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Text Identifier:"^from_the_depths_my_prayer_ascendeth$"

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Pardoning Mercy

Appears in 6 hymnals First Line: From the depths my prayer ascendeth Lyrics: 1 From the depths my prayer ascendeth Unto God on high; Hear, O Lord, my supplication And my cry. 2 None can stand unscathed and blameless In Thy judgment just, But the contrite in Thy mercy Humbly trust. 3 Lord, my hope is in Thy promise, And I wait for Thee More than they who watch for morning, Light to see. 4 With the Lord is tender mercy, And redeeming love; Israel, look for full salvation From above. Topics: Aspirations For Christ; Aspirations For Grace; Aspirations For Holiness; Assurance Desired; Christians Believers; Faith Act of; Gospel Fulness of ; Hope; Pardon Set Forth; Pardon Sought; Penitence; Prayer Confession in; Prayer For Pardon; Prayer Importunity in ; Repentance; Resignation; Salvation From Sin and Trouble; Salvation God's Gift; Sin Confession of; Sin Salvation from; Waiting upon God ; Watchfulness Scripture: Psalm 130 Used With Tune: STEPHANOS

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BULLINGER

Meter: 8.5.8.3 Appears in 283 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Ethelbert W. Bullinger Tune Key: A Flat Major Incipit: 56513 26765 113 Used With Text: From the Depths My Prayer Ascendeth
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STEPHANOS

Appears in 338 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Henry W. Baker Tune Key: G Major Incipit: 33323 55433 21256 Used With Text: Pardoning Mercy

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From the Depths My Prayer Ascendeth

Hymnal: Psalter Hymnal (Red) #289 (1934) Meter: 8.5.8.3 Lyrics: 1 From the depths my prayer ascendeth Unto God on high; Hear, O Lord, my supplication And my cry. 2 None can stand unscathed and blameless In Thy judgment just, But the contrite in Thy mercy Humbly trust. 3 Lord, my hope is in Thy promise, And I wait for Thee More than they who watch for morning, Light to see. 4 With the Lord is tender mercy, And redeeming love; Israel, look for full salvation From above. Topics: Confession of Sin; Forgiveness of Sin; Grace of God; Hope; Longing for God or Christ; Mercy of God; Morning; Prayer; Preparatory Service; Redemption; Salvation; Sorrow for Sin; Waiting upon God ; Watchfulness Scripture: Psalm 130 Languages: English Tune Title: BULLINGER
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From the Depths My Prayer Ascendeth

Author: Anonymous Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #1499 Meter: 8.5.8.3 Lyrics: 1. From the depths my prayer ascendeth Unto God on high; Hear, O Lord, my supplication And my cry. 2. None can stand unscathed and blameless In Thy judgment just, But the contrite in Thy mercy Humbly trust. 3. Lord, my hope is in Thy promise, And I wait for Thee More than they who watch for morning, Light to see. 4. With the Lord is tender mercy, And redeeming love; Israel, look for full salvation From above. Languages: English Tune Title: BULLINGER

From The Depths My Prayer Ascendeth

Hymnal: Psalter Hymnal (Blue) #275 (1976) Meter: 8.5.8.3 Topics: Hope, Christian; Longing, Spiritual; Waiting upon God ; Waiting upon God ; Watchfulness; Forgiveness of Sins; Preparatory Service; Mercy, God'S Scripture: Psalm 130 Languages: English Tune Title: BULLINGER

