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Text Identifier:"^my_savior_and_my_lord_to_thee_i_lift$"

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My Savior And My Lord

Author: Alexandre R. Vinet, 1799-1847; Richard B. Hoyle, 1875-1939 Meter: 6.6.8.6 D Appears in 4 hymnals Lyrics: 1 My Savior and my Lord, To Thee I lift mine eyes; Instruct me by Thy holy Word, And make me truly wise. 2 Be it my chief delight To read this volume o’er; To seek its author day and night, And love Thee more and more. 3 May this my thoughts engage, In each perplexing case; Help me to feed on every page, And grow in every grace. 4 O let it cleanse my heart, And guide me all my days; Its wonders, Lord, to me impart, And Thou shalt have the praise. Used With Tune: VESPER Text Sources: French

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VESPER

Meter: 6.6.8.6 D Appears in 22 hymnals Tune Sources: Cottage Melodies by William B. Bradbury and Sylvester Main (New York: Carlton & Porter, 1859) Tune Key: A Major Incipit: 16165 67113 53545 Used With Text: My Savior And My Lord

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My Savior And My Lord

Author: Alexandre R. Vinet, 1799-1847; Richard B. Hoyle, 1875-1939 Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #11638 Meter: 6.6.8.6 D Lyrics: 1 My Savior and my Lord, To Thee I lift mine eyes; Instruct me by Thy holy Word, And make me truly wise. 2 Be it my chief delight To read this volume o’er; To seek its author day and night, And love Thee more and more. 3 May this my thoughts engage, In each perplexing case; Help me to feed on every page, And grow in every grace. 4 O let it cleanse my heart, And guide me all my days; Its wonders, Lord, to me impart, And Thou shalt have the praise. Languages: English Tune Title: VESPER
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My Saviour and my Lord

Hymnal: Hymns for Sunday Schools, Youth and Children #44 (1854) Meter: 6.6.8.6 Lyrics: 1 My Saviour and my Lord, To thee I lift mine eyes; Instruct me by thy holy Word, And make me truly wise. 2 Be it my chief delight To read this volume o'er; To seek its Author day and night, And love thee more and more. 3 May this my thoughts engage, In each perplexing case; Help me to feed on every page, And grow in every grace. 4 O let it cleanse my heart, And guide me all my days; Its wonders, Lord, to me impart, And thou shalt have the praise. Topics: Opening Before Reading the Scriptures Languages: English
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My Saviour and my Lord

Hymnal: Hymns for Sunday Schools, Youth, and Children #44 (1857) Languages: English

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

R. Birch Hoyle

1875 - 1939 Person Name: Richard B. Hoyle, 1875-1939 Translator of "My Savior And My Lord" in The Cyber Hymnal Born: March 8, 1875, Clough­fold, Lan­ca­shire, Eng­land. Died: De­cem­ber 14, 1939, Wim­ble­don, Sur­rey, Eng­land. Hoyle at­tend­ed Re­gent’s Park Coll­ege in Lon­don, then pas­tored in Sud­bu­ry, Ab­er­deen, and Lon­don (1900-17), and in Bel­ve­dere, Kent (1923-26). He ed­it­ed the YMCA’s Red Tri­an­gle mag­az­ine, and was pro­fess­or of the­ol­o­gy at West­ern The­o­lo­gic­al Sem­in­a­ry, Pitts­burgh, Penn­syl­van­ia (1934-36). He lat­er re­turned to Eng­land, pas­tor­ing at the Bap­tist church in Kings­ton-on-Thames. Some of his work ap­pears in the World Stu­dent Chris­tian Fed­er­a­tion hym­nal Can­ta­te Do­mi­no (1925). Translations: Holy God, Thy Name We Bless My Sav­ior and My Lord Thine Is the Glo­ry What Joy, to Think of That Vast Host --www.hymntime.com/tch

Alexandre Rodolphe Vinet

1797 - 1847 Person Name: Alexandre R. Vinet, 1799-1847 Author of "My Savior And My Lord" in The Cyber Hymnal Vinet, Alexandre Rodolphe, born June 12, 1799, [sic 1797] at Ouchy, near Lausanne. His father, a man of somewhat stern religion, was schoolmaster of the village, and held a small appointment in the Canton du Vaud, Alexandre was appointed Professor of the French language at the gymnasium of Basle, at the age of 20, and occupied this office, with same work for the University, for twenty years. In 1819 he was called to the ministry, and married. At first opposed to the movement of the Réveil a deeper knowledge of its principles and deep sympathy with the persecution of its leaders, drew him heartily to its side. His pen was fearlessly used in defence of toleration (Du respect des opinion, 1824), freedom of worship (Mémoire en faveur de la liberty des cultesé, 1826), and the separation of Church and State (Essai sur la manifestation des convictions religieuses, et sur la separation de l’Église et de l’État, 1842). No work is more permanently valuable on the subject than the Essai, from the logical sequence of its conclusions from the premises laid down. In 1837 he had been recalled to Lausanne, to occupy the "chaire de théologie pratique," in the Academy. In the end of 1840, however, he resigned the chair, withdrawing at the same time from the national church. He took a prominent part in the preliminary committees for the formation of the "Église libre du Canton de Vaud"; but his proposals were largely modified in the final constitution of it, to his deep regret. He had been compelled to withdraw from the discussions by his failing health. His constitution, always delicate, gave way comparatively early, and he died May 10, 1847. His name is tenderly cherished, not only for his efforts in the cause of religious freedom, but as an Evangelical Divine and as a distinguished man of letters. His articles in the Semeur touched wide and varied subjects of literature with rare delicacy, acuteness, and truth. The hymns published in the Chants Chrétiens are only a few out of the number he wrote. They reveal the inner depth of a nature that shrank from outward demonstration of religious emotion, and are valuable on this account, as well as for that refinement of meditation which places them so high among the Protestant hymns of France. [Rev. H. Leigh Bennett, M.A.] --Excerpts from John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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