God, in the Gospel of his Son
- Joshua 1:8
- Job 12:13
- Psalms 119:105
- Psalms 119:130
- Psalms 119:18
- Psalms 146:7-8
- Psalms 19:8
- Proverbs 6:23
- Proverbs 8:1-11
- Isaiah 61:1
- Matthew 1:1
- Matthew 11:28-29
- Matthew 5:4
- Mark 1:1
- Luke 1:1-4
- Luke 1:79
- Luke 24:32
- Luke 24:45
- Luke 4:18
- John 20:31
- Acts 16:14
- Acts 17:23
- Acts 20:27
- Acts 9:5
- Romans 11:33-34
- Romans 15:4-6
- Romans 5:6-8
- 1 Corinthians 2:7-8
- Ephesians 1:9-11
- Ephesians 3:10-11
- Colossians 2:3
- Hebrews 11:9-16
- James 1:21-22
- James 3:17-18
- 1 John 5:20
- 547
God, in the gospel of his son,
makes his eternal counsels known
where love in all its glory shines
and truth is drawn in fairest lines.
2. Here sinners of a helpless race
may learn his name and taste his grace,
may read in characters of blood
the wisdom, power and grace of God.
3. Here may the prisoners lose their chains,
the weary rest from all their pains,
the captives find their souls’ release,
the mourners find the way of peace.
4. Here faith reveals to mortal eyes
a brighter world beyond the skies;
here shines the light which guides our way
from earth to realms of endless day.
5. Here wisdom all her light imparts,
to teach our minds and move our hearts:
such influence bids the sinner live
and makes the burdened soul revive.
6. O grant us grace, almighty Lord,
to understand your holy word,
with meekness all its truths receive
and by its light for ever live.
Benjamin Beddome 1717-95 and Thomas Cotterill 1779-1823
Downloadable Items
Would you like access to our downloadable resources?
Unlock downloadable content for this hymn by subscribing today. Enjoy exclusive resources and expand your collection with our additional curated materials!
Subscribe nowIf you already have a subscription, log in here to regain access to your items.
Tunes
-
Gunnerside Metre: - LM (Long Metre: 88 88)
Composer: - Reynoldson, James
-
Warrington Metre: - LM (Long Metre: 88 88)
Composer: - Harrison, Ralph
The story behind the hymn
This one enduring hymn from the prolific Benjamin Beddome may remind us of the great number of evangelical texts which are now forgotten. The author is given generous treatment by Julian, who says of this hymn ‘Its use, especially in America, is very extensive’; yet among current hymnals it is found until now only in GH and (with variation) PHRW, both books omitting one stz. (GH has 5 of his hymns and CH, 2; 3 in its 2004 edn.) This was first published in Rippon’s Selection … in 1787, headed ‘The Gospel of Christ’. The editor’s hand is reflected in the ascription, to which more recent changes have been added. Stz 2 had, ‘… humble frame/ may taste his grace, and learn his name’; 3 (a strong reminder of Watts) is made plural and thus inclusive, and sinners now lose rather than break their (own!) chains; the final lines, revised here as in PHRW, were ‘its truths with meekness to receive/, and by its holy precepts live.’
GUNNERSIDE makes a rare appearance here, as chosen for these words in GH; composed by James Reynoldson who is otherwise unrepresented in current hymnals, it is also set there to the paraphrase For ever settled in the heavens. Gunnerside is a village near Crackpot in the N Yorks Dales.
A look at the authors
Beddome, Benjamin
b Henley-in-Arden, Warwicks Jan 1716/17, d Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucs 1795. He was originally apprenticed to a surgeon, but moved first to London and after attending the Baptist Ch in Prescot(t) St, between Aldgate and the Tower, he was ordained in 1740. His first and only ministerial charge was as the Baptist pastor at Bourton-on-the-Water, where he remained from 1741 to the end of his life. While there he saw hundreds of conversions; among young members called to the ministry was John Ryland (qv), while Beddome declined several invitations to serve ‘more conspicuous churches’. He wrote his hymns not for publication, but (like Doddridge, qv) to summarise his morning sermon and to be sung at the end of the service. A model of ‘evangelical catholicity’, he co-operated with George Whitefield and other Anglican gospel preachers as well as sharing a vision for worldwide evangelism. Some hymns were printed in his lifetime in collections edited by John Ash and Caleb Evans (1769) and in John Rippon’s 1st edn of his Selection…(1787). His Scriptural Exposition also appeared while he lived, but his sermons and complete 830 hymns posthumously, not until 1817, with an Introduction by Robert Hall (1764–1831): Hymns adapted to Public Worship or Family Devotion.
At their best these bear comparison with Isaac Watts and Anne Steele (qv), including her ‘national’ hymns; did he have her in mind when writing ‘What is the world with all its store?/ ’Tis but a bitter sweet;/ when I attempt to pluck the rose,/ a pricking thorn I meet’? Montgomery said they were ‘calculated to be more useful than attractive’ but also called them agreeable, impressive, brief and pithy. Some are very moving: ‘So fair a face bedewed with tears!/ What beauty e’en in grief appears!/ He wept, he bled, he died for you;/ what more, ye saints, could Jesus do?’. Or, ‘Let the loud cannon cease to roar,/ the warlike trump no longer sound;/ the din of arms be heard no more,/ nor human blood pollute the ground’ (from On Britain, long a favoured isle). Few if any Baptists wrote more hymns than he did; the 1967 edn of the Baptist Hymn Book Companion comments that Beddome and Steele ‘were outstanding members of a notable group of Baptist hymn writers, including also Ryland, Fawcett, Stennett and Swain, such as no subsequent generation has produced…they served their own times and pointed the way for others’ (p241). Beddome was a keen admirer of the Baptist anti-slavery campaigner and missionary enthusiast Abraham Booth (1734–1806), now almost forgotten. Julian gives details of over 100 of BB’s texts, adding that they were far more popular in N America than in the UK; any featured in the 1793 General Baptist Hymn Book. The USA preference was confirmed by T B Hewitt in 1918 but seems now to have changed, as his appearances in current American hymnals are rare and he is absent from the 1992 Southern Baptist book. 8 hymns found a place in various 19th-c edns of John Stevens’ Selection of Hymns; 3 are in the 2004 CH. Rhode Island Coll (now Brown Univ) awarded his MA in 1770. No.547*.
Costain, George Arthur
b 1901, d 1987. A secondary school music teacher at Leighton Park School, Reading. 1928–30, where David Preston (qv) also taught in the 1960s. Composed tunes for school use; Praise! is the first hymnal to include his work. No.99.