Surely Goodness And Mercy


surely goodness and mercy
(John W. Peterson & Alfred B Smith – 1958)

A pilgrim was I and a-wand’ring,
In the cold night of sin I did roam,
When Jesus the kind Shepherd found me,
And now I am on my way home.

Chorus:
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me
All the days, all the days of my life;
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me
All the days, all the days of my life.

He restoreth my soul when I’m weary,
He giveth me strength day by day;
He leads me beside the still waters,
He guards me each step of the way.

When I walk thro’ the dark lonesome valley,
My Savior will walk with me there;
And safely His great hand will lead me
To the mansions He’s gone to prepare.

Extended Chorus:
And I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever,
And I shall feast at the table spread for me;
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me
All the days, all the days of my life.

Added after last Chorus only:
All the days, all the days of my life.

The Lord is my shepheredBack in the “old days,” (The 1980s are already becoming old days nowadays), we had hymnals. In church children stood by their parents and learned to read the music as well as the words as they shared their song book with Mom or Dad or any adult next to them in church. Many of us remember all five verses to How Great Thou Art and Just As I Am because the hymns became a part of who we are. Sometimes I fear that we will have a generation of children who do not know how to read music because they have missed out on this wonderful tradition of sharing a hymnal.

One such hymn book was scripture in Song and I very well remember the Song Surely Goodness and mercy. This is another song written by John W Peterson. For this particular project, two well known names in the field of Gospel Music at the time John W Peterson and Alfred B Smith, collaborated in 1958 to write this popular paraphrase of Psalm 23. Smith recalls the humorous touch that provided the initial inspiration for this song.

Surely Goodness and mercy was written after receiving a letter from one of the descendants of P.P Bliss, telling of Bliss ‘first country school teacher, Miss Murphy, whom he loved dearly. The letter told of her teaching of the class before they could read or write. They were told to memorise the twenty Third Psalm. When the part “Surely Goodness and Mercy “was reached,  little Phillip then thought it said, “Surely good Miss Murphy shall follow me all the days of my life”. This little incidence focused the minds of Peterson and Smith on the phrase which became the heart and title of the song.

No person at all has the right to consider themselves the Lord’s sheep, unless their nature has been renewed because the scriptural description of the unconverted people does not picture them as sheep, but as wolves or goats. Wild and uncontrolled. A sheep is an object of a humble property, not a wild animal. It is well to know and David certainly knew that we belong to the Lord. There is a sense of confidence about this sentence- The Lord is my shepherded, I shall not want. Charles Haddon Spurgeon also known as the Prince of Preachers has said something worthy noting regarding this pslam. By the way Charles Haddon Spurgeon laboured for more than 20 years writing his unrivalled commentary of the Psalms in a seven volume work called – The Treasury of David. He says “Only those who have profoundly meditated on the Psalms, can have any adequate conception of the wealth they contain. I would love it if we could meditate on this comment Spurgeon made regarding this part of the Pslam.

The sweetest word of the whole passage is the mono-syllable “my”. He does not say “The Lord is the shepherd of the whole world at large, and leadeth forth the multitude as His flock”. If He is a shephered to no one else, He is a shepherd to me. He cared for me, watches over me, and preserves me. The words are in the present tense. Whatever be the believer’s position, he is even now under the pastoral care of Jehovah”.

We have elsewhere looked at the biography of John W Peterson but here it is again since we are looking at one of his many songs here.

About John W Peterson

John Peterson

John W. Peterson (1921-2006) was born in Lindsborg, Kansas, and began his musical career while he was still in his teens.  During World War II, he served as an Army Air Force pilot flying the famed “China Hump.”  Later, he attended Moody Bible Institute and served on the radio staff there for a number of years.  In 1953, he graduated from the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago and shortly thereafter settled in Pennsylvania to continue his songwriting career.  He then moved to Grand Rapids, Michigan, where for over ten years he was President and Editor-in-Chief of Singspiration, a sacred music publishing company.  He also served on the board of Gospel Films, Inc. of Muskegon, Michigan for several years.  Later he moved to Scottsdale, Arizona where he continued his writing and co-founded Good Life Productions.  A few years later, the John W. Peterson Music Company was established.  During this time, he also served on the board of Family Life Radio Network in Tucson, Arizona.  He had wide experience as a choral director, and throughout his career was in great demand as a guest conductor of his own works.

His music is loved and sung around the world.  Mr. Peterson has composed well over 1000 individual songs, including titles such as:  “It Took a Miracle,” “Over the Sunset Mountains,” “So Send I You,” “Springs of Living Water,” “Heaven Came Down,” “Jesus Is Coming Again” and “Surely Goodness and Mercy.”  In addition, he has written 35 cantatas and musicals.  Among these are “Night of Miracles,” “Born a King,” “No Greater Love,” “Carol of Christmas,” “Jesus Is Coming,” “King of Kings,” “Down from His Glory” and “The Last Week.”  Approximately 10,000,000 copies of these cantatas and musicals have been published and sold.

