Litany for the Slandered

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1 O God, my faithful God,
True fountain ever flowing,
Without whom nothing is,
All perfect gifts bestowing:
Give me a healthy frame,
And may I have within
A conscience free from blame,
A soul unstained by sin.

2 Grant me the strength to do
With ready heart and willing
Whatever You command,
My calling here fulfilling;
That I do what I should
While trusting You to bless
The outcome for my good,
for You must give success.

3 Keep me from saying words
That later need recalling;
Guard me lest idle speech
May from my lips be falling;
But when within my place
I must and ought to speak,
Then to my words give grace
Lest I offend the weak.

4 Lord, let me win my foes
With kindly words and actions,
And let me find good friends
For counsel and correction.
Help me, as You have taught,
To love both great and small
And by Your Spirit's might
To live in peace with all.

5 Let me depart this life
Confiding in my Savior;
By grace receive my soul
That it may live forever;
And let my body have
A quiet resting place
Within a Christian grave;
And let it sleep in peace.

6 And on that final day
When all the dead are waking,
Stretch out Your mighty hand,
My deathly slumber breaking.
Then let me hear Your voice,
Redeem this earthly frame,
And bid me to rejoice
With those who love Your name.



Source: Lutheran Service Book #696

Author: Johann Heermann

Heermann, Johann, son of Johannes Heermann, furrier at Baudten, near Wohlau, Silesia, was born at Baudten, Oct. 11,1585. He was the fifth but only surviving child of his parents, and during a severe illness in his childhood his mother vowed that if he recovered she would educate him for the ministry, even though she had to beg the necessary money. He passed through the schools at Wohlau; at Fraustadt (where he lived in the house of Valerius Herberger, q. v., who took a great interest in him); the St. Elizabeth gymnasium at Breslau; and the gymnasium at Brieg. At Easter, 1609, he accompanied two young noblemen (sons of Baron Wenzel von Rothkirch), to whom he had been tutor at Brieg, to the University of Strassburg; but an affection of the ey… Go to person page >

Translator: Catherine Winkworth

Catherine Winkworth is "the most gifted translator of any foreign sacred lyrics into our tongue, after Dr. Neale and John Wesley; and in practical services rendered, taking quality with quantity, the first of those who have laboured upon German hymns. Our knowledge of them is due to her more largely than to any or all other translators; and by her two series of Lyra Germanica, her Chorale Book, and her Christian Singers of Germany, she has laid all English-speaking Christians under lasting obligation." --Annotations of the Hymnal, Charles Hutchins, M.A., 1872… Go to person page >

Author (Prayer): Paul Detterman

(no biographical information available about Paul Detterman.) Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: O God, Thou faithful God
Title: Litany for the Slandered
Author: Johann Heermann (1630)
Translator: Catherine Winkworth (1863)
Author (Prayer): Paul Detterman (2011)
Meter: 6.7.6.7.6.6.6.6
Source: James 3: 9-10 and Psalm 35
Language: English
Notes: Scriptural Reading ending with Hymn: Oh God, my faithful God.
Copyright: © 1973, 1984, 2011 by Biblica Inc (for text); © Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (for author of prayer); © THE HOLY BIBLE< NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION ®, NIV ® Copyright (for text)

Tune

DARMSTADT

Also known as: WAS FRAG ICH NACH DER WELT O GOTT DU FROMMER GOTT Composed by Ahasuerus Fritsch (b. Mücheln on the Geissel, near Merseburg, Germany, 1629; d. Rudolstadt, Germany, 1701), DARMSTADT first appeared in his Himmels-Lust und Welt-Unlust (1679). The melody was altered when it was publishe…

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O GOTT DU FROMMER GOTT


Timeline

Media

Psalter Hymnal (Gray) #574

Instances

Instances (7)TextImageAudioScore
Psalms for All Seasons: a complete Psalter for worship #35AImage
Rejoice in the Lord #69Text
Psalter Hymnal (Gray) #574TextImageAudioScore
Lift Up Your Hearts: psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs #646Image
Presbyterian Hymnal #277TextImage
Trinity Hymnal #602Text
Lutheran Service Book #696Text