Text: | Up, My Soul, Gird Thee With Power |
Author: | Johann B. Treystein |
Translator: | E. Cronenwett |
Tune: | NASSAU |
Composer (attributed to): | Johann Rosenmüller |
1 Up, my soul, gird thee with pow'r,
Watch! to prayer betake thee;
Lest the sudden evil hour
Unawares o'ertake thee.
Satan's prey
Soon are they,
Who, with best endeavor,
Watch not, pray not, ever.
2 But first rouse thee, and awake
From secure indiff'rence;
Else will follow in its wake
Woe without deliv'rance.
Take thou heed!
Utter need,
Death in sins might find thee,
Ere thou look behind thee.
3 Wake, arouse! else can the Lord
Not enlighten, ground thee;
Nor thou see the quick'ning Word
Shine in splendor round thee.
God demands
Eyes and hands
Open for the offers,
He so richly proffers.
4 With thy watching mingle prayer;
Grace but rids from slumber.
God rids thee from slothful care
And the weights that cumber;
Else will still
Mind and will
Lukewarm praises tender,
And cold service render.
5 God will have it that we ask,
And it shall be given;
Who pray alway, alway bask
In the grace of heaven.
Ere they plead
Will He heed,
Strengthen, keep, defend them,
And deliv'rance send them.
6 Cheer thee then, my soul! all must
Work for good and bless us,
If we but in prayerful trust
To God's Son address us;
And He will
Richly fill,
And His Spirit send us,
Who to Him commend us.
7 Let us watch then, pray, with heed,
God will prove our Hearer;
For the hour of utmost need
Constantly draws nearer.
Saints will cheer,
Sinners fear,
When the trumpet calleth,
Earth in ruins falleth.
Text Information | |
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First Line: | Up, my soul, gird thee with pow'r |
Title: | Up, My Soul, Gird Thee With Power |
Translator: | E. Cronenwett (1880) |
Author: | Johann B. Treystein (1697) |
Meter: | 7 6 7 6 3 3 6 6 |
Language: | English |
Publication Date: | 1930 |
Topic: | The Christian Life: Consecration |
Tune Information | |
---|---|
Name: | NASSAU |
Composer (attributed to): | Johann Rosenmüller |
Meter: | 7 6 7 6 3 3 6 6 |
Key: | D Major |
Source: | German chorale: Straf mich nicht in deinem Zorn; Dresden, 1694 |