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And may the promise of Advent be yours this day and always.

O Jesus, our salvation

Representative Text

1 O Jesus, our Salvation,
Low at Thy cross we lie:
Lord, in Thy great compassion,
Hear our bewailing cry.
We come to Thee with mourning,
We come to Thee in woe;
With contrite hearts returning,
And tears that overflow.

2 O gracious Intercessor!
O Priest within the veil,
Please for each lost transgressor
The blood that cannot fail.
We lay our sins before Thee,
We tell them one by one:
O for Thy Name's great glory
Forgive all we have done.

3 O by Thy cross and passion,
Thy tears and agony,
And crown of cruel fashion,
And death on Calvary;
By all that untold suffering,
Endured by Thee alone,
O Priest, O spotless Offering,
Plead, for Thou didst atone!

4 And in these hearts now broken
Re-enter Thou and reign,
And say, by that dear token,
We are absolved again.
And build us up, and guide us,
And guard us day by day;
And in Thy presence hide us,
And take our sins away.

Amen.

Source: The Hymnal and Order of Service #191

Author: James Hamilton

Hamilton, James, M.A., was born at Glendollar, Scotland, April 18, 1819, and educated at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Taking Holy Orders in 1845, he held various charges until 1866, when he became Incumbent of St. Barnabas's, Bristol. In 1867 he was preferred to the Vicarage of Doulting, diocese of Bath and Wells. Mr. Hamilton is the author of a few hymns of great merit. Of these the following are in common use:— 1. Across the sky the shades of night. New Year's Eve. "Written to the old chorale introduced by Mendelssohn into his St. Paul, ‘To God on High be thanks and praise.' " (Hymns Ancient & Modern, tune to 104 by Decius.) It is in Thring's Collection, 1882, &c. 2. O Jesu! Lord most merciful. Passiontide. Contr… Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: O Jesus, our salvation
Author: James Hamilton
Language: English
Copyright: Public Domain

Tune

PASSION CHORALE (Hassler)

The tune HERZLICH TUT MICH VERLANGEN has been associated with Gerhardt's text ["O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden"] since they were first published together in 1656. The tune's first association with a sacred text was its attachment in 1913 [sic: should read 1613] to Christoph Knoll's funeral text "Herzl…

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LUX MUNDI (Sullivan)


AU FORT DE MA DETRESSE

GENEVAN 130 was first published in the 1539 edition of the Genevan Psalter. The 1564 harmonization by Claude Goudimel (PHH 6) originally placed the melody in the tenor. GENEVAN 130 is a Dorian tune consisting of four long lines in which the rhythm of line 3 is a fitting contrast to the repeated rhyt…

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Timeline

Instances

Instances (1 - 19 of 19)

Christian Hymnal #d340

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Church Hymnal #59

Gloria in Excelsis #d484

Hymnal of the Evangelical Church. Word ed. #d533

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Hymns for the Reformed Church in the United States #140

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In Excelsis #409

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In Excelsis #a409

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Laudes Domini #618

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The Christian Hymnal #114

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The Church Hymnary #414

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The Evangelical Hymnal #207

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The Evangelical Hymnal. Text edition #207

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The Hymnal and Order of Service #191

Text

The Hymnal and Order of Service #191

The Hymnal of the Evangelical Lutheran Augustana Synod. Text ed. #d412

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The Lutheran Hymnary #AIII

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The Lutheran Hymnary #477

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The New Laudes Domini #630

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The Praise Hymnary #333

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