O God, whose all-sustaining hand
- Exodus 18:13-27
- Leviticus 19:18
- Deuteronomy 16:18-20
- Deuteronomy 17:8-20
- Judges 2:16-18
- 1 Samuel 8
- 2 Samuel 23:3-4
- 1 Kings 12:1-15
- 2 Chronicles 10:1-15
- Psalms 119:142
- Psalms 41:1
- Psalms 72:1-4
- Psalms 82:1-4
- Psalms 85:10
- Proverbs 14:34
- Proverbs 29:18
- Isaiah 58:6-7
- Jeremiah 22:1-3
- Micah 6:8
- Luke 10:29-37
- Luke 24:34
- Romans 13:1-7
- Philippians 4:19
- 1 Timothy 2:1-6
- James 1:27
- James 5:19-20
- 1 Peter 2:13-17
- 924
O God, whose all-sustaining hand
is over this and every land,
whose laws from age to age have stood,
sure guardians of our common good,
may love of justice rule our days
and ordered freedom guide our ways.
2. Be near to those who strive to see
our homes from harm and terror free,
who live their lives at duty’s call
and spend themselves in serving all:
receive for them your people’s prayer,
uphold them by your constant care.
3. Teach us to serve our neighbour’s need,
the homeless help, the hungry feed,
the poor protect, the weak defend,
and to the friendless prove a friend;
the wayward and the lost reclaim
for love of Christ and in his name.
4. So may our hearts remember yet
that cross where love and justice met,
and find in Christ our fetters freed,
whose mercy answers all our need:
who lives and reigns, our risen Lord,
where justice sheathes her righteous sword.
© Author / Oxford University Press
Timothy Dudley-Smith
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Tune
-
Magdalen=Rest Metre: - 88 88 88
Composer: - Stainer, John
The story behind the hymn
If an earlier generation was better at producing hymns for national or civic occasions, some of which have dated by now, Timothy Dudley-Smith’s text illustrates the continuing opportunities in such areas. In 1996 Peter Thistlethwayte was to take up office as High Sheriff of Essex, and his wife asked the retired bishop if he would write a hymn for the annual ‘Justice Service’ at Chelmsford Cathedral. On such occasions the High Court Judges (if on circuit in the area), representatives of the legal profession and others responsible for law and order express their dependence on God and the value they place on Britain’s Christian inheritance. Receiving the request in Jan that year, the author completed his hymn in March and April, partly at Swansea and partly at home in Ford, nr Salisbury. He writes that in such contexts ‘it suits my style to be general rather than specific … I allowed the hymn to develop in terms of the just community, and to move on, in the last verse, to our own hope of mercy and faith in Christ to save.’ The words were published in the quarterly News of Hymnody in Oct 1996, and then in the author’s supplementary collection Great is the Glory published a year later, from which these quotations come in the course of more detailed background notes. This is the first full hymnal to include it.
The tune which the author was requested to match was MELITA (823); safe in being well-known but in some current danger of over-use—see the note at its ‘proper’ home, 915. The author suggests 3 further possibles, but first choice here is yet another. For John Stainer’s MAGDALEN (=REST), see 76.
A look at the author
Dudley-Smith, Timothy
b Manchester 1926. Tonbridge School, Kent, Pembroke Coll Camb, and Ridley Hall Camb; ordained (CofE) 1950. After ministry at Northumberland Heath (nr Erith, Kent) and Bermondsey (SE London) he worked with the Evangelical Alliance, editing Crusade magazine before moving to the Church Pastoral Aid Society, becoming Gen Sec in 1965. Subsequently he became Archdeacon of Norwich (73–81), then suffragan Bp of Thetford until his retirement to Ford, nr Salisbury, in 1992. A writer of verse (including a mastery of the comic sort) from his youth, he is seen by Prof J R Watson (in The English Hymn, 1997) as igniting the late 20th cent ‘hymn explosion’ with his 1961 Tell out, my soul, the greatness of the Lord, one of the hymns from that period in the widest use. He is the author of over 250 hymn texts in a similar number of hymnals worldwide, first collected in Lift Every Heart (1984), most recently in A House of Praise ( 2003). The latest of 4 smaller supplements, A Door for the Word, appeared in 2006, and 2 smaller booklets of his texts with accompanying music were published in 2001 and 2006: respectively Beneath a Travelling Star and A Calendar of Praise.
For many years the Bible commentator Derek Kidner was a mentor for most of TDS’s early drafts. While some were begun or completed at home, on trains or elsewhere, several were the fruit of family holidays on the Cornish coast, as a pre-breakfast employment (and delight) overlooking the beach near The Lizard. As reviewers have often observed, his texts are notable for their varied metres, disciplined rhyming, and biblical content; the theme of redemption through the cross and the shed blood of our Lord Jesus Christ is a theme encountered consistently, naturally and with variety; so is the fact that ‘the Lord is risen’. Without plagiarising, the hymns deliberately draw on a wide range of earlier poets and other authors for suggested ideas, as the attached notes fully illustