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| Text: | Comfort, comfort ye my people |
| Author: | Johann Olearius |
| Translator: | Catherine Winkworth |
| Tune: | LUDWIGSBURG (Freu dich sehr, o meine Seele) |
1 Comfort, comfort ye my people,
Speak ye peace, thus saith our God;
Comfort those who sit in darkness,
Mourning 'neath their sorrow’s load;
Speak ye to Jerusalem
Of the peace that waits for them;
Tell her that her sins I cover,
And her warfare now is over.
2 Yea, her sins our God will pardon,
Blotting out each dark misdeed;
That which well deserved His anger
He will not more see or heed.
She hath suffer'd many a day,
Now her griefs have passed away,
God will change her pining sadness
Into ever springing gladness.
3 For Elijah's voice is crying
In the desert far and near,
Bidding all men to repentance,
Since the kingdom now is here.
O that warning cry obey,
Now prepare for God a way!
Let the valleys rise to meet Him,
And the hills bow down to greet Him.
4 Make ye straight what long was crooked,
Make the rougher places plain,
Let your hearts be true and humble,
As befits His holy reign;
For the glory of the Lord
Now o'er earth is shed abroad,
And all flesh shall see the token
That His Word is never broken.
| Text Information | |
|---|---|
| First Line: | Comfort, comfort ye my people |
| Author: | Johann Olearius (1671) |
| Translator: | Catherine Winkworth (1863) |
| Meter: | No. 38 |
| Language: | English; Latin |
| Publication Date: | 1908 |
| Topic: | The Church Year: John the Baptist; Fourth Sunday of Advent |
| Notes: | Now Public Domain. From the German text: Troestet, troestet meine Lieben |
| Tune Information | |
|---|---|
| Name: | LUDWIGSBURG (Freu dich sehr, o meine Seele) |
| Meter: | No. 38 |
| Key: | G Major |
| Source: | French Psalm Tune, Geneva, 1551 |
| Notes: | Public Domain. |