I will exalt you, God my King
- Exodus 34:6-7
- Deuteronomy 4:7-8
- 2 Chronicles 15:2
- Psalms 111:1
- Psalms 145:17
- Psalms 150:2
- Psalms 34:18
- Psalms 48:1-2
- Psalms 63:4
- Psalms 86:15
- Psalms 86:5
- Psalms 98:6
- Isaiah 38:19
- Jeremiah 29:13
- Daniel 4:3
- Daniel 4:34
- Daniel 6:26
- Daniel 7:14
- Hosea 10:12
- Joel 2:13
- Amos 5:4
- Amos 9:13-15
- Zechariah 8:4-5
- Matthew 6:10
- Matthew 7:7-8
- Luke 11:2
- Luke 11:9-10
- John 5:21-25
- Acts 14:17
- Acts 17:25-27
- Romans 6:4-6
- Ephesians 2:4-6
- 145B
I will exalt you, God my king,
for ever praise, for ever sing
all glory to your treasured name:
all praise, all love, our hearts proclaim!
2. As parents to their children tell
how always God does all things well,
so I delight to meditate
how just you are, how good, how great.
3. Believers trust and pray and prove
the glories of your mighty love:
our streets shall sing, our cities bloom,
your everlasting kingdom come!
4. In every promise God keeps faith;
you raise us, Lord, from sin and death:
you help the strugglers in the race-
redeemed, sustained, and crowned by grace.
5. By truth that shines in all your ways
you guide your people all their days;
your loving care for humankind
ensures that all who seek shall find.
6. How happy those who come to know
your love so full, your wrath so slow!
You give us life and health and food:
to all so near; for all so good.
7. As generations take their turn
and saints in each your glory learn,
your name be praised, and praised again,
and praised for evermore: Amen!
© Author/Jubilate Hymns
Christopher Idle
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
-
Roscommon Metre: - LM (Long Metre: 88 88)
Composer: - Bury, William
The story behind the hymn
The first draft of this text was completed by Christopher Idle at Poplar, E London, in 1974. It was then much revised before its 1998 publication in Light upon the River, through the author’s repeated fine tuning as well as comments from others. Stz 6 (like the 5th of 145A) could serve as a grace before meals; the whole Psalm was so used in the early centuries on account of v15. Timothy Dudley-Smith has also paraphrased this Psalm (as To God our great salvation) and the 3 following. It was David Preston who suggested William Bury’s early 19th-c tune ROSCOMMON (repeated at 941), which is set to two adjacent hymns in GH but found in few, if any, other current British hymnals.
A look at the author
Idle, Christopher Martin
b Bromley, Kent 1938. Eltham Coll, St Peter’s Coll Oxford (BA, English), Clifton Theol Coll Bristol; ordained in 1965 to a Barrow-in-Furness curacy. He spent 30 years in CofE parish ministry, some in rural Suffolk, mainly in inner London (Peckham, Poplar and Limehouse). Author of over 300 hymn texts, mainly Scripture based, collected in Light upon the River (1998) and Walking by the River (2008), Trees along the River (2018), and now appearing in some 300 books and other publications; see also the dedication of EP1 (p3) to his late wife Marjorie. He served on 5 editorial groups from Psalm Praise (1973) to Praise!; his writing includes ‘Grove’ booklets Hymns in Today’s Language (1982) and Real Hymns, Real Hymn Books (2000), and The Word we preach, the words we sing (Reform, 1998). He edited the quarterly News of Hymnody for 10 years, and briefly the Bulletin of the Hymn Society, on whose committee he served at various times between 1984 and 2006; and addressed British and American Hymn Socs. Until 1996 he often exchanged draft texts with Michael Perry (qv) for mutual criticism and encouragement. From 1995 he was engaged in educational work and writing from home in Peckham, SE London, until retirement in 2003; following his return to Bromley after a gap of 40 years, he has attended Holy Trinity Ch Bromley Common and Hayes Lane Baptist Ch. Owing much to the Proclamation Trust, he also belongs to the Anglican societies Crosslinks and Reform, together with CND and the Christian pacifist Fellowship of Reconciliation. A former governor of 4 primary schools, he has also written songs for school assemblies set to familiar tunes, and (in 2004) Grandpa’s Amazing Poems and Awful Pictures. His bungalow is smoke-free, alcohol-free, car-free, gun-free and TV-free. Nos.13, 18, 21, 23A, 24B, 27B, 28, 31, 35, 36, 37, 48, 50, 68, 78, 79, 80, 81, 83, 85, 89, 92, 95, 102, 108, 109, 114, 118, 119A, 121A, 125, 128, 131, 145B, 157, 176, 177, 193*, 313*, 333, 339, 388, 392, 420, 428, 450, 451, 463, 478, 506, 514, 537, 548, 551, 572, 594, 597, 620, 621, 622, 636, 668, 669, 693, 747, 763, 819, 914, 917, 920, 945, 954, 956, 968, 976, 1003, 1012, 1084, 1098, 1138, 1151, 1158, 1159, 1178, 1179, 1181, 1201, 1203, 1204, 1205, 1209, 1210, 1211, 1212, 1221, 1227, 1236, 1237, 1244, 1247, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020.