Saward began writing pamphlets about different aspects of church life in the 1960s, mainly for
Scripture Union, before embarking on books such as ''Don't Miss the Party
(1974) and the controversial And So To Bed?
(1975), which examined Christian views about sex. This was followed by Cracking the God Code
(1978), God's Friends: Romans
(1978) and All Change'' (1983). In later years Saward concentrated on writing hymns, contributing to many hymn books and editing
Come Celebrate, a compilation of modern hymn writing, in 2009. Saward's autobiography,
A Faint Streak of Humility, was published in 1999.
Hymn writer Saward wrote over a hundred hymns, of which "Christ triumphant, ever reigning" is his best known, usually sung to the
hymn tune "Guiting Power" (named after the village of
Guiting Power in Gloucestershire) by
John Barnard. A long-term member of the
Jubilate Group of hymnwriters, Saward was also its chairman from 1999 to 2001. He was part of what has been described as a British "hymn explosion" since World War II. Saward was an active member of the Hymn Society of Great Britain and Ireland, serving on its executive committee. ==Later life==