Hallelujah for the Blood

Hallelujah for the blood, for the sin-cleansing fountain

Author: Lelia N. Morris
Tune: [Hallelujah for the blood, for the sin-cleansing fountain]
Published in 21 hymnals

Audio files: MIDI

Representative Text

1. Hallelujah for the blood, for the sin-cleansing fountain,
For the Lamb has been slain, and the ransom price paid;
Fully cancelled was the debt, when on Calvary’s mountain
All the sins of this world upon Jesus were laid.

Refrain:
There was no arm to save, there was no eye to pity,
Until Jesus our Savior from glory came down;
He was mighty to save, He was strong to deliver,
He has brought us salvation, a robe and a crown;
Hallelujah, hallelujah, sing the triumphant strain;
Hallelujah, for the blood and the Lamb that was slain.

2. Hallelujah for the blood; sing for joy, all ye nations,
And rejoice that the work of redemption is done;
Here is pardon free for all, and a perfect salvation
Through the sin-cleansing blood of the Crucified One.

3. Hallelujah for the blood, hallelujah forever!
We shall sing it anew in the kingdom of God,
Where the anthems of delight shall be silent, no, never;
Evermore hallelujah for Christ and the blood.

Source: 50 Uncommon Songs: for partakers of the common salvation #9

Author: Lelia N. Morris

Lelia (Mrs. C.H.) Morris (1862-1929) was born in Pennsville, Morgan County, Ohio. When her family moved to Malta on the Muskingum River she and her sister and mother had a millinery shop in McConnelsville. She and her husband Charles H. Morris were active in the Methodist Episcopal Church and at the camp meetings in Sebring and Mt. Vernon. She wrote hymns as she did her housework. Although she became blind at age 52 she continued to write hymns on a 28-foot long blackboard that her family had built for her. She is said to have written 1000 texts and many tunes including "Sweeter as the years go by." Mary Louise VanDyke Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: Hallelujah for the blood, for the sin-cleansing fountain
Title: Hallelujah for the Blood
Author: Lelia N. Morris
Language: English
Refrain First Line: There was no arm to save, there was no eye to pity
Publication Date: 1899
Copyright: Public Domain

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50 Uncommon Songs #9

Include 20 pre-1979 instances
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