Ye righteous, in the Lord rejoice; It is a seemly sight

Ye righteous, in the Lord rejoice; It is a seemly sight

Author: John Hopkins
Published in 9 hymnals

Representative Text

1 Ye righteous, in the Lord rejoice;
it is a seemly sight
That upright men with thankful voice
should praise the Lord of might.

2 Praise ye the Lord with harp, and sing
to him with psaltery,
With ten-string'd instrument sounding,
praise ye the Lord most high:

3 Sing to the Lord a song most new,
with courage give him praise,
For why? his word is ever true,
his works and all his ways:

4 Both judgment, equity and right
he ever lov'd and will,
And with his gifts he doth delight
the earth throughout to fill.

5 For by the word of God alone
the heav'ns above were wrought,
Their hosts and powers ev'ry one
his breath to pass has brought.

6 The waters great gather'd hath he
on heaps within the shore,
And hid them in the depth to be
as in a house of store.

7 Let all the earth then fear the Lord,
and keep his righteous law,
And all the world with one accord
dread him and stand in awe.

8 What he commanded, wrought it was
at once with utmost speed;
What he doth will is brought to pass
with full effect indeed.

9 The counsels of the nations rude
the Lord doth bring to naught,
He doth defeat the multitude
of their device and thought:

10 But his decrees continue still,
they never slack nor 'swage;
The motions of his mind and will
take place in ev'ry age.

The Second Part.

11 Blessed are they to whom the Lord
as God and guide is known,
Whom he doth choose of mere accord
to take them as his own.

12 The Lord from heav'n did cast his sight
on men mortal by birth,
Beholding from his seat of might
the dwellers on the earth.

13 The Lord, I say, whose hand hath wrought
man's heart, and doth it frame,
'Tis he alone doth know the thought
and working of the same.

14 A king that trusteth in his host
shall nought prevail at length,
The man that of his might doth boast
shall fail for all his strength:

15 The troops of horsemen all shall fail,
their sturdy steeds shall swerve;
The strength of horse shall not prevail
the rider to preserve:

16 But lo, the eyes of God attend
and watch to aid the just,
With such as fear him to offend,
and on his goodness trust;

17 That he of death and great distress
may set their souls from dread,
And if that dearth their land oppress
in hunger them to feed.

18 Wherefore our soul doth whole depend
on God our strength and stay
He is our shield, us to defend,
and drive all darts away.

19 Our joyful souls alway proclaim
his power and his might;
For why? in his most holy name
we hope and much delight.

20 Therefore let thy goodness, O Lord,
still present with us be,
As we always with one accord
do only trust in thee.

Source: The Whole Book of Psalms #XXXIII

Author: John Hopkins

(no biographical information available about John Hopkins.) Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: Ye righteous, in the Lord rejoice; It is a seemly sight
Author: John Hopkins
Language: English
Copyright: Public Domain

Timeline

Instances

Instances (1 - 9 of 9)

Asaph #d345

Bible Songs #d239

Divine Service Book for the Armed Forces #d248

Songs for Young and Old #d184

The Book of Psalms Rendered in Metre and Set to Music #d341

The Book of Psalms Rendered in Metre and Set to Music #ad341

The Psalms of David, in Metre #d154

TextPage Scan

The Whole Book of Psalms #XXXIII

TextPage Scan

The Whole Booke of Psalmes #15b

Suggestions or corrections? Contact us
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.