Lord God, Your Love Has Called Us Here

Full Text

1 Great God, your love has called us here
as we, by love, for love were made.
Your living likeness still we bear,
though marred, dishonored, disobeyed.
We come, with all our heart and mind
your call to hear, your love to find.

2 We come with self-inflicted pains
of broken trust and chosen wrong,
half-free, half-bound by inner chains,
by social forces swept along,
by powers and systems close confined,
yet seeking hope for humankind.

3 Great God, in Christ you call our name
and then receive us as your own,
not through some merit, right or claim,
but by your gracious love alone.
We strain to glimpse your mercy seat
and find you kneeling at our feet.

4 Then take the towel, and break the bread,
and humble us, and call us friends.
Suffer and serve till all are fed,
and show how grandly love intends
to work till all creation sings,
to fill all worlds, to crown all things.

5 Great God, in Christ you set us free
your life to live, your joy to share.
Give us your Spirit's liberty
to turn from guilt and dull despair
and offer all that faith can do
while love is making all things new.

Author: Brian Wren, 1936-

Brian Wren(b. 1936) is Emeritus Professor of Worship, Columbia Theological Seminary, Decatur, Georgia. He is a writer, preacher, worship and workshop leader, and internationally published hymn-poet, with entries in most recent denominational hymnals in North America, Britain and Australia. Some of his hymn-poems have been translated into Finnish, French, Japanese, Mandarin, Spanish and Korean.Brian holds undergraduate and doctoral degrees from Oxford University. He is a Minister of the United Reformed Church (UK). His publications include What Language Shall I Borrow? - God-Talk in Worship: A Male Response to Feminist Theology (1989 and 2009), Praying Twice: The Music and Words of Congregational Song (2000), Advent, Christmas and Epiphany:… Go to person page >

Tune

RYBURN


ST. PETERSBURG

Dmitri Stephanovich Bortnianski (b. Gloukoff, Ukraine, 1751; d. St. Petersburg, Russia, 1825) was a Russian composer of church music, operas, and instrumental music. His tune ST. PETERSBURG (also known as RUSSIAN HYMN) was first published in J. H. Tscherlitzky's Choralbuch (1825). The tune is suppo…

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ABINGDON


Timeline

Media

Worship and Rejoice #55

Instances

Instances (15)TextImageAudioScore
Church Hymnal, Fifth Edition #416
Church Hymnary, Fourth Edition #484Text
Common Praise #442Text
Complete Anglican Hymns Old & New #251
Evangelical Lutheran Worship #358Image
Hymns Ancient & Modern, New Standard Edition #489
Lift Up Your Hearts: psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs #153Image
Presbyterian Hymnal #353TextImage
Rejoice in the Lord #503Text
Scripture Song Database #1296
Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal #396
The United Methodist Hymnal #579TextImage
The Worshiping Church #779TextImage
With One Voice #666Text
Worship and Rejoice #55TextImageAudioScore