
1 Jesus, Lord of life and glory,
bend from heav'n thy gracious ear;
while our waiting souls adore thee,
Friend of helpless sinners, hear:
Refrain:
by thy mercy, O deliver us, good Lord.
2 From the depth of nature's blindness,
from the hard'ning pow'r of sin,
from all malice and unkindness,
from the pride that lurks within, [Refrain]
3 When temptation sorely presses,
In the day of Satan's pow'r,
In our times of deep distresses,
In each dark and trying hour, [Refrain]
4 When the world around is smiling,
in the time of wealth and ease,
earthly joys our hearts beguiling,
in the day of health and peace, [Refrain]
5 In our weary hours of sickness,
in our times of grief and pain,
when we feel our mortal weakness,
when the creature's help is vain, [Refrain]
6 In the solemn hour of dying,
in the awful Judgment Day,
may our souls, on thee relying,
find thee still our rock and stay: [Refrain]
Source: Trinity Hymnal (Rev. ed.) #569
First Line: | Jesus, Lord of life and glory, Bend from heaven Thy gracious ear |
Title: | Jesu, Lord of life and glory |
Author: | James John Cummins (1839) |
Meter: | 8.7.8.7.4.7 |
Language: | English |
Copyright: | Public Domain |
Jesus, Lord of life and glory, Bend from, &c. J. J. Cummins. [Lent.] A sweet and musical Litany, which appeared in his Poetical Meditations and Hymns, 1839, in 7 stanzas of 4 lines, with the refrain, "By Thy mercy, 0 deliver us, Good Lord." In 1819, it was reprinted in his Hymns, Meditations, and Other Poems, London, Royston & Brown, pp. 26-27. It is in common use as:—
(1) Orig. text. stanzas i., iii.-vii., with "our Hope," for "our Rock," in Hymns Ancient & Modern 1868 and 1875.
(2) "Jesu, Lord of life and glory." As in Hymns Ancient & Modern, with change to Jesu only in the Hymnary, 1872.
(3) “Jesus, Lord, we kneel before Thee." In the Salisbury Hymn Book, 1857, No. 74, with the alteration of the first line, the omission of stanza v. and the addition of stanza vii. The same text was repeated in Kennedy, 1863, the Anglican Hymn Book, 1808, and in the 1869 Appendixto the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge Psalms & Hymns.
(4) The same first line, but composed of stanzas i., iii., iv., vi., and vii., in Chope's Hymnal, 1864, and Thring's Collection, 1882.
(5) The same text as Salisbury Hymn Book, with “Jesu" for "Jesus," in The Parish Hymn Book, 1863 and 1875, Sarum, 1868, &c.
The sub-title of the Hymns, &c, of 1849, and by which the book is generally known, is Lyra Evangelica. Original text therein.
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)