Make music to the Lord most high
- Deuteronomy 31:19-22
- Deuteronomy 32:4
- Job 12:13
- Job 21:7-13
- Psalms 119:147-148
- Psalms 52:8
- Psalms 83
- Psalms 92:13-14
- Psalms 94:3-4
- Proverbs 11:28
- Isaiah 40:29-31
- Lamentations 3:22-23
- Luke 1:67
- Luke 2:25-38
- Acts 16:25
- Romans 11:33-34
- Ephesians 5:19-20
- Colossians 3:16
- Revelation 15:3
- 92
Make music to the Lord most high
whose praise is our delight:
as day begins we sing your love,
your faithfulness by night.
2. Lord, when we see what you have done
our songs of joy resound:
your handiwork, how vast it is,
your counsels, how profound!
3. The godless mind will never know-
because its sense is void-
that though the wicked spread like grass,
they all shall be destroyed.
4. For ever, Lord, you are supreme;
your throne remains on high
while rebels meet eternal doom
and evildoers die.
5. But like the cedar and the palm
the righteous stand serene;
they flourish in the house of God,
their leaves are fresh and green.
6. To fruitful age they still proclaim
the Lord who makes them new-
our God, in whom there is no wrong,
my rock, for ever true.
© Author/Jubilate Hymns
Christopher Idle
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Tune
-
Irish Metre: - CM (Common Metre: 86 86)
Composer: - Hymns and Sacred Poems
The story behind the hymn
The classic text for this ‘Psalm or song for the Sabbath Day’ remains Watts’ Sweet is the work, my God, my King, included at 231—yet another hymn in its own right. The version in place here was written by Christopher Idle at Limehouse in 1981, and published in BP five years later. Lines which underwent subsequent revision, in the light of both experience and constructive criticism, are 1.3, 5.2, 5.4, and the final stz. But the palm and the cedar remain as evocative biblical images with rich associations. The words seem to require an expansive tune; BISHOPTHORPE (8) or KILMARNOCK (375) are options, but equally suitable and preferred here is an 18th-c tune, possibly with folksong origins, named IRISH. It came in A Collection of Hymns and Sacred Poems published in 1749 in Dublin by S Powell, where it is set to Isaac Watts’ hymn, Time, what an empty vapour ’tis; by 1760 it was known simply as ‘Irish tune’, thanks probably to Caleb Ashworth’s Collection of Tunes from Northampton. In 1770 it featured in a Psalm tune collection edited by Isaac Smith, who was for a time named as its composer, but it is safer to call it anonymous. It is used with other Psalm versions, such as Watts’ Long as I live I’ll bless thy name (Psalm 145).
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.