1. Royal and rare was the wondrous store
Naaman had bro't to the prophet's door,
Willing to give his countless wealth
To be restored to perfect health.
Chorus:
Wash and be clean, wash and be clean,
Wash in the fountain once open'd for sin;
Wash and be clean, wash and be clean,
This is the message: "Believe on His name."
2. Nothing to do but believe and live;
God was the Giver and loved to give;
Such was the message that came to him,
Bidding the leper "Wash and be clean." [Chorus]
3. Naaman, in anger, would not obey,
Proudly rejecting the simple way,
He would have purchased his health with gold,
Naught that was needed would he withhold. [Chorus]
Penn, William Evander. (Near village of Old Jefferson, Rutherford County, Tennessee, August 11, 1832--April 29, 1895, Eureka Springs, Arkansas). Southern Baptist. Evangelist in Texas and other states, 1875-1895. Compiled three hymnals titled Harvest Bells (1881, 1884, 1887) for use in his meetings. His hymns were primarily revivalistic in emphasis. His finest hymn, "There is a rock in a weary land, Its shadow falls on the burning sand" was paid the compliment of being reworked and issued under the name of Edward Husband in D.B. Towner's Revival Hymns (Chicago, 1905).
He and his wife Corilla Frances Sayle adopted three children. Ordained December 4, 1880.
--David W. Music, and additional information from the DNAH Archives
See:… Go to person page >
Display Title: Wash and Be CleanFirst Line: Royal and rare was the wondrous storeTune Title: [Royal and rare was the wondrous store]Author: W. E. PennDate: 1892
Display Title: Wash and Be CleanFirst Line: Royal and rare was the wondrous storeTune Title: [Royal and rare was the wondrous store]Author: W. E. PennDate: 1896
Display Title: Wash and Be CleanFirst Line: Royal and rare was the wondrous storeTune Title: [Royal and rare was the wondrous store]Date: 1888Source: English
It looks like you are using an ad-blocker. Ad revenue helps keep us running.
Please consider white-listing Hymnary.org or getting Hymnary Pro
to eliminate ads entirely and help support Hymnary.org.