I’ve owned Then Sings My Soul for around 20 years without doing much more than leafing through the pages on occasion. When I decided to make an effort to read more Christian nonfiction in 2025, I knew this book needed to be on the list. The stories behind great songs is a subject that has fascinated me since I stumbled upon VH1’s Behind the Music as a child. Music has always been the language of my heart, and learning the inspiration behind the songs that move me, as well as more about the lives of the artists who penned them, adds even more depth and nuance to that experience.
It turns out that this is especially true of songs written to the glory of God. Then Sings My Soul covers 150 hymns, spanning from centuries before Christ’s birth to the turn of the 21st century. Though they touch on such a wide swath of history, the majority of these hymns were penned between the 15th and 20th centuries. Some songs I knew. Many, I didn’t. But all were lovely in their own ways, and I enjoyed learning more about the writers who wrote them. Part of me wishes that some of these hymns had more than a single page written about them, but brevity is the nature of this type of book. When covering 150 songs, not much time can be spent on any one offering.
Then Sings My Soul is an enjoyable read. I would especially recommend it to anyone who is involved in music ministry, or simply has a deep and abiding affection for hymns. It’s a refreshing look at an art that is still vital to churches today.