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Text Results

Meter:8.8.6.8.8.6
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All Wise, All Good, Almighty Lord

Author: Charles Wesley Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal Lyrics: 1. All wise, all good, almighty Lord, Jesus, by highest Heav’n adored, Ere time its course began; How did Thy glorious mercy stoop, To take Thy fallen children up, When Thou Thyself wert man? 2. Th’eternal God from Heav’n came down; The King of glory dropped His crown And veiled His majesty; Emptied of all but love He came, Jesus, I call Thee by the name, Thy pity bore for me. 3. O holy Child, still let Thy birth Bring peace to us poor worms of earth, And praise to God on high! Come, Thou who didst my flesh assume; Now to the abject sinner come, And in a manger lie. 4. Didst Thou not in person join The natures human and divine, That God and man might be Henceforth inseparably one? Haste then and make Thy nature known Incarnated in me. 5. In my weak, sinful flesh appear, O God, be manifested here, Peace, righteousness and joy; Thy kingdom, Lord, set up within My faithful heart; and all my sin, The devil’s work, destroy. 6. I long Thy coming to confess, The mystic power of godliness, The life divine to prove: The fullness of Thy life to know, Redeemed from all my sins below, And perfected in love. 7. O Christ, my Hope, make known to me The great, the glorious mystery The hidden life impart; Come, Thou Desire of nations, come, Formed in a spotless virgin’s womb, A pure, believing heart. 8. Come quickly, dearest Lord, that I May own, tho’ Antichrist deny, Thy incarnation’s power: May cry, a witness to my Lord, Come in my flesh is Christ the Word, And I can sin no more! Text Sources: Hymns for the Nativity of Our Lord (London: William Strahan, 1745), number 15
TextAudio

Arise And Hail The Sacred Day

Author: Elizabeth Scott, 1708-1776 Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 33 hymnals First Line: Arise, and hail the sacred day Lyrics: 1 Arise, and hail the sacred day, Cast all low cares of life away; And thoughts of meaner things; This day, to cure our deadly woes, The Sun of Righteousness arose With healing in His wings. 2 If angels on that happy morn The Savior of the world was born Poured forth seraphic songs, Much more should we of human race Adore the wonders of His grace, To whom that grace belongs. 3 How wonderful, how vast His love, Who left the shining realms above, Those happy seats of rest; How much for lost mankind He bore, Their peace and pardon to restore, Can never be expressed. 4 While we adore His boundless grace, And pious joy and mirth take place Of sorrow, grief and pain, Give glory to our God on high, And not, among the general joy, Forget good-will to men. 5 O then let Heav’n and earth rejoice, Creation’s whole united voice, And hymn the sacred day, When sin and Satan vanquished fell, And all the powers of death and hell, Before His sovereign sway. Used With Tune: ROMFORD
TextAudio

O Food That Weary Pilgrims Love

Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 19 hymnals Lyrics: 1. O food that weary pilgrims love, O bread of angel hosts above, O manna of the saints, The hungry soul would feed on Thee; Ne’er may the heart unsolaced be Which for Thy sweetness faints. 2. O fount of love, O cleansing tide, Which from the Savior’s piercèd side And sacred heart dost flow, Be ours to drink of Thy pure rill, Which only can our spirits fill, And all our need bestow. 3. Lord Jesu, whom, by power divine Now hidden ’neath the outward sign, We worship and adore, Grant, when the veil away is rolled, With open face we may behold Thyself forevermore. Used With Tune: ESCA VIATORUM Text Sources: Maintzich Gesangbuch, 1661; translated from Latin to English by the compilers of Hymns Ancient and Modern
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Come on, companions of our way

Author: James Montgomery Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal Lyrics: Come on, companions of our way, Who travel to eternal day Through this poor world of night; Give to the Lord, in noble songs, The praise that to His name belongs, As children of the light. Call'd out of darkness, by His voice, Be that clear shining path our choice, Which Christ our captain trod! Whether with flowers and fragrance crown'd, Or thorns and thistle interwound, It leads the soul to God. Though pilgrims in a vale of woes, Thick-strown with snares, and throng'd with foes; Since Jesus journey'd through, 157 Plant but your steps where his have prest The ground once curst,--that ground now blest Is heaven's highway for you. To heaven, to heaven then march we on, Go where our conquering Lord hath gone! Thus where He is, shall we In joy behold Him face to face, And, changed by glorifying grace, Resemble Him we see. Sacred Poems and Hymns

They Come From Far A King To Seek

Author: Isa J. Postgate Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal Text Sources: A Christmas Legend, and Other Verses, 1899, alt.

Moderation and Charity

Author: Benjamin Beddome Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal First Line: When I behold my table spread Text Sources: Appeared posthumously in Hymns Adapted to Public Worship (London: Burton and Briggs,1818)

Uprightness and Truth

Author: Benjamin Beddome Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal First Line: Who shall ascend that holy hill Text Sources: Appeared posthumously in Hymns Adapted to Public Worship (London: Burton and Briggs,1818)
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O Lord of mercies, Thee we owe

Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 2 hymnals Topics: Morning and Evening

Eternal Mind, Who Rules The Fates

Author: Isaac Watts Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal Text Sources: Horae Lyrica Book 1, 1706

Doxology and Benediction

Meter: 8.8.6.8.8.6 Appears in 17 hymnals First Line: Come, all ye servants of the Lord

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