Hymn inspired by Psalm 84 – God who walked this earth before us

Inspired by Psalm 84

God who walked this earth before us


God who walked this earth before us,
over mountains, by cool springs,
pictured in the poet's image:
soaring high on eagles’ wings:

we can never cage or capture
such a Spirit in her flight,
yet within a vaulted temple
people seek to praise your might.

'Neath its eaves, in arching timbers,
birds are nesting, swallows fly,
here where choirs will praise Your glory,
priests and people sing or cry.

While we worship in closed buildings,
shuttered from the world outside,
far beyond our tethered spirits,
Love is soaring, free to glide.

Words © 2015 © Stainer & Bell Ltd, London, England copyright@stainer.co.uk . Please include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
Tune: RUSSIAN AIR (Hymns for the People, 43; Jubilate); DIJON
Metre: 8.7.8.7

The Hardest Part – Studdert Kennedy

At a time when rumours of wars have been replaced by real wars at every turn Studdert Kennedy’s words warrant re-visiting. Written by a man trying to find out what ‘God is like’ in the context of war – The First World War – this is still relevant if only to make us think. The book is widely available in various formats. Take a look here

Extract – pertinent to a time when we elect governments…

God’s will has been a shibboleth for those who wished to bolster up the existing social order. God is Almighty, and God can do no wrong, and therefore, whatever is, is right.


The rich man in his castle,
The poor man at his gate. God made them high or lowly
And ordered their estate.


So we sang with childish lips, and so we were taught and believed until we learned in the school of the world that the rich man often — not always, but often — entered his castle by filthy ways, paved with human miseries and wet with human blood, and that it was often not God but whisky that put the poor man at his gate.


Once the eyes of man are opened to the power and persistence of evil in the world, this pious or impious fatalism becomes impossible ; and when men have learned to hate evil with all their hearts, it becomes not only impossible but repulsive and dis gusting.

Hidden mysteries amaze us Mark 4: 26 – 34

Hymn: Hidden mysteries amaze us June 16TH Lectionary Mark 4: 26 – 34

Hidden mysteries amaze us,
seed is sown then grows up high,
swelling seas form mighty mountains,
stars adorn the evening sky.

Jesus saw in life a story,
parables of love and grace,
things of God and revelation,
rooted, grounded in each place.

Yet for some the grace stayed hidden,
clouded, shrouded from their eyes,
others read the words more clearly,
God unmasked, not in disguise.

Here in Christ they saw the God-head,
emptied now of all but love;
God now grounded, standing with them,
not in cosmic space above.
© Andrew Pratt 31/5/2012
Words © 2012 © Stainer & Bell Ltd, London, England copyright@stainer.co.uk . Please include any reproduction for local church use on your CCL Licence returns. All wider and any commercial use requires prior application to Stainer & Bell Ltd.
Tune: GOTT WILL’S MACHEN
Metre: 8.7.8.7