187. I need Thee every hour
Annie Sherwood Hawks, 1835-1918
A song expressing the Christian believer’s ever-present sense of divine help and guidance. It first appeared in a small collection of gospel songs prepared for the National Baptist Sunday School Association which met in Cincinnati, Ohio, November, 1872, and was sung there.
Mrs. Annie Sherwood Hawks was an active member of the Baptist Church in Brooklyn of which Rev. Robert Lowry, who wrote the music to the words and added the refrain, was the pastor. Concerning the hymn, Mrs. Hawks wrote:
Whenever my attention is called to it I am conscious of great satisfaction in the thought that I was permitted to write the hymn, “I need Thee every hour,” and that it was wafted out to the world on the wings of love and joy, rather than under stress of a great personal sorrow, with which it has so often been associated in the minds of those who sing it.
I remember well the morning ... when in the midst of the daily cares of my home ... I was so filled with the sense of nearness to the Master that, wondering how one could live without Him either in joy or pain, these words, “I need Thee every hour,” were ushered into my mind, the thought at once taking full possession of me....
For myself the hymn was prophetic rather than expressive of my own experience at the time it was written, and I do not understand why it so touched the great throbbing heart of humanity. It was not until long years after, when the shadow fell over my way—the shadow of a great loss—that I understood something of the comforting in the words I had been permitted to write and give out to others in my hours of sweet security and peace.
MUSIC. NEED. The tune was written for this hymn. The composer, Rev. Robert Lowry, 1826-99, was born in Philadelphia and educated at Bucknell University. After a few years in the Baptist ministry he became Professor of Rhetoric at his alma mater. The University gave him his doctorate in 1875. He resigned his chair in 1875 and the following year resumed the work of the ministry at Plainfield, N. J., continuing until his death. Though he had no serious training in music, Lowry wrote many tunes and edited several popular collections of hymns. He did much to encourage the gospel song movement in America.