How urgent is the summons

Scriptures:
  • Genesis 3:7-8
  • Exodus 3:4
  • Exodus 35:30
  • Deuteronomy 30:19-20
  • 1 Samuel 3:10
  • Psalms 139:7
  • Psalms 40:8
  • Isaiah 43:1-2
  • Jeremiah 17:9
  • Jeremiah 23:24
  • Matthew 10:38
  • Matthew 16:24-25
  • Matthew 19:16-30
  • Matthew 20:25-27
  • Mark 10:17-31
  • Mark 10:42-44
  • Mark 8:34-35
  • Luke 10:38-42
  • Luke 18:18-30
  • Luke 8:14
  • Luke 9:23-24
  • John 19:38-39
  • John 7:45-52
  • Romans 12:3
  • Philippians 2:5-7
  • Colossians 3:2
  • 1 Timothy 6:17-19
  • 2 Timothy 4:10
  • Titus 2:12
  • Hebrews 10:7
  • Hebrews 11:24-26
  • Revelation 3:16
Book Number:
  • 856

How urgent is the summons
addressed to us by name:
your holy call is life and death,
an all-embracing claim;
and yet our hearts are tepid:
how slowly we obey
the voice which bids us take the cross
and follow day by day.

2. From you and from each other
our flaws we try to hide:
release us from this tyranny
of self-deceiving pride.
How seldom are we willing
to stand for what is right:
renew our vision, purge our fears
and nerve us for the fight!

3. Forgive the small ambitions
which often tie us down,
enticing us to idolise
achievement or renown;
seduced by creature-comforts,
allured by worldly gain,
we need your word to turn our thoughts
to treasures which remain.

4. From activism spare us-
how much we try to do!
We struggle to retain control
instead of trusting you.
Lord, pardon our reliance
on energy and skill;
may we be found with servant hearts,
content to do your will.

© 1999 Kevin Mayhew Ltd
Martin E Leckebusch

The Christian Life - Zeal in Service

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 now

If you already have a subscription, log in here to regain access to your items.

Tune

  • St Margaret
    St Margaret
    Metre:
    • 76 86 D
    Composer:
    • Martin, George Clement

The story behind the hymn

In May 1997, a questioner on the BBC radio programme ‘Any Questions’ asked what adjective members of the panel would apply to themselves as something by which they would like to be remembered. ‘Musing on this’, writes Martin Leckebusch, ‘I was struck how low I was aiming in my choice.’ How about something like ‘holy’? The phrase ‘Forgive the small ambitions’ (3.1) came to mind—perhaps echoing Michael Griffiths’ book Give up your small ambitions—and proved to be ‘the trigger for this text’. Very few hymns deal equally with the dangers of both sheer laziness and frantic activism. This is the first hymnal to publish it, following its first outing in his More than Words (2000). For the final line, cf 548, 814 (refrain) and 870.

George C Martin’s ST MARGARET is one of the two tunes suggested by the author. At least 3 other Victorian composers used this name for a tune, of which Albert Peace’s is the best-known. Margaret of Scotland is celebrated by that one, but there are other historic and saintly women of that name.

A look at the author

Leckebusch, Martin Ernest

b Leicester 1962. King Edward VII Coll, Coalville, Leics; Oriel Coll Oxford; BA/MA (Maths) 1983; Brunel Univ Middx, MSc (Numerical Analysis) 1984. He worked for 16 yrs as a Computer Systems Programmer, followed by 5 as Support Specialist. In 2006 he was redirected to the role of Technical Design Authority for the IBM mainframe platform within Lloyds TSB. He has belonged to various CofE and Free Churches, including 6 yrs as a Methodist Local Preacher (1992–1998); currently a member of Kendal Rd Baptist Ch, Longlevens, Gloucester since 2001. His hymn-writing began in 1987; 144 hymn texts were collected in More than Words, 2000, some of which had appeared in earlier books including NewStart (1999, 6 hymns in a total of 71), Sing Glory (14 hymns), and Praise! A collection of 150 texts based on the Psalms, for singing to well-known tunes, appeared in 2006, giving a total of 275 texts by then in print. 6 of these are in Carol Praise (2006). In that year he also joined the Text Advisory Group (TAG) of Jubilate Hymns which he later chaired, and he also consults regularly with representatives of the more informal songwriters; he is active in the Hymn Soc, and lives with his family in Gloucester. In the 2005 edn of A Panorama of Christian Hymnody, which features 2 of his texts, Paul A Richardson notes their ‘conservative theology, biblical imagery and structural ingenuity’, adding that ML ‘advocates a restoration of hymnody in traditional forms to those who, like him, are in the charismatic wing of the church’. He is also keen to explore some issues often neglected by contemporary writers. By 2010, which saw the publication of a further collection Never Let the Songs End, the total number of his hymns had exceeded 400. Nos.270, 278, 285, 322, 381, 586, 604, 665, 756, 770, 771, 841, 856, 882, 892, 926, 936, 942, 1023, 1029, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1167, 1168, 1170, 1171, 1173, 1176, 1177, 1182, 1194, 1196, 1197, 1202, 1206, 1207, 1208, 1217, 1240, 1243.