Lord of the living harvest

Representative Text

1 Lord of the living harvest
That whitens o'er the plain,
Where angels soon shall gather
Their sheaves of golden grain;
Accept these hands to labor,
These hearts to trust and love,
And deign with them to hasten
Thy kingdom from above.

2 As laborers in Thy vineyard,
Send us, O Christ, to be
Content to bear the burden
Of weary days for Thee;
We ask no other wages,
When Thou shalt call us home,
But to have shared the travail
Which makes Thy kingdom come.

3 Be with us, God the Father,
Be with us, God the Son,
And God the Holy Spirit,
Eternal Three in One!
Make us a royal priesthood,
Thee rightly to adore,
And fill us with Thy fullness
Now and for evermore.

AMEN.

Source: The A.M.E. Zion Hymnal: official hymnal of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church #364

Author: John S. B. Monsell

John Samuel Bewley Monsell (b. St. Colomb's, Londonderry, Ireland, 1811; d. Guilford, Surrey, England, 1875) was educated at Trinity College in Dublin and served as a chaplain and rector of several churches in Ireland after his ordination in 1835. Transferred to England in 1853, he became rector of Egham in Surrey and was rector of St. Nicholas Church in Guilford from 1870 until his death (caused by a construction accident at his church). A prolific poet, Monsell published his verse in eleven volumes. His three hundred hymns, many celebrating the seasons of the church year, were issued in collections such as Hymns and Miscellaneous Poems (1837), Spiritual Songs (1857), Hymns of Love and Praise (1863), and The Parish Hymnal (1873). Bert P… Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: Lord of the living harvest
Author: John S. B. Monsell (1866)
Meter: 7.6.7.6 D
Language: English
Copyright: Public Domain

Notes

Lord of the living harvest. J. S. B. Monsell . [Ordination, and Church Guilds.] This hymn appears in the hymnbooks, first as a hymn for Ember Day and Ordinations; and second, for Church Guilds and Associations.
1. It originally appeared in Dr. Monsell's Hymns of Love and Praise, 2nd edition, 1866, in 4 stanzas of 8 lines, for Ember Days and Ordinations. This was repeated in his Parish Hymnal, 1813, and the people's edition of his Spiritual Songs, 1875, the last being the authorized text. From this text Thring's Collection, 1882, differs somewhat, and especially in stanza iii. In Monsell the hymn is a prayer for the Ordained, in Thring the prayer is supposed to be offered by the Ordained themselves. For use at Ordinations Dr. Monsell's authorized form is the better of the two.
2. In the Society for Promoting Church Knowledge Church Hymns, 1871, the hymn is given in an altered form for Church Guilds and Associations. With two slight changes in the text, and the omission of stanza iii., this was given in W. F. Stevenson's Hymns for the Church and Home, 1873, with a note in which he says that his text was "printed from manuscript in the form finally adopted by the author."
The authorized text of this hymn therefore is (1) for Ordination—that in Dr. Monsell's Parish Hymnal, and (2) for Church Guilds and Associations, that in Dr. Stevenson's Hymns.

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Tune

EDENGROVE


AURELIA

Composed by Samuel S. Wesley (PHH 206), AURELIA (meaning "golden") was published as a setting for “Jerusalem the Golden” in Selection of Psalms and Hymns, which was compiled by Charles Kemble and Wesley in 1864. Though opinions vary concerning the tune's merits (Henry J. Gauntlett once condemned…

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HOLY CHURCH


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Instances

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Christian Worship (1993) #559

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Lutheran Worship #260

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The A.M.E. Zion Hymnal #364

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The Cyber Hymnal #3849

Hymns of the Christian Life #440

Include 110 pre-1979 instances
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