W. M. Bunting

W. M. Bunting
Short Name: W. M. Bunting
Full Name: Bunting, W. M. (William Maclardie), 1805-1866
Birth Year: 1805
Death Year: 1866

Bunting, William Maclardie, son of Dr. Jabez Bunting, a well-known Wesleyan minister, was born at Manchester, Nov. 23,1805, and educated at the Wesleyan Schools at Woodhouse Grove, and Kingswood, and at St. Saviour's Grammar School, Southwark. In 1824 he entered the Wesleyan Ministry, and continued in active circuit work for twenty-five years. Failing health then compelled him to retire upon the Supernumerary list, when he took up his residence in London, and died there on Nov. 13, 1866. In addition to editing the Select Letters of Agnes Bulmer, &c, 1842, and engaging in other literary labours, he contributed hymns to the Methodist Magazine (under the nom de plume of Alec) from time to time, and specially 43 to Dr. Leifchild's Original Hymns, 1842. Of these Dr. Leifchild rejected 8, and abbreviated 2. In 1842 these 10 hymns were published as An Instrument of Ten Strings, strung in aid of the Wesleyan Missions, By Alec. Other hymns by him were included in his Memorials, &c, published by the Rev. G. S. Rowe in 1870. Although a few of these hymns have come into common use, they have failed as a whole to command public attention.

Those in common use are:—
1. Blessed are the pure in heart, They have, &c. Purity.
2. Blest Spirit! from the Eternal Sire. Holy Spirit.
3. Dear is the day which God hath made. Sunday.
4. Father, our child we place. Holy Baptism.
5. Holy Spirit, pity me. Lent.
6. O blessed, blessed sounds of grace. After Sermon.
7. O crucified, triumphant Lord. Holy Baptism.
8. O God, how often hath Thine ear. Renewing the Covenant. Written in 1824, and given in the Supplement to the Wesleyan Hymn Book 1830. This is the best known of his hymns.
9. Thou doest all things well. God all in all. Most of these hymns are in the revised Wesleyan Hymn Book, 1875; Nos. 1-4 and 6 were in Dr. Leifchild's Original Hymns, 1842, and all are in the Memorials, 1870.

-- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

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Bunting, William Maclardie, p. 193, ii. Of his hymns named here, Nos. 1-4, and 6, were in Leifchild's Original Hymns, 1842: as also, "We love to call creation Thine." (Missions.) The hymn, "Rites cannot change the heart," in the American Methodist Episcopal Hymnal, 1878, begins with stanza iii. of No. 4, "Father, our child we place." His hymn, No. 9, "O God, how often hath thine ear," was written at the age of 15, and was first published in the Methodist Magazine for Jan. 1824.

--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)


Texts by W. M. Bunting (14)AsAuthority Languagessort descendingInstances
A strong tower is the Lord our GodW. M. Bunting (Author)5
Blest Spirit, from the eternal SireW. M. Bunting (Author)2
My Sabbath suns may all have setW. M. Bunting (Author)5
The flesh of our Lord Jesus ChristW. M. Bunting (Author)5
While yet the life proclaiming wordW. M. Bunting (Author)3
Blessed are the pure in heart, They have loved the better partWilliam Maclardie Bunting, 1805-66 (Author)English1
Father, our child we placeW. M. Bunting (Author)English3
Holy Spirit, pity me, Pierced with grief for grieving TheeRev. W. M. Bunting (Author)English8
Let all in whom the Spirit glowsW. M. Bunting (Author)English5
O blessed, blessed sounds of graceWilliam Maclardie Bunting (Author)English4
O God, how often hath thine earW. M. Bunting (Author)English10
Rites cannot change the heartWilliam M. Bunting (Author)English5
Rites change not, Lord, the heartW. M. Bunting (Author)English6
This day the covenant I signW. M. Bunting (Author)English3
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