You help make Hymnary.org possible. More than 10 million people from 200+ countries found hymns, liturgical resources and encouragement on Hymnary.org in 2025, including you. Every visit affirms the global impact of this ministry.

If Hymnary has been meaningful to you this year, would you take a moment today to help sustain it? A gift of any size—paired with a note of encouragement if you wish—directly supports the server costs, research work and curation that keep this resource freely available to the world.

Give securely online today, or mail a check to:
Hymnary.org
Calvin University
3201 Burton Street SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49546

Thank you for your partnership, and may the hope of Advent fill your heart.

Sidney Dyer

Short Name: Sidney Dyer
Full Name: Dyer, Sidney, 1814-1898
Birth Year: 1814
Death Year: 1898

Dyer, Sidney, who served in the U. S. Army from 1831 to c. 1840, is a native of White Creek, Washington County, New York, where he was born in 1814. On leaving the army he was ordained a Baptist Minister in 1842, and acted first as a Missionary to the Choctaws, then as Pastor in Indianapolis, Indiana (1852), and as Secretary to the Baptist Publication Society, Phila. (1859). He has published sundry works, and in the Southwestern Psalmist, 1851, 16 of his hymns are found.

The following are later and undated:—
1. Go, preach the blest salvation. Missions. In the Baptist Praise Book, 1871, and The Baptist Hymn & Tune Book, 1871.
2. Great Framer [Maker] of unnumbered worlds. National Humiliation. In the Boston Unitarian Hymn [and Tune] Book, 1868, and others.
3. When faint and weary toiling. Work whilst it is day. In the Baptist Praise Book, 1871.
4. Work, for the night is coming. Duty. This hymn is in wider use than the foregoing, but though often ascribed to Dyer, is really by Miss Anna L. Walker, of Canada, who published a volume of Poems, 1868. S. Dyer, in 1854, wrote a hymn on the same subject for a Sunday-school in Indianapolis, and hence the confusion between the two. In 1882 a cento beginning with the same stanza was given in Whiting's (English) Hymns for the Church Catholic, No. 366. Of this cento, stanzas i., ii. are by Miss Walker; and stanzas iii., iv. by Miss Whiting, daughter of the editor of that collection. [Rev.F. M. Bird, M.A.]

-- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

==================

Dyer, S., p. 317, ii. Additional hymns by Dr. Dyer are given in the Baptist Sursum Corda, Phila., 1898, with the following dates :—
1. Enter, Jesus bids thee welcome. Invitation. 1883.
2. No more with horrors veil the tomb. Burial. 1897.
Dr. Dyer d. in 1898.

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

=================

Dyer, Sidney. (White Creek, New York, February 11, 1814--December 22, 1898, Philadelphia). Baptist. Indiana State University, honorary A.M. ; Bucknell University, honorary Ph.D. Missionary to the Choctaws early in his career. Pastorates at Brownsville, New York, 1842; Indianapolis, 1852-1859. District secretary of the American Baptist Publication Society, Philadelphia, 1859-1885. Author of eight religious books designed for children, two volumes of verse: Voices of Nature (Louisville, 1849), and Songs and Ballads (Indianapolis, 1857). Wrote a large number of hymns in Sunday School as well as church collections. In 1851, he published The South Western Psalmist (Louisville), which became known as Dyer's Psalmist. Of 467 hymns, 16 are by Dyer. Also wrote a prize-winning hymn "O wondrous land! thy onward march sublime" for the Jubilee of the American Baptist Home Mission Society which was help in New York in 1882. This 66-stanza hymn may be found in Baptist Home Missions in North America: Including a Full Report of the Proceedings and Address of the Jubilee Meeting . . . (New York: Baptist Home Mission Rooms, 1883). "Work, for the night is coming," written by Annie L. (Walker) Coghill, was sometimes ascribed to Dyer. The confusion arose when, in 1854, Dyer wrote a text on the same subject for a Sunday School in Indianapolis.

--Deborah Carlton Loftis, DNAH Archives


Texts by Sidney Dyer (48)sort descendingAsAuthority LanguagesInstances
Arouse! a traitor band is armingSidney Dyer (Author)2
Behold a host with rapt emotionS. Dyer (Author)1
Beneath the Jordan's limpid waveSidney Dyer (Author)2
Come heart broken sinnerSidney Dyer (Author)2
Enter, Jesus bids thee welcomeSidney Dyer (Author)English13
Ever to Jesus go, There leave thy sorrowRev. Sidney Dyer (Author)English1
Faith, hope, love, are awakingRev. Sidney Dyer (Author)1
Farewell to my homeSidney Dyer (Author)English3
Go preach the blest salvationSidney Dyer (Author)English17
Go proclaim the wondrous storySidney Dyer (Author)English3
Go when the skies are brightestSidney Dyer (Author)English1
Grant us wisdom, gracious LordSidney Dyer (Author)2
Great Cause of all things, Source of lifeSidney Dyer (Author)6
Great Framer of unnumbered worldsDyer (Author)1
Great Maker of unnumbered worldsDyer (Author)14
Greatest of beings, source of lifeDyer (Author)2
How blest are weSidney Dyer (Author)3
How precious the dying of saints to the LordRev. Sydney Dyer (Author)3
How sad to return to the home where light-heartedS. Dyer (Author)2
I hear the voice of singingSidney Dyer (Author)6
I would not have life's pathway smoothSidney Dyer (Author)2
Join with us Immanuel's bandSidney Dyer (Author)English1
காலம் நேர்த்தியாய் நகருதே (Kālam nērttiyāy nakarutē)Sidney Dyer (Author)Tamil1
Life is a dreaming, death an awakingRev. Sidney Dyer (Author)1
Lo Zion's banners streamingRev. Sidney Dyer, D.D. (Author)1
My bark is on the deepSidney Dyer (Author)2
No more with horrors veil the tombSidney Dyer (Author)English2
O Lord, we come before Thee now, Thou who the suppliant hearsS. Dyer (Author)English2
O never look back with your hand on the plowSidney Dyer (Author)English2
O'er dark and stormy watersSidney Dyer (Author)2
Our life is like an idle dreamSidney Dyer (Author)3
Repent, believe, and be baptized, The great divine commandS. Dyer (Author)English2
Rouse thee, child of heavenSidney Dyer (Author)5
Should storms arise and darkness reignSidney Dyer (Author)2
Soft and light o'er the soul are now glidingSidney Dyer (Author)2
That thou art love, O God, I seeSidney Dyer (Author)2
The year has flown and we againSidney Dyer (Author)6
Though they may lay beneath the groundSidney Dyer (Author)8
Through a weary landSidney Dyer (Author)1
Time is earnest, passing bySidney Dyer (Author)English20
Unto Thy temple, Lord, we comeSidney Dyer (Author)English1
We come to his courtsS. Dyer (Author)1
When at the margin of the streamSidney Dyer (Author)2
When faint and weary toilingSidney Dyer (Author)English18
When Jesus once came to Jerusalem's gateSidney Dyer (Author)2
When mourning o'er my sense ofRev. Sidney Dyer (Author)2
While now we taste these emblems, LordS. Dyer (Author)2
Work, for the night is coming; Work through the morning hoursS. Dyer (Author)English106

Data Sources

Suggestions or corrections? Contact us
It looks like you are using an ad-blocker. Ad revenue helps keep us running. Please consider white-listing Hymnary.org or getting Hymnary Pro to eliminate ads entirely and help support Hymnary.org.