Nossa Morada na Rocha Está

Representative Text

1 Que alicerce tens para construir
Uma casa que possa resistir
A essa tempestade que assoprará
E a mal fundada casa abaterá?

Refrain:
Nossa morada na Rocha está;
Firme e segura sempre ficará.
Quando o temporal sobre ela der
Há de resistir bem ao seu poder.

2 Como a areia é sempre alicerce vão,
São também as obras na salvação;
Pois jamais irá salvação obter,
Quem não queira em Cristo, tão somente, crer.

3 Os cristãos, porém, que deveras creem,
Pelas obras mostram a fé que têm.
Praticando o bem provam todo o amor
Que por Cristo sentem como Salvador.

Source: Hinos e Cânticos: com música #59

Translator: S. E. McNair

Stuart Edmund McNair was born on March 8, 1867, in Brighton, England, and grew up in Croydon. He was the son of Lindsay William McNair and Harriet Agnes Turrell. He graduated in civil engineering, mechanical drawing, and theology. At 14, he had a significant experience with theologian John Nelson Darby, which influenced his spiritual journey. In 1891, McNair moved to Lisbon, where he worked for five years. In 1896, at 29 years old, he arrived in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, to do missionary work. Over the years, he evangelized in several Brazilian cities and traveled to Argentina, Spain, and Portugal, including a three-year stay in Coimbra, where he evangelized university students. In addition to his evangelism, McNair made a significant c… Go to person page >

Author: Priscilla J. Owens

Owens, Priscilla Jane, was born July 21, 1829, of Scotch and Welsh descent, and is now (1906) resident at Baltimore, where she is engaged in public-school work. For 50 years Miss Owen has interested herself in Sunday-school work, and most of her hymns were written for children's services. Her hymn in the Scotch Church Hymnary, 1898, "We have heard a joyful sound" (Missions), was written for a Sunday-school Mission Anniversary, and the words were adapted to the chorus "Vive le Roi" in the opera The Huguenots. [Rev. James Bonar, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix II (1907)… Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: Que alicerce tendes pra construir
Title: Nossa Morada na Rocha Está
English Title: Will your anchor hold in the storms of life
Author: Priscilla J. Owens (1882)
Translator: S. E. McNair
Meter: 10.10.10.10 with refrain
Language: Portuguese
Refrain First Line: Nossa morada na Rocha está
Publication Date: 1991
Copyright: This text may still be under copyright because it was published in 1991.

Timeline

Instances

Instances (1 - 3 of 3)

Hinário para o Culto Cristão #416

Hinário para o Culto Cristão (2nd ed.) #416

Text

Hinos e Cânticos #59

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