Hear me, O Lord, in my distress
- 1 Kings 8:46
- 2 Chronicles 6:36
- Job 9:2
- Psalms 116:16
- Psalms 130:3
- Psalms 140:6
- Psalms 143
- Psalms 42:1-2
- Psalms 44:1-3
- Psalms 59:1
- Psalms 63:1
- Psalms 77:11-14
- Psalms 77:5
- Ecclesiastes 7:20
- Matthew 13:27-28
- Acts 27:23
- Romans 3:20
- Romans 3:23-24
- Galatians 3:16
- 143
Hear me, O Lord, in my distress,
give ear to my despairing plea!
In faithfulness, in righteousness,
O hear my prayer and answer me.
2. I claim no favour as of right;
you are the God I serve and trust,
yet judge me not: for in your sight
no living soul is counted just.
3. My fierce oppressor hunts me down:
I shrink in darkness, like the dead;
my spirit fails-all hope is gone,
my heart is overwhelmed with dread.
4. Days long since vanished I review,
I see the wonders of your hands,
and I stretch out my hands to you,
for you I thirst like desert sands.
5. Lord, answer me without delay!
I perish if you hide your face;
in you I trust: let this new day
bring word of your unfailing grace.
6. From my pursuers save me still:
in you my refuge I have found;
teach me, O God, to do your will,
and lead my feet on level ground.
7. For your name’s sake, Lord, hear my plea:
your servant’s stricken life preserve!
From all oppression set me free
to live and love the God I serve.
© Author/Jubilate Hymns
David G Preston
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.
Tune
-
Finnart Metre: - LM (Long Metre: 88 88)
Composer: - Finlay, Kenneth George
The story behind the hymn
V2 of the biblical text, quoted by the apostle Paul in Romans 3 and Galatians 2 and familiar to users of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer, traditionally establishes this as the 7th and last of the penitential Psalms (see on no.6) though its chief emphasis lies elsewhere. This further text by David Preston first appeared in Carey Praise at Reading in 1989. For stz 2, cf Christopher Idle’s 1978 version O God of justice, answer me: ‘and judge me not, for in your sight/ no living soul is in the right’. Barbara Woollett has also provided O LORD, I bring myself to you. Kenneth Finlay’s FINNART was composed in June 1919, and published in A Missionary Hymn-Book (SPCK) in 1922, set to Almighty Father who dost give. In the 1965 Anglican Hymn Book it is the first choice for At even, ere the sun was set. The village of Finnart is on the shores of Loch Rannoch in Tayside, Scotland.
A look at the author
Preston, David George
b London 1939. d 2020. Archbishop Tenison’s Grammar School, Kennington, London; Keble College Oxford (MA Mod Langs.) He worked as a French Teacher, including 11 years at Ahmadu Bello Univ, Nigeria, and gained a PhD on the French Christian poet Pierre Emmanuel (1916 84). A member of Carey Baptist Ch, Reading, for many years, he later moved to Alweston, nr Sherborne, Dorset. He compiled The Book of Praises (Carey Publications, Liverpool) in 1987, with versions of 71 Psalms; these include modified texts of Watts and a few other classic paraphrasers, but most are by contemporary writers including himself. 60 of his metrical Psalm versions are so far published, including one each in Sing Glory (2000), the Scottish Church Hymnary 4th Edn (2005) and Sing Praise (2010), and 3 in the 2004 edn of CH; also 10 tunes. His writing and composing has taken place in Leicester, Reading, Nigeria and his present home; he was a member of the editorial board throughout the preparation of Praise! and had a major share in the choice of music for the Psalm texts (1-150). His convictions about the Psalms, as expressed in the Introduction to BP, are that ‘There is nothing to compare with their blend of the subjective and the objective, the inner life and practical goodness, the knowledge of one’s own rebellious heart and the knowledge of God…Today’s general neglect of congregational Psalm singing is a symptom of the spiritual malaise of our churches. When the preaching of the Gospel has prospered, bringing into being churches vibrant with spiritual life, men and women have taken great delight in praising their Maker and Redeemer through these scriptural hymns’. 15 of his own, self-selected, feature as his share of ‘contemporary hymns’ in the 2009 Come Celebrate; he has also served as a meticulous proof-reader. Nos.1, 2A, 5*, 6, 7, 11, 15, 16, 17, 19A, 24A, 27A, 30B, 32*, 33*, 38, 40, 42, 43, 47, 51*, 52, 55, 57*, 64, 66, 74, 76, 77, 84, 90, 91A, 96*, 97, 99, 100B, 101, 114*, 120, 126, 132, 139, 142*, 143, 145A, 147*, 824*, 830*, 963*.