Before Thy throne, O God, we kneel, Give us a conscience quick to feel

Before Thy throne, O God, we kneel, Give us a conscience quick to feel

Author: William Boyd Carpenter
Published in 13 hymnals

Printable scores: PDF, MusicXML
Audio files: MIDI

Representative Text

1 Before thy throne, O God, we kneel:
give us a conscience quick to feel,
a ready mind to understand
the meaning of thy chastening hand;
whate'er the pain and shame may be,
bring us, O Father, nearer thee.

2 Search out our hearts and make us true;
help us to give to all their due.
From love of pleasure, lust of gold,
from sins which make the heart grow cold,
wean us and train us with thy rod;
teach us to know our faults, O God.

3 For sins of heedless word and deed,
for pride ambitious to succeed,
for crafty trade and subtle snare
to catch the simple unaware,
for lives bereft of purpose high,
forgive, forgive, O Lord, we cry.

4 Let the fierce fires which burn and try,
our inmost spirits purify:
consume the ill; purge out the shame;
O God, be with us in the flame;
a newborn people may we rise,
more pure, more true, more nobly wise.

Source: The Hymnal 1982: according to the use of the Episcopal Church #574

Author: William Boyd Carpenter

William Boyd Carpenter KCVO (26 March 1841, Liverpool – 26 October 1918, Westminster) was a Church of England clergyman who became Bishop of Ripon and court chaplain to Queen Victoria. William Boyd Carpenter was the second son of the Rev. Henry Carpenter of Liverpool, perpetual curate of St Michael's Church, Aigburth, who married (marriage license 1837 in Derry) Hester Boyd of Derry, sister of Archibald Boyd, Dean of Exeter. Her father was Archibald Boyd (born about 1764 of Saint Leonards, Shoreditch, London, England), who married Sarah Bodden there on 13 July 1789. Their eldest son was Archibald Boyd. William Boyd Carpenter eventually fathered a total of 5 sons and 6 daughters. He married his first wife, Harriet Charlotte Peers, in… Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: Before Thy throne, O God, we kneel, Give us a conscience quick to feel
Author: William Boyd Carpenter
Language: English

Tune

ST. PETERSBURG

Dmitri Stephanovich Bortnianski (b. Gloukoff, Ukraine, 1751; d. St. Petersburg, Russia, 1825) was a Russian composer of church music, operas, and instrumental music. His tune ST. PETERSBURG (also known as RUSSIAN HYMN) was first published in J. H. Tscherlitzky's Choralbuch (1825). The tune is suppo…

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VATER UNSER

Martin Luther's versification of the Lord's Prayer was set to this tune in Valentin Schumann's hymnal, Geistliche Lieder (1539); the tune, whose composer remains unknown, had some earlier use. The tune name derives from Luther's German incipit: “Vater unser im Himmelreich….” Because VATER UNSE…

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STRASBURG


Timeline

Media

The Cyber Hymnal #413
  • Adobe Acrobat image (PDF)
  • Noteworthy Composer score (NWC)
  • XML score (XML)

Instances

Instances (1 - 13 of 13)

Christian Worship and Praise #d37

Christian Youth Hymnal #289

Hymnal for Colleges and Schools #75

Hymnal for Colleges and Schools. 3rd ed. #d27

The Canadian Youth Hymnal #21

The Churches of God Hymnal. #d50

TextScoreAudio

The Cyber Hymnal #413

TextPage Scan

The Hymnal 1982 #574

TextPage Scan

The Hymnal 1982 #575

The Hymnal of the Evangelical Mission Covenant Church of America #475

Page Scan

The Hymnal of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America 1940 #499

The Methodist Hymn-Book with Tunes #884

The New Church Hymnal #d40

Exclude 10 pre-1979 instances
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