Missing Verses
If you have a large library of hymnals, and books on hymn history, as I do, or if you check a well-researched Web site such as the Cyber Hymnal, you will discover that many of the hymns we know and love have additional stanzas that are seldom, if ever, printed in today’s hymn books.
The reasons for this are varied. Sometimes, the verses omitted are of relatively poor poetic quality, or they may express a doctrinal position that is questionable. Sometimes, it is a bow to contemporary culture–because most congregations today would be unwilling to sing eight or ten stanzas. (Often three or four seem to tax us!) Many times, however, it seems to be simply a matter of space and keeping hymn books from becoming unmanageably large.
That being said, there are some unsung treasures in the missing stanzas of our hymns. It is worthwhile doing a bit of research on this. And if you are a pastor, or worship leader, you may be able to print a missing stanza in the bulletin, occasionally, or include it on an overhead. It will be an added blessing for all who think they already know the hymn.
Following are a few examples.
Why, for instance, would editors omit this stanza of There Shall Be Showers of Blessing which contains a key principle of application:
There shall be showers of blessing,
If we but trust and obey;
There shall be seasons refreshing,
If we let God have His way.
There is a worshipful stanza of Fairest Lord Jesus that few hymn books include:
All fairest beauty, heavenly and earthly,
Wondrously, Jesus, is found in Thee;
None can be nearer, fairer or dearer,
Than Thou, my Saviour, art to me.
Several hymn books I’ve seen leave out the following insightful stanza of More Love to Thee. The author of the song, a bedridden invalid, could make this statement from personal experience, and it is reminiscent of the testimony of Paul that he could glory in his infirmities (II Cor. 12:7-10):
Let sorrow do its work, come grief or pain;
Sweet are Thy messengers, sweet their refrain,
When they can sing with me: More love, O Christ, to Thee;
More love to Thee, more love to Thee!
Several stanzas of the poem that became the popular hymn, How Great Thou Art, have not been used with the hymn. Here is one that I’ve found a blessing:
When burdens press, and seem beyond endurance,
Bowed down with grief, to Him I lift my face;
And then in love He brings me sweet assurance,
“My child, for thee, sufficient is My grace.”
And here is the concluding stanza of the carol, As With Gladness Men of Old, which takes us beyond the bounds of time into eternity:
In the heavenly country bright,
Need they no created light;
Thou its Light, its Joy, its Crown,
Thou its Sun which goes not down;
There forever may we sing
Alleluias to our King!
This is an often missing stanza of I Need Thee Every Hour:
I need Thee every hour; teach me Thy will;
And Thy rich promises in me fulfil.
Being something of a traditionalist, I’m not always enthused by the modern trend to tamper with our old hymns. But from time to time I come across a change that seems helpful. Long ago, hymn writer Edward Bickersteth added this final stanza to Nearer, My God, to Thee:
There in my Father’s home, safe and at rest,
There in my Saviour’s love, perfectly blest;
Age after age to be, nearer my God to Thee.
Nearer, my God to Thee, nearer to Thee.
I encourage you to do some research of your own. You may be surprised and delighted by what you find!
