Gerhardt, Paul, also Paulus (Gräfenhainichen nr. Wittenberg, 1607-76, Lübben), a son of the mayor of Gräfenhainichen, became the most notable Protestant hymn writer. He was educated at Grimma (see Fürstenschulen) and Wittenberg University, where he studied theology. For some years a private tutor in Berlin, he was appointed pastor at Mittenwalde near Berlin in 1651, and six years later went to St Nicholas's Church (Nikolaikirche), one of the most important pastoral appointments in Berlin. He married in 1655 and his wife bore him five children, but she and all but one son died during his twelve years in Berlin.
To Gerhardt's personal sufferings were added tribulations in office. He was a staunch Lutheran but the Electors of Brandenburg had been Calvinistic since 1613. During Gerhardt's time a conflict arose, in the course of which the Electoral authorities ordered his dismissal, which was withdrawn, but Gerhardt, conscious that a principle was at stake, resigned in 1667 from St Nicholas. For two years he was supported by devoted friends and parishioners, and in 1669 became pastor at Lübben, where he spent the remainder of his life.
Gerhardt's earliest hymns (18 in number) were published in 1647 in a collection (Praxis pietatis melica) made by J. Crüger, the organist at St Nicholas's Church, who provided the tunes. In the second edition of this hymnal (1653) Gerhardt's contribution rose to 63. At the same time 37 of his hymns were included in C. Runge's D. M. Luthers und anderer vornehmem, geistreichen und gelehrten Männer geistliche Lieder und Psalmen (1653). The largest collection to appear in Gerhardt's lifetime was Pauli Gerhardi geistliche Andachten, containing 120 hymns and published in 1667 by Crüger's successor as organist. Gerhardt's poetry, nearly all of which is intended to be sung, is devout yet unsentimental, sensitive yet robust, striking a balance between man's inner life and the visible world around him. Not only have a number of the hymns retained a place in anthologies of poetry, they also continue to be included in hymnals. Among the best known are ‘Abendlied’ (‘Nun ruhen alle Wälder’), ‘Morgensegen’ (‘Die güldne Sonne’), ‘Christliches Wanderlied’ (‘Befiehl du deine Wege’), ‘Sommerlied’ (‘Geh aus, mein Herz, und suche Freud’), and ‘Ich bin ein Gast auf Erden’. Particularly widely known is ‘O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden’, the last of a set of seven Latin poems by St Bernard of Clairvaux, which Gerhardt translated in 1656 with such success that they persist as German poems in their own right (Sieben Lieder an die Gliedmaßen des Herrn Jesu). The first two verses of ‘O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden’, as well as the first verse of ‘Befiehl du deine Wege’, are used as chorales in J. S. Bach's St Matthew Passion. A single-volume





