Great is the Lord our God. I. Watts. [Psalm xlviii.] First published in his Psalms of David, &c, 1719, in 7 stanzas of 4 lines, and headed, "The Church is the honour and safety of a nation." The popular form of this hymn is composed of stanzas i., ii., vi., vii. This is in extensive use in Great Britain and America, and embodies the oft-quoted stanza:—
"These temples of His grace,
How beautiful they stand
The honours of our native place,
The bulwarks of our land."
In a few cases the text is altered, and sometimes, as in the New Mitre, 1875, a doxology is addedition
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)