 1 Thessalonians 4:17
  • 2 Timothy 2:8
  • Hebrews 13:20-21
  • 1 Peter 5:4
  • 1 Peter 5:7
  • 1 John 3:2
  • Revelation 19:9
Book Number:
  • 658

Sit down beneath his shadow
and rest with great delight;
the faith that now beholds him
is pledge of future sight.

2. Our Master’s love remember,
so great and free and true;
lift up your heart in gladness,
for he remembers you.

3. Bring every weary burden:
your sin, your fear, your grief;
he calls the heavy-laden
and gives them kind relief.

4. His righteousness all-glorious
my festal robe shall be;
and love surpassing knowledge
his banner over me.

5. Though parted for a moment,
remember, wait and love
until he comes in glory,
until we meet above.

6. Till in the Father’s kingdom
the heavenly feast is spread
and we behold his beauty
whose blood for us was shed.

Frances R Havergal 1836-79

The Church - The Lord's Supper

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Tune

  • Barton
    Barton
    Metre:
    • 76 76
    Composer:
    • Knecht, Justin Heinrich

The story behind the hymn

With the exception of three hymnals since the 1960s (including GH which, however, omits stz 4), this Communion hymn of Frances Ridley Havergal’s has remained something of a hidden treasure. She wrote it at her home in Leamington, Warwicks, on 27 Nov 1870, the year of her father’s death, and it was published in Under the Surface (1874) and Life’s Mosaic (1879). It touches on verses from the Song of Songs, notably 2:3, while keeping in view the past, present and future work of Christ for us. Stz 2 read ‘… exceeding great and free … for thee’; Matthew 11:28 is used in stz 3, and as the key text of her devotional book of daily readings, The Royal Invitation, which also draws on SofS 2:10 etc. Stz 5 began ‘A little while though parted’.

The tune known as BARTON, KOCHER, or KNECHT after its composer Justin H Knecht, has commonly been used with J M Neale’s O happy band of pilgrims since the original A&M. It first appeared in Christmann and Knecht’s Vollständige Sammlung … Choralmelodion published in Stuttgart in 1799. GH uses it for this hymn, while others choose the Vulpius/Bach CHRISTUS DER IST MEIN LEBEN.

A look at the author

Havergal, Frances Ridley

b Astley, Worcs 1836, d Caswell Bay, Oystermouth, nr Swansea, Glam 1879. Named after a distant ancestor, the Protestant martyr Bp Nicholas Ridley, she was a bubbly personality growing up as her father’s favourite in an evangelical and musical family. A gifted linguist from her Worcester childhood onwards, she learned Lat, Gk and Heb as well as French, German and Italian. She was reading and memorising Bible portions from the age of 4 (and later in their original languages), writing verse from 7 onwards, proficient at the piano and in singing, teaching younger Sunday School children at 9, and at 14 made a decisive commitment to Christ—which for her meant service as well as belonging. This was the year when, following her mother’s death, she followed her older sisters to boarding school at Campden House. Caroline Cooke, who led her to the point of clear decision, was soon to marry Frances’s widowed father. From 1859 onwards she worked energetically in support of the (evangelistic) Irish Society. Uncertain health did not prevent her from travelling to the continent including a further (and strictly discipined) educational year in Düsseldorf, Germany, and five journeys to the Swiss Alps where she revelled in some adventurous climbing—not unique among Victorian ladies but far more demanding for them than for their modern counterparts. In her ‘love affair with the Alps’ she was constantly moved by the mountain scenery to adoration of the Creator. By 1860 she was contributing verse to the journal Good Words and her own first collection came in 1869/71 with The Ministry of Song (5th edn 1888). She was also now a solo singer with the Kidderminster Philharmonic Soc. Her father’s death in 1870, and an attack of typhoid, spurred her to further travel and intense literary and mission work including her best-known hymns.

On Advent Sunday 1873 she experienced a deep spiritual renewal; her pursuit of holiness in no way lessened the lighter touch of her wit and humour. She was a keen supporter of the early Mildmay and Keswick Conferences (later the ‘Convention’—while remaining wary of what she saw as some of its extremes), CMS (which featured 12 of her hymns in its centenary collection The Church Missionary Hymn Book of 1899) and other evangelical causes at home and abroad. The Rev Charles Busbridge Snepp enlisted her help in editing his Songs of Grace and Glory; Hymnal Treasures of the Church of Christ from the 6th to the 19th Centuries (1872-74) and became a personal friend. This book went through many editions. FRH corresponded with the American Fanny Crosby (see notes to Frances J Van Alstyne): ‘Dear blind singer over the sea,/ this English heart goes forth to thee./ Sister, what will our meeting be/ when our hearts shall sing, our eyes shall see!’ In 1879, the final year of her relatively short life, she wrote the last of her dozen or so books, Kept for the Master’s Use. She had recently turned down the last of several proposals of marriage; and she died in June before being able to address a Church Congress at Swansea in October. Her place was taken by John Ellerton, qv, who began by saying that ‘the hymns of this lady will live long in the heart of the church’.

Frances’s sister Maria published Memorials of Frances Ridley Havergal in 1880, and her verse was collected posthumously as Poetical Works (2 vols, 1884). Church Hymns (SPCK 1871) was the first hymnal to include her work; by its 5th edn, Hymns of Consecration and Faith featured 5 items of FRH’s words and music combined, with a further 19 hymn texts and 3 tunes. Hymns of Faith (1964) has 18 of her texts; 5 are included in the 2006 Evangelical Lutheran Worship. Most hymns appeared first as leaflets; most are addressed to Christ. Biographies include those by T H Darlow (1927) and Janet Grierson (published by the Havergal Society on the centenary of her death, 1979), and her writings for children have been reprinted as recently as 2005. She also appears as a rare hymnwriter in J G Lawson’s eccentric but useful Deeper Experiences of Famous Christians (1911). John Ellerton says, ‘Christ was her King; she loved to call him so‘; to Spurgeon she was the ‘last and loveliest of our modern poets’ and Pamela Bugden points out that ‘the esteem…was mutual’ (Ever, only, ALL for Thee, 2007). Nancy Cho, who in 2007 completed her work on women hymnwriters, ranks her as the foremost. See also Carol Purves, Travels with Frances Ridley Havergal, Day One ‘Travel Guide’ series, 2010. Nos.515, 658, 698, 728, 799, 850, 854, 859, 860.