Ira Sankey, good friend of hymn author Fanny Crosby, once related this story about the comfort “Blessed Assurance” provides:
“’During the recent war in the Transvaal,’ said a gentleman at my meeting in Exeter Hall, London, in 1900, ‘when the soldiers going to the front were passing another company whom they recognized, their greetings used to be, “Four-nine-four, boys; four-nine-four;” and the salute would invariably be answered with “Six further on, boys; six further on.” The significance of this was that, in ‘Sacred Songs and Solos,’ a number of copies of the small edition of which had been sent to the front, number 494 was ‘God be with you till we meet again’; and six further on than 494, or number 500, was ‘Blessed Assurance, Jesus is mine’” (My Life and Sacred Songs, 69).
From the very day she wrote them, Crosby’s words have provided comfort for millions of Christians in the face of fear, persecution, sorrow, and doubt. In spite of all the trials that may come, we know that we serve a Savior who came to bring the Kingdom of God on earth, and as we serve Him, we participate in, and belong to, that Kingdom. We each play our own part in that “glorious foretaste” of what is still to come. We belong to Christ and his Kingdom – what an assurance this is!
Text:
For a hymn as well loved as this one, there is, oddly enough, some division about the text. Paul Westermeyer writes that “some sing it with fervor, while others are offended by what they perceive as smug and self-assured inwardness” (Let the People Sing, 306). I would argue the text speaks of comfort and hope, not smugness, and is a very fitting hymn in the face of trials.
Second, some traditions have replaced Crosby’s original second verse which reads:
“Perfect submission, perfect delight,
visions of rapture now burst on my sight;
angels descending, bring from above
echoes of mercy, whispers of love.”
While the word “rapture” might immediately conjure up images of the end times and dispensationalist thinking, it is unlikely that this is what Crosby meant by the word. Crosby would probably only have heard about dispensationalist thinking after her good friend Dwight Moody did, and he became a proponent of that belief only after Crosby had written the hymn.
It is more likely that Crosby is referring in this verse to her experiences within the Holiness Movement. This offshoot of nineteenth-century Methodism emphasized “Christian perfection,” and a defining characteristic of this tradition was the ultimate conversion experience or the “total submission” of one’s self in an ecstatic encounter with God.
However, there could be a third, very powerful meaning to the verse. Fanny Crosby was blind from a very young age. Thus, the line “visions of rapture now burst on my sight” speaks of things being right with the world. It is a testimony of faith in the New Heaven and New Earth where the deaf would hear and the blind receive sight. This is a stanza that reminds us that God is restoring this world and making all things new, and what a vision of beauty that will be.
Tune:
The tune for this hymn, aptly entitled ASSURANCE, was actually written before the words. The tune is very simple to sing since if follows the same rhythmic pattern throughout, but be careful to establish the length of held notes after each phrase and keep that consistent throughout the hymn. It’s easy to hold the second dotted quarter in the first line twice as long as you should, and that will drastically alter the rhythm of the rest of the song.
For powerful harmonies, check out The Isaacs’ a cappella rendition. Avalon has a version of the song that’s big and upbeat and great for worship bands. Alan Jackson has a classic country rendition of the hymn.
When/Why/How:
This hymn can be sung throughout the liturgical year as a hymn of comfort and a declaration of faith in times of trial or struggle. It is a powerful hymn of assurance, or it could be sung as a response to a sermon about God’s providence and salvation of His people. It would also work as a closing hymn to end a service that moves from an acknowledgement of pain and struggle to an assurance of the hope we have in Christ.
Alternative Harmonization for Organ:
Alternative Harmonization for Piano:
Other music to consider:
Laura de Jong,
Hymnary.org