“About the Hymns: It Is Well with My Soul,” About the Hymns (2025)
About the Hymns
It Is Well with My Soul
This hymn of comfort and hope by Horatio G. Spafford is especially poignant because its beginnings were marked by deep sorrow and heartbreaking loss. Spafford had already endured a series of devastating personal and business setbacks. Then, in 1873, as his wife and four daughters were traveling to Europe aboard the SS Ville du Havre, it collided with another ship and sank in the Atlantic Ocean. After his wife, Anna, was pulled out of the sea and taken to Wales on a passing boat, she sent her husband a telegram that read, “Saved alone. What shall I do.” All four Spafford daughters had perished in the shipwreck.
While Spafford was crossing the Atlantic to meet Anna, his ship reached the site where the shipwreck had occurred. But he did not think of his loved ones being there; he knew that they were safe and cared for in heaven.
Following the tragedy, Spafford wrote the hymn text “It Is Well with My Soul,” expressing the sustaining peace we can find in Jesus Christ even “when sorrows like sea billows roll.” The opening line draws on another water image from Isaiah 66:12: “Behold, I will extend peace … like a river.” The tune, composed by Philip P. Bliss, is named “Ville du Havre” after the lost ship.
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Scriptures
Principles
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No matter our circumstances, we can rely on God as the source of lasting peace.
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Our faith in Jesus Christ invites His healing and comfort.
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Through His Atoning sacrifice, Jesus Christ made it possible for our sins to be forgiven.
Questions to Ponder
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When have you experienced a need for the peace that God provides?
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What can you do to seek God’s peace?
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What has led you to know that you can be forgiven through Jesus Christ?
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