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Text Results

Meter:8.6.8.6
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Praise to the Redeemer

Author: Anne Steele Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 362 hymnals First Line: To our Redeemer's glorious name
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O God, My Heart Is Fully Bent

Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 70 hymnals Lyrics: 1 O God, my heart is fully bent To magnify Thy name; My tongue with cheerful songs of praise Shall celebrate Thy fame. 2 Awake, my lute; nor thou, my harp, Thy warbling notes delay; Whilst I with early hymns of joy Prevent the dawning day. 3 To all the listening tribes, O Lord, Thy wondrous works I’ll tell, And to those nations sing Thy praise, That round about us dwell: 4 Because Thy mercy’s boundless height The highest heav’n transcends; And far beyond th’aspiring clouds Thy faithful truth extends. 5 Be Thou, O God, exalted high Above the starry frame; And let the world, with one consent, Confess Thy glorious name. 6 That all Thy chosen people Thee Their Savior may declare; Let Thy right hand protect me still, And answer Thou my prayer. 7 Since God Himself has said the word, Whose promise cannot fail, With joy I Sichem will divide, And measure Succoth’s vale. 8 Gilead is mine, Manasseh, too, And Ephraim owns my cause: Their strength my regal power supports, And Judah gives my laws. 9 Moab I’ll make my servile drudge, On vanquished Edom tread; And thro’ the proud Philistine lands, My conquering banners spread. 10 By whose support and aid shall I Their well fenced city gain? Who will my troops securely lead Thro’ Edom’s guarded plain? 11 Lord, wilt not Thou assist our arms, Which late Thou didst forsake? And wilt not Thou, of these our hosts, Once more the guidance take? 12 O to Thy servant in distress Thy speedy succor send; For vain it is on human aid For safety to depend. 13 Then valiant acts shall we perform, If Thou Thy power disclose; For God it is, and God alone, That treads down all our foes. Used With Tune: LAMBETH Text Sources: A New Version of the Psalms of David by Nahum Tate and Nicholas Brady, 1696

As on the cross the Saviour hung

Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 173 hymnals Used With Tune: NEWPORT
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What Poor Despised Company

Author: Anonymous Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 170 hymnals Lyrics: 1 What poor despised company Of travelers are these, That walk in yonder narrow way, Along that rugged maze? 2 Ah, these are of a royal line, All children of a king; Heirs of immortal crowns divine, And lo! for joy they sing. 3 Why do they then appear so mean, And why so much despised? Because of their rich robes unseen, The world is not apprised. 4 But some of them seem poor distressed, And lacking daily bread; Ah, they’re of boundless wealth possessed, With hidden manna fed. 5 But why keep they that narrow road, That rugged thorny maze? Why, that’s the way their leader trod, They love and keep His ways. 6 Why must they shun the pleasant path, That worldlings love so well? Because that is the road to death, The open road to hell. 7 What, is there then no other road, To Salem’s happy ground? Christ is the only way to God, None other can be found. Used With Tune: BEATITUDO Text Sources: A Choice Collection of Hymns and Spiritual Songs Intended for the Edification of Sincere Christians of All Denominations (New London: Conn.: 1774)
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Life Is A Span, A Fleeting Hour

Author: Anne Steele Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 165 hymnals Lyrics: 1 Life is a span, a fleeting hour, How soon the vapor flies! Man is a tender, transient flower, That e’en in blooming dies! 2 Death spreads like winter’s frozen arms, And beauty smiles no more; Ah! where are now those rising charms Which pleased our eyes before? 3 The once loved form, now cold and dead, Each mournful thought employs; And nature weeps, her comforts fled, And withered all her joys. 4 But wait the interposing gloom And lo, winter flies! And dressed in beauty’s fairest bloom The flowery tribes arise. 5 Hope looks beyond the bounds of time; When what we now deplore, Shall rise in full immortal prime, And bloom to fade no more. 6 Then cease, fond nature, cease thy tears, Religion points on high; There everlasting spring appears, And joys that cannot die. Used With Tune: BEATITUDO Text Sources: Poems on Subjects Chiefly Devotional, 1760

See Israel's gentle Shepherd stand

Author: Philip Doddridge, 1702-1751 Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 487 hymnals Topics: The Church of God The Sacraments - Baptism Used With Tune: EVAN
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On Jordan's Stormy Banks

Author: Samuel Stennett, 1727-1795 Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 1,396 hymnals First Line: On Jordan's stormy banks I stand Refrain First Line: I am bound for the promised land Topics: Heaven and Eternity Scripture: Deuteronomy 11:31 Used With Tune: PROMISED LAND
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Servant of All, to Toil for Man

Author: Charles Wesley Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 13 hymnals Lyrics: 1. Servant of all, to toil for man Thou didst not, Lord, refuse; Thy majesty did not disdain To be employed for us. 2. Son of the carpenter, receive This humble work of mine; Worth to my meanest labor give, By joining it to Thine. 3. End of my every action Thou, In all things Thee I see; Accept my hallowed labor now, I do it unto Thee. 4. Thy bright example I pursue, To Thee in all things rise; And all I think or speak or do Is one great sacrifice. 5. Careless through outward cares I go, From all distraction free; My hands are but engaged below, My heart is still with Thee. Used With Tune: AZMON Text Sources: Cen­to from “Son of the Car­pen­ter, Re­ceive” in Hymns and Po­ems, 1739
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Why Did the Nations Join to Slay

Author: Isaac Watts Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 51 hymnals Lyrics: 1. Why did the nations join to slay The Lord’s anointed Son? Why did they cast His laws away, And tread His Gospel down? 2. The Lord, that sits above the skies, Derides their rage below; He speaks with vengeance in His eyes, And strikes their spirits through. 3. “I call him my eternal Son, And raise Him from the dead; I make My holy hill His throne, And wide His kingdom spread. 4. Ask Me, My Son, and then enjoy The utmost heathen lands: Thy rod of iron shall destroy The rebel that withstands. 5. Be wise, ye rulers of the earth, Obey th’ anointed Lord, Adore the king of heav’nly birth, And tremble at His Word. 6. With humble love address His throne; For if He frown, ye die: Those are secure, and those alone, Who on His grace rely. Used With Tune: MANOAH Text Sources: The Psalms of David, 1719
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There Is a Name I Love to Hear

Author: Frederick Whitfield, 1829-1904 Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 596 hymnals Lyrics: 1 There is a name I love to hear; I love to sing its worth: It sounds like music in mine ear, The sweetest name on earth. 2 It tells me of a Savior's love, Who died to set me free; It tells me of His precious blood, The sinner's perfect plea. 3 It tells of One whose loving heart Can feel my deepest woe, Who in my sorrow bears a part That none can bear below. 4 Jesus! the name I love so well, The name I love to hear; No saints on earth its worth can tell, No heart conceive how dear. Topics: Jesus Christ Names and Titles; Jesus Names and Titles; Jesus Passion Scripture: 1 John 4:8 Used With Tune: EVAN

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