1 They come, God’s messengers of love,
They come from realms of peace above,
From homes of never-fading light,
From blissful mansions ever bright.
2 They come to watch around us here,
To soothe our sorrow, calm our fear:
But chiefly, at our journey's end,
'Tis theirs the spirit to defend.
3 Blest Jesus, Thou Whose groans and tears
Have sanctified frail nature’s fears,
To earth in bitter sorrow weighed,
Thou didst not scorn Thine angel’s aid.
4 An angel guard to us supply,
When on the bed of death we lie;
And by Thine own almighty power,
O shield us in that final hour.
Amen.
Source: Common Service Book of the Lutheran Church #253
First Line: | They come, God's messengers of love |
Author: | Robert Campbell |
Language: | English |
Copyright: | Public Domain |
They come, God's messengers of love. R. Campbell. [St. Michael and All Angels.] Written for, and first published in his Hymns and Anthems, 1850, p. 94, in 6 stanzas of 4 lines. In 1852 it was republished, with alterations, in Murray's Hymnal, No. 79. This was repeated in several collections, including Hymns Ancient & Modern, 1861, and has become the accepted form of the hymn. Sometimes it is abridged to four stanzas. It is the most widely adopted hymn for St. Michael and All Angels of any in the English language.
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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They come, God's messengers of love, p. 1163, ii. In Church Hymns, 1903, R. Campbell's original text of this hymn is restored.
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)