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Frances Ridley Havergal

Frances Ridley Havergal (December 14, 1836 – June 3, 1879) was an English preacher, hymn writer, and poet whose ministry of words uplifted Victorian Christians with gospel truth and consecration. Born in Astley, Worcestershire, England, to William Henry Havergal, an Anglican clergyman and hymn writer, and Jane Head, she was the youngest of six children in a musical and devout family. Educated at home and later at schools in Worcester, Düsseldorf, and Oberkassel, she mastered multiple languages—including Greek and Hebrew—by her teens, memorizing much of the Bible after a conversion at 14 confirmed by her stepmother, Caroline Cooke, following Jane’s death in 1848. Havergal’s preaching career unfolded through her prolific hymns and writings rather than a pulpit, beginning with early poems and culminating in works like “Take My Life and Let It Be” (1874) after a transformative experience of surrender in 1873 at Areley House. Her “sermons” in song—such as “I Gave My Life for Thee” and “Who Is on the Lord’s Side?”—and books like Kept for the Master’s Use (1879) preached holiness and devotion, reaching churches and homes across England and beyond. Chronically ill yet tireless, she traveled to share her faith until collapsing in Wales. Never married, she died at age 42 in Caswell Bay, Swansea, Wales, from peritonitis.
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Frances Ridley Havergal delves into the promise of peaceable fruit that comes after enduring chastening from the Lord, emphasizing that even the smallest troubles we face daily are recognized by God as chastenings from His hand, working out blessings and glory for Him. She encourages not to overlook the significance of each trial, as every separate chastening has its own special 'afterward' of peaceable fruit, linked with the good pleasure of God's goodness. Havergal urges believers to watch and expect the beautiful correspondence between each chastening and its resulting afterward, finding comfort and trust in the Lord's dealings, and to anticipate the peaceable fruit as soon as the pressure of chastening is past.
The Sure Afterward
Frances Ridley Havergal (1836-1879), the daughter of a Church of England minister, is well known for her great hymns of consecration including the famous Take My Life and Let It Be. It is not well known that she also wrote devotional materials, and an explication of the aforementioned hymn which was published posthumously. From her devotional book entitled Royal Bounty, we have chosen a selection which we trust will speak to your heart. “Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless, afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby.”—Heb. 12:11 There are some promises which we are apt to reserve for great occasions, and thus lose the continual comfort of them. Perhaps we read this one with a sigh, and say: “How beautiful this is for those whom the Lord is really chastening! I almost think I should not mind that, if such a promise might then be mine. But the things that try me are only little things that turn up every day to trouble and depress me.” Well, now, does the Lord specify what degree of trouble, or what kind of trouble, is great enough to make up a claim to the promise? And if He does not, why should you? He only defines it as “not joyous, but grievous.” Perhaps there have been a dozen different things today which were “not joyous, but grievous” to you. And though you feel ashamed of feeling them so much, and hardly like to own to their having been so trying, and would not think of signifying them as “chastening,” yet, if they come under the Lord’s definition, He not only knows all about them, but they were, every one of them, chastenings from His hand; neither to be despised and called “just nothing” when all the while they did “grieve” you; nor to be wearied of; because they are working out blessing to you and glory to Him. Every one of them has been an unrecognized token of His love and interest in you; for “whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth.” (Heb. 12:6) Next, do not let us reserve this promise for chastenings in the aggregate. Notice the singular pronoun, “Nevertheless, afterward IT yieldeth,” not “they yield.” Does not this indicate that every separate chastening has its own special “afterward”? We think of trials as intended to do us good in the long-run, and in a general sort of way; but the Lord says of each one, “It yieldeth.” Apply this to “the present.” The particular annoyance which befell you this morning; the vexatious words which met your ear and “grieved” your spirit; the disappointment which was His appointment for today; the slight but hindering ailment; the presence of someone who is “a grief of mind” to you; whatever this day seemeth not joyous, but grievous, is linked in “the good pleasure of His goodness,” with a corresponding afterward of “peaceable fruit”; the very seed from which, if you only do not choke it, this shall spring and ripen. If we set ourselves to watch the Lord’s dealings with us, we shall often be able to detect a most beautiful correspondence and proportion between each individual “chastening” and its own resulting “afterward”. The habit of thus watching and expecting will be very comforting, and a great help to quiet trust when some new chastening is sent: for then we shall simply consider it as the herald and earnest of a new “afterward”. Lastly, do not let us reserve this promise for some far future time. The Lord did not say “a long while afterward”, and do not let us gratuitously insert it. It rather implies that, as soon as the chastening is over, the peaceable fruit shall appear unto the glory and praise of God. So let us look out for the “afterward” as soon as the pressure is past. This immediate expectation will bring its own blessing if we can say, “My expectation is from Him” (Ps. 62:5), and not from any fruit-bearing qualities of our own; for only “from Me is thy fruit found”. (Hos. 14:8) Fruit from Him will also be fruit unto Him. What shall Thine afterward be, O Lord? I wonder, and wait to see (While to Thy chastening hand I bow) What peaceable fruit may be ripening now, Ripening fast for Thee!
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Frances Ridley Havergal (December 14, 1836 – June 3, 1879) was an English preacher, hymn writer, and poet whose ministry of words uplifted Victorian Christians with gospel truth and consecration. Born in Astley, Worcestershire, England, to William Henry Havergal, an Anglican clergyman and hymn writer, and Jane Head, she was the youngest of six children in a musical and devout family. Educated at home and later at schools in Worcester, Düsseldorf, and Oberkassel, she mastered multiple languages—including Greek and Hebrew—by her teens, memorizing much of the Bible after a conversion at 14 confirmed by her stepmother, Caroline Cooke, following Jane’s death in 1848. Havergal’s preaching career unfolded through her prolific hymns and writings rather than a pulpit, beginning with early poems and culminating in works like “Take My Life and Let It Be” (1874) after a transformative experience of surrender in 1873 at Areley House. Her “sermons” in song—such as “I Gave My Life for Thee” and “Who Is on the Lord’s Side?”—and books like Kept for the Master’s Use (1879) preached holiness and devotion, reaching churches and homes across England and beyond. Chronically ill yet tireless, she traveled to share her faith until collapsing in Wales. Never married, she died at age 42 in Caswell Bay, Swansea, Wales, from peritonitis.