In 1967, the National Evangelical Film Foundation presented Mr. Peterson with the Sacred Music Award in recognition of his accomplishments in the field of sacred music.  In the same year, he received the honorary degree, Doctor of Sacred Music, from John Brown University.  In 1971, he received the honorary degree, Doctor of Divinity, from Western Conservative Baptist Seminary in Portland, Oregon; and in 1979, he received the honorary degree, Doctor of Fine Arts, from Grand Canyon University in Phoenix, Arizona.  In 1977, his autobiography, “The Miracle Goes On,” was published by Zondervan Publishing House, and a film by the same title was released by Gospel Films.  In 1986, Mr. Peterson was inducted into the Gospel Music Hall of Fame, and in 1996 at MusiCalifornia, he received the prestigious Ray DeVries Church Music Award.  He’s listed in “Who’s Who in America” and “Who’s Who in the World.”

 alfred_smithAbout Alfred B Smith (Alfred Barney), 1916-2001Al Smith 1916-2001 Often called the dean of Gospel music, Dr. Al Smith, was a composer, Gospel soloist, song leader, lecturer, and an authority on church music, recording artist and music publisher. You may have seen or heard him on national radio or television, met him in a little white New England church where he was giving a concert, found him lecturing in a classroom to a group of college students, or leading a great audience of some 20,000 in singing at a conference in Knoxville, Tennessee. Wherever you may have found Dr. Smith, you were sure to find a man who enjoyed the work God called him to do… to challenge hearts and lives with the “Singing Gospel” and tell the interesting histories of the songs and their writers as only he could tell them.

The fascinating life of Dr. Smith began on November 8, 1916 in a small Holland Dutch community in northern New Jersey where the news of the day reported that “Mr. and Mrs. Barney Smith” had become the proud parents of a baby boy who they named Alfred Barney Smith.

Alfred’s early years were filled with loving care from a Father and Mother who loved the Lord. Carrie Smith was a stay at home mother who was able to spend her time encouraging and teaching her son in the three “R’s”, reading, writing, and arithmetic, to which she added the fourth “R”, religion. At an early age Alfred learned the stories of David and Goliath, Daniel in the Lion’s Den, Noah and the Ark and best of all the story of Jesus. Though his mother had never received any extensive musical training she did love to sing. The first song she taught young Alfred was “Jesus loves me this I know, for the Bible tells me so”, soon followed by “Jesus Bids Us Shine”, and of course “America” and “Onward Christian Soldiers” for which he was given a little flag to wave as he marched around the room. These became his favorites. Feeling that music would be one of his most important ingredients in the home, a Symphonic Model phonograph manufactured by Thomas Alva Edison was purchased. With the phonograph came twenty-five records chosen by the company. At the time, little did the young parents realize how much their included records would affect the future of thier young son.

Young Mother Smith had always loved the violin and in the set were two records by a talented violinist named Albert Spaulding, a family member of the famous Spaulding family who manufactured athletic equipment. Young “Alfred”He played some of the beautiful compositions written by the world-renowned violinist, Fritz Kreisler, such songs as “The Old Refrain”, “Liebesfreud”, “Caprice Viennois”, etc. The young father and mother were thrilled with the recordings and four-year-old Alfred in the months and years ahead would learn to love them too.

We thought these early and interesting details deserved more than just a casual mention. It was these early decisions by his young parents that helped build the foundation and set the direction Alfred would go in the future.

When Alfred was eight and a half years of age his mother began to see that her son was developing an interest in the violin. During this time he rediscovered the old Edison records of Albert Spaulding and began to play them often. Observing this, she decided that it was time to start her son on the violin. She was fortunate in securing a Holland/Dutch immigrant named, Herman De Young, who proved to be a very good and honest teacher. Alfred made wonderful progress, in fact, when he reached the age of eleven his teacher advised his mother that he had taught his pupil all that he could and thought it was time for a new instructor. She found Roderick Meakle a special member of the faculty of the Juliard School of Music, who was also an associate of Leopold Auer, the world renown teacher of such violinists as Yoshua Heifitz, Isaac Stern, and Yehudi Menuhin. Under the teaching of Auer and Meakle, young Alfred made great progress, soon he was performing in concerts in various parts of the east including solos with various symphony orchestras.

At fourteen he was invited to a tent meeting in Hawthorne, New Jersey, where he accepted Christ as Savior. He was thrilled upon hearing the one hundred and fifty people in the tent singing “Saved, Saved, Saved” and “One Day.” That day he fell in love with Gospel music It was a love that never left him.

