1 Nearer, O God, to Thee,
Hear Thou our pray’r;
E’en tho’ a heavy cross,
Fainting we bear;
Still all our pray’r shall be,
Nearer to Thee,
Nearer, O God, to Thee;
Nearer to Thee.
2 If, where they led the Lord,
We, too, are borne;
Planting our steps in His;
Weary and worn;
There let us ever be;
Nearer to Thee;
Nearer, O God, to Thee;
Nearer to Thee.
3 And when Thou, Lord, once more,
Glorious shalt come;
Oh, for a dwelling place
In Thy bright home;
Thro’ all eternity!
Nearer to Thee;
Nearer, O God, to Thee;
Nearer to Thee.
Source: Gloria Deo: a Collection of Hymns and Tunes for Public Worship in all Departments of the Church #118
First Line: | Nearer, O God, to Thee! Hear Thou our prayer |
Title: | Nearer, O God, to Thee |
Author: | William Walsham How |
Language: | English |
Copyright: | Public Domain |
Nearer, my God, to Thee, Hear Thou my prayer. Bishop W. W. How. [Nearness to God desired.] This was written for the 1861 edition of Morrell & How's Psalms & Hymns where it was given as No. 154, a somewhat slightly different version of the same having appeared in Kennedy (1863) a short time before, as:—
"Nearer to Thee, my God,
Still would I rise."
The 1864 text has been repeated in several collections in Great Britain and America. In the Society for Promoting Christian KnowledgeChurch Hymns, 1871, it begins:—
"Nearer, O God, to Thee! Hear Thou my prayer,"
and is accompanied in the folio edition, 1881, with the note:—
"A paraphrase of Mrs. Adams's hymn, expressing more definitely Christian faith, and better adapted for congregational worship."
Although in somewhat extensive use, it is the least musical of Bishop How's hymns.
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)