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H. W. Baker

1821 - 1877 Person Name: Henry W. Baker Composer of "STEPHANOS" in The Psalter Baker, Sir Henry Williams, Bart., eldest son of Admiral Sir Henry Loraine Baker, born in London, May 27, 1821, and educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he graduated, B.A. 1844, M.A. 1847. Taking Holy Orders in 1844, he became, in 1851, Vicar of Monkland, Herefordshire. This benefice he held to his death, on Monday, Feb. 12, 1877. He succeeded to the Baronetcy in 1851. Sir Henry's name is intimately associated with hymnody. One of his earliest compositions was the very beautiful hymn, "Oh! what if we are Christ's," which he contributed to Murray's Hymnal for the Use of the English Church, 1852. His hymns, including metrical litanies and translations, number in the revised edition of Hymns Ancient & Modern, 33 in all. These were contributed at various times to Murray's Hymnal, Hymns Ancient & Modern and the London Mission Hymn Book, 1876-7. The last contains his three latest hymns. These are not included in Hymns Ancient & Modern. Of his hymns four only are in the highest strains of jubilation, another four are bright and cheerful, and the remainder are very tender, but exceedingly plaintive, sometimes even to sadness. Even those which at first seem bright and cheerful have an undertone of plaintiveness, and leave a dreamy sadness upon the spirit of the singer. Poetical figures, far-fetched illustrations, and difficult compound words, he entirely eschewed. In his simplicity of language, smoothness of rhythm, and earnestness of utterance, he reminds one forcibly of the saintly Lyte. In common with Lyte also, if a subject presented itself to his mind with striking contrasts of lights and shadows, he almost invariably sought shelter in the shadows. The last audible words which lingered on his dying lips were the third stanza of his exquisite rendering of the 23rd Psalm, "The King of Love, my Shepherd is:"— Perverse and foolish, oft I strayed, But yet in love He sought me, And on His Shoulder gently laid, And home, rejoicing, brought me." This tender sadness, brightened by a soft calm peace, was an epitome of his poetical life. Sir Henry's labours as the Editor of Hymns Ancient & Modern were very arduous. The trial copy was distributed amongst a few friends in 1859; first ed. published 1861, and the Appendix, in 1868; the trial copy of the revised ed. was issued in 1874, and the publication followed in 1875. In addition he edited Hymns for the London Mission, 1874, and Hymns for Mission Services, n.d., c. 1876-7. He also published Daily Prayers for those who work hard; a Daily Text Book, &c. In Hymns Ancient & Modern there are also four tunes (33, 211, 254, 472) the melodies of which are by Sir Henry, and the harmonies by Dr. Monk. He died Feb. 12, 1877. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Anonymous

Author of "From the Depths My Prayer Ascendeth" in The Cyber Hymnal In some hymnals, the editors noted that a hymn's author is unknown to them, and so this artificial "person" entry is used to reflect that fact. Obviously, the hymns attributed to "Author Unknown" "Unknown" or "Anonymous" could have been written by many people over a span of many centuries.

Ethelbert W. Bullinger

1837 - 1913 Composer of "BULLINGER" in Psalter Hymnal (Blue) Ethelbert William Bullinger DD United Kingdom 1837-1913. Born in Canterbury, he was an Anglican clergyman, Biblical scholar, and ultradispensationalist theologian and writer. Educated at King's College, London, he became a good organist, singer, and composer. He married Emma Dobson, 13 years his senior, and they had two sons. In 1861 he began as Associate Curate to the parish of St. Mary Magdelene, Bermondsey, and was ordained as priest in the Church of England in 1862. He served as parish curate in Tittleshall until 1866, then Notting Hill until 1869, them Leytonstone to 1870, and finally Walthamstow, until becoming Vicar of the new parish of St. Stephen's in 1874. He resigned his vicarage in 1888. In 1867 he was clerical secretary of the Trinitarian Bible Society, which he held (except for illnesses) until his death. The Society completed and published a Hebrew version of the New Testament, the Tanakh (introduction to the Hebrew Bible), formation of the Brittany evangelical Mission Society under Pasteur LeCoat and translation of the Bible into Breton, also producing the first ever Protestant Portuguese reference Bible. It also distributed Spanish Bibles in Spain after the 1868 Spanish Revolution. Bullinger, a practiced musician, collected and harmonized untranscribed hymns on his visits to Tremel, Brittany. He wrote many articles, edited a monthly journal “Things to come”. He wrote 4 Biblical works (16 works). John Perry