At the Name of Jesus

Full Text

1 At the Name of Jesus
Every knee shall bow,
Every tongue confess Him
King of glory now;
'Tis the Father's pleasure
We should call Him Lord,
Who from the beginning
Was the mighty Word.

2 At His voice creation
Sprang at once to sight,
All the angel faces,
All the hosts of light,
Thrones and dominations,
Stars upon their way,
All the heavenly orders,
In their great array.

3 Humbled for a season,
To receive a Name
From the lips of sinners
Unto whom He came,
Faithfully he bore it
Spotless to the last,
Brought it back victorious,
When from death He passed;

4 Bore it up triumphant,
With its human light,
Through all ranks of creatures,
To the central height;
To the throne of Godhead,
To the Father's breast,
Filled it with the glory
Of that perfect rest.

5 In your hearts enthrone Him;
There let Him subdue
All that is not holy,
All that is not true:
Crown Him as your Captain
In temptation's hour;
Let His will enfold you
In its light and power.

6 Brothers, this Lord Jesus
Shall return again,
With His Father's glory,
With His angel train;
For all wreaths of empire
Meet upon His brow,
And our hearts confess Him
King of Glory now.

The Hymnal: revised and enlarged as adopted by the General Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America in the year of our Lord 1892

Author: Caroline M. Noel

Noel, Caroline Maria, daughter of the Hon. Gerard T. Noel (p. 809, ii.), and niece of the Hon. Baptist W. Noel, was born in London, April 10, 1817, and died at 39 Great Cumberland Place, Hyde Park, Dec. 7, 1877. Her first hymn, "Draw nigh unto my soul" (Indwelling), was written when she was 17. During the next three years she wrote about a dozen pieces: from 20 years of age to 40 she wrote nothing; and during the next 20 years the rest of her pieces were written. The first edition of her compositions was published as The Name of Jesus and Other Verses for the Sick and Lonely, in 1861. This was enlarged from time to time, and its title subsequently changed by the publishers to The Name of Jesus and Other Poems. The 1878 ed. contains 78 piece… Go to person page >

Notes

Scripture References:
st. 1 = Phil. 2:6-11
John 1:1
st. 2 = Ps. 33:6-9
st. 3 = Col. 2:15
st. 6 = Acts 1:11

Caroline Marie Noel (b. Teston, Kent, England, 1817; d. St. Marylebone, London, England, 1877) wrote this spiritually powerful text. The daughter of an Anglican clergyman and hymn writer, she began to write poetry in her late teens but then abandoned it until she was in her forties. During those years she suffered frequent bouts of illness and eventually became an invalid. To encourage both herself and others who were ill or incapacitated, Noel began to write devotional verse again. Her poems were collected in The Name of Jesus and Other Verses for the Sick and Lonely (1861, enlarged in 1870).

One of the hymns in the 1870 collection was this text (originally beginning "In the Name of Jesus"), designed for use as a processional hymn on Ascension Day. The Psalter Hymnal includes stanzas 1, 3-5, and 7-8 of Noel's original eight stanzas.

The text is based on the confession of faith that Paul quotes in Philippians 2:6-11, which may well have been an early Christian hymn. Stanza 1 announces the triumph of the ascended Christ to whom "every knee should bow" (Phil. 2: 10). In stanza 2 Christ is the "mighty Word" (see John 1:1-4) through whom "creation sprang at once to sight." Stanzas 3 and 4 look back to Christ's humiliation, death, resurrection, and ascension (Phil. 2:6-9). Stanza 5 is an encouragement for submission to Christ, for us to have the "mind of Christ," and stanza 6 looks forward to Christ's return as "King of glory." The text is not only concerned with the name 'Jesus," whose saving work it confesses, but also with the glory and majesty that attends "the name of Jesus."

Liturgical Use:
Advent; Easter; Ascension; Epiphany; as a sung confession of faith; many other occasions of worship.

--Psalter Hymnal Handbook

Tune

KING'S WESTON

Ralph Vaughan Williams (PHH 316) composed KING'S WESTON for this text. It was published in Songs of Praise (1925). The combination of text and tune in a festive hymn¬-anthem by Vaughan Williams has become a favorite of many church choirs. The tune's title refers to a manor house on the Avon River n…

Go to tune page >


EVELYNS


Timeline

Media

Baptist Hymnal 1991 #198

Instances

Instances (34)TextImageAudioScore
A New Hymnal for Colleges and School #19
Baptist Hymnal 1991 #198TextImageAudioScore
Baptist Hymnal 2008 #309TextImage
Celebration Hymnal #766Image
Christian Worship: a Lutheran hymnal #344Text
Church Family Worship #305
Church Hymnary, Fourth Edition #458bText
Church Hymnary, Fourth Edition #458aText
Common Praise #375Text
Complete Anglican Hymns Old & New #55
Complete Mission Praise #41
Evangelical Lutheran Hymnary #53Text
Evangelical Lutheran Worship #416Image
Hymnal 1982: according to the use of the Episcopal Church #435TextImage
Hymns Ancient & Modern, New Standard Edition #148
Hymns Old and New: New Anglican #46
Lift Up Your Hearts: psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs #220Image
Lutheran Service Book #512Text
Presbyterian Hymnal #148TextImage
Psalter Hymnal (Gray) #467TextImageAudio
Rejoice in the Lord #336Text
Renew! #133TextImage
Renew! #279TextImage
Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal #232
Sing Glory: Hymns, Psalms and Songs for a New Century #317
The Covenant Hymnal: a worshipbook #268
The Hymnal for Worship and Celebration #235
The United Methodist Hymnal #167bTextImage
The United Methodist Hymnal #168TextImage
The Worshiping Church #266TextImage
Together in Song: Australian Hymn Book II #231
Trinity Hymnal #163Text
Voices United: The Hymn and Worship Book of The United Church of Canada #335Text
Worship and Rejoice #321TextImage