This hymn, beautiful in poetic imagery, is based on I Peter 5:7, “Casting all your care upon Him: for He careth for you.” When it first appeared, posthumously, in a book of hymns by the author, it bore the title, “God’s care a remedy for ours.”

Philip Doddridge was born in London, the youngest of a family of twenty, most of whom died in childhood. His father was an oil merchant. Before he could read, he had learned from his mother the stories of the Bible by the aid of Bible pictures on the Dutch tiles that covered a portion of the living room. Doddridge became a minister in the Congregational Church and devoted his life not only to preaching, but to writing books and teaching young men for the ministry. In 1751, he went to Lisbon to seek relief from tuberculosis but died there. He is the author of over 400 hymns, a few of which have survived, and are found in most hymn books. The Hymnary contains six of his compositions.

MUSIC. DENNIS. For comments on this tune see [Hymn 41].

57. Thou Grace Divine, encircling all

Eliza Scudder, 1821-96

The hymn was written by Eliza Scudder, an American hymn writer of the middle nineteenth century. She was born in Boston, and died in Weston, Massachusetts. She was a niece of Edmund H. Sears, author of “It came upon a midnight clear” ([No. 75]). Miss Scudder was a person of deep religious insight and lived a quiet, retiring life. She published a book of religious verse, Hymns and Sonnets, in 1880. During most of her active life she was a Unitarian, but in later life joined the Episcopal Church.

MUSIC. BALLERMA (misspelled Balerma in some editions of the Hymnary) is a very simple tune, the second pair of lines varying only slightly from the first pair. The origin of the tune is uncertain. It is thought to be an old Spanish melody, arranged by F. H. Barthélémon.

For comments on Barthélémon see [Hymn 2].

58. There’s a wideness in God’s mercy

F. W. Faber, 1814-63