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Text Identifier:"^met_o_god_to_ask_thy_presence$"

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Met, O God, to ask thy presence

Author: J. B. Waterbury Appears in 15 hymnals

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WATERBURY

Meter: 8.7 Appears in 2 hymnals Incipit: 55661 76653 21233 Used With Text: Backslider's Confession

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Met, O God, to ask thy presence

Hymnal: Evangelical Hymns #84 (1838) Languages: English
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Met, O God, to ask thy presence

Author: Jared Bell Waterbury Hymnal: The Psalms and Hymns, with the Doctrinal Standards and Liturgy of the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church in North America #H617 (1860)

Met, O God, to ask thy presence

Author: Jared Bell Waterbury Hymnal: Prayer Meeting, Revival, and Union Hymns #d38 (1841)

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J. B. Waterbury

1799 - 1876 Person Name: J. B. W. Author of "Backslider's Confession" in The Christian Lyre Waterbury, Jared Bell, D.D., was born in New York City, Aug. 11, 1799, and graduated at Yale College, 1822. He was for some time pastor of a Congregational church at Hudson, New York, and then of Bowdoin Street Congregational church, Boston. He died at Brooklyn, Dec. 31, 1876. He published Advice to a Young Christian; The Officer on Duty, and other works. To the Rev. J. Leavitt's Christian Lyre, vol. i., 1830, he contributed the following hymns, each of which was headed, "Written for the Lyre," and signed "J. B. W.":— 1. My Jesus, Thou hast taught. The Love of Jesus. 2. Met, O God, to ask Thy presence. Repentance. 3. 0 fly, mourning sinner, saith Jesus to me. Promise of Pardon. 4. See Sodom wrapt in fire. Warning. 5. Sinner, is thy heart at rest? The Voice of Conscience. 6. Soldiers of the Cross, arise! Lo! your Leader from the skies. Soldiers of the Cross. 7. When, O my Saviour, shall this heart? Desiring Jesus. In vol. ii. of the same work, 1830, also:-- 8. I have fought the good fight; 1 have finished my race. Martyr's Death Song. Another of his hymns is given in the Songs for the Sanctuary, 1865, as:— 9. Infinite love, what precious stores. Riches of Divine Grace. Sometimes dated 1862. Of these hymns, Nos. 5, 6, and 9 are the best known. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)