Psalm of the Valley

Grant me a valley, far from the nations

Author: William Heavner (2005)
Tune: OPEQUON CHURCH
Published in 1 hymnal

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Audio files: MIDI

Representative Text

1. Grant me a valley, far from the nations,
Where I may dwell all my days.
There peace attends me, ’mid tribulations,
If I but walk in Your ways.
While furies rage and tremble the ground,
While fear and conflicts surround.
In that calm valley, my generations
Stand giving thanks, singing praise.

2. Where Your hand leads me, there shall I follow,
Trusting Your Word as my guide.
When others fail me, their pledge found hollow
Your grace and love fast abide.
Wilderness path or broad smooth highway
I’ll yield to You, Lord, the way.
The present I see. Not so, tomorrow,
Save that You walk by my side.

3. God the creator, who is and shall be,
Present in all time and place.
Be my defender, never forsake me.
Never from me, hide your face.
When cold descends and gathers the dark,
When night stills even the lark.
Be my protector, fold your hand o’er me.
I’ll shelter in its embrace.

Author: William Heavner

Lyrics: All Creation Is as One Let Saints on Earth Unite to Sing Psalm of the Valley --www.hymntime.com/tch  Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: Grant me a valley, far from the nations
Title: Psalm of the Valley
Author: William Heavner (2005)
Meter: 8.8.8.8
Language: English
Notes: This hymn was composed for the dedication of the fifth sanctuary to be built at Opequon Presbyterian Church in Winchester, Virginia. Opequon was founded in 1732 by the first European settlers to the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. These early German, Scot, Irish, and French settlers were of the reformed faith. They first settled among the tolerant Quakers of Pennsylvania. They longed for a place away from the established English and Roman churches where they could worship freely in their own simple but formal manner. When word reached them that the Shenandoah Valley was open for settlement, they headed west, then south, down the Old Wagon Road (today's U.S. 11 and Interstate 81), to establish the oldest congregation west of the Blue Ridge Mountains. From the first simple log building in the wilderness where a teenaged surveyor was among the worshipers, to a larger log building constructed during the time when that same surveyor returned as a colonel to oversee the construction of a line of defensive frontier forts during the French and Indian War. Three years before the surveyor, turned colonel, and later general, was about to take the oath of office as the first president of the United States, a dignified stone meeting house was constructed. The building stood for seven decades before General Stonewall Jackson suffered his only defeat there at the First Battle of Kernstown. Heavily damaged and stripped of its interior, the building stabled horses during the occupation that followed the Second Battle of Kernstown. As soon as possible after the end of the war, the congregation restored their meeting house, only to see it gutted by fire within a month. Even without a building of their own for the first time in 140 years, the now small congregation continued to worship together. After 20 years of sharing the neighboring churches of the Methodists and Mennonites, the congregation was able to rebuild their own church. From the reclaimed scorched stones of their old meeting house, they built a simple late Victorian church building. For more than a century this smaller sanctuary provided the worship space until construction of the present generous sanctuary. The tune was first played at the ground-breaking service for the fifth sanctuary of the church. William Heavner, 2006
Copyright: © 2005 William Heavner. The author gives permission for use in worship services. Commercial rights reserved by the composer. For further information contact: William Heavner, Opequonal rights reserved.

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The Cyber Hymnal #5687
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The Cyber Hymnal #5687

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