In 1930, he began playing on radio broadcasts. The station was WKBO, located in Jersey City, New Jersey. The program was called “the Old Fashioned Gospel Hour.” A young fellow by the name of George Beverly Shea was also on the broadcast. In 1933, Al met Wendell P. Loveless, Director of WMBI, and the radio voice of Moody Bible Institute. In 1934, Alfred enrolled at the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, at the invitation of Mr. Loveless. He became a member of the WMBI staff, which more or less prepared him for his future ministry of radio, recording, and publishing of Gospel music.

In 1937, Alfred B. Smith graduated from Moody Bible Institute and immediately began as Minister of Music at The Church of the Open Door in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, pastored by Dr. Merrell T. MacPherson. In the fall of 1938 the church loaned him to The Philadelphia School of the Bible – now The Philadelphia College of the Bible. C.I. Scofield who gave us the Scofield Reference Bible was the founder. Smith was teamed with W. Douglas Roe, a young and successful Pastor in New Jersey. It was during that year that he wrote “For God So Loved the World” after visiting the ninety-four year-old hymn writer George C. Stebbins. He was beginning an adventure in inspiration that kept him occupied for over sixty years.

In 1939 he was offered a scholarship to Wheaton College (which he gratefully accepted). His next three and half years were busy ones. That first year he spent each weekend in Chicago where he was the choir director and song leader for a large church pastored by Dr. Harry Hager.

In the fall of 1940 Billy Graham was a student at Wheaton. Smith and Graham struck up an early friendship and decided that they would Dr. Smith Singing Praise to God work together as a team. Graham did the preaching and Smith coordinated the music. As a result of their ministry Singspirataion was born in 1941. God worked in a mighty way…in Singspiration’s first two months of sales the entire printing of five thousand books was sold!

On Valentines Day of 1942 Al Smith married Catherine Barron at the Wheaton Bible Church. The same year he produced “Singspiration Two”, “Favorites”, and choose Zondervan of Grand Rapids, Michigan to be his distributor.

In 1943 he graduated from Wheaton and became the associate pastor of North Baptist Church of Flint, Michigan. Before leaving Wheaton, Billy Graham, Bev Shea, and Al presented their idea for Saturday night meetings in Chicago to Torrey Johnson, a well-known pastor and radio preacher in Chicago. Much to their dismay, they were turned down. However, God again showed Himself faithful as only a year later “Youth for Christ” was started in Chicago. God had worked another miracle in his life. After two years of a wonderful ministry in Flint, Smith felt lead of the Lord to resign from North Baptist and move back to Wheaton to devote his time to Singspiration and Youth for Christ. For the next ten years his days and nights were spent engaged in those two important ministries.

In 1947 his wife “Kay” became ill. After two operations and several months at the Mayo Clinic, she was diagnosed as having Multiple Sclerosis. During the next five years her illness made her more and more weak. Finally in 1953 he decided to move back east. First to his hometown of Ridgewood, New Jersey and then to Montrose, Pennsylvania. Montrose became the new headquarters for Singspiration and a new Christian radio station, WPEL. In 1957, John W. Peterson, Norman Johnson and Harold DeCou join the Singspiration staff. New publications including cantatas begin to cover not only America but Canada, England and other parts of the English speaking world. Though the ministry was growing by leaps and bounds, Catherine’s health continued to decline. In 1960 Catherine, after her long illness, went to be with her Savior for whom for years she longed to see. With Al she left two children; Barbara and Gordon.

In 1963 Singspiration moved to Grand Rapids and became part of Zondervan. Al remained in Pennsylvania. Free from the pressure of Singspiration he devoted most of his time to ministering in church meetings. He also kept quite busy with the writing and publishing of “Hymn Histories”, and the hymnal “Living Hymns.” “Living Hymns” was published in 1972 and “Hymn Histories” in 1982. These books were well received and Al Smith was back doing the thing he liked best.

In 1966 he married Nancy Wilbur from the little community of Heart Lake Pennsylvania. Al and Nancy raised four children, Rebecca,Al and Nancy David, Sarah, and Jonathan. In 1985, to make sure that their children would get Christian teaching, they moved to Greenville, South Carolina, where they attended Bob Jones Academy. Here for the last fifteen years of his life he was able to continue his publishing. Though he battled cancer in his later years, Dr. Smith was always going the extra mile to share the love of God with others whether in his home church, The Greenville Christian Fellowship, or in any of the countless other churches across the nation that he and Nancy have ministered in.

Dr. Alfred B. Smith went home to be with the Lord on August 9, 2001 with singing and praise to his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

 

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1 Response to Surely Goodness And Mercy

  1. rcottrill says:

    Greetings from Wordwise Hymns. Thanks for your comments on the hymn, and on the two authors. I posted an article on the song this morning, so your post caught my attention. For your encouragement, there are still many churches that use hymn books and sing the great hymns of the faith. The one my wife and I attend is one of them. God bless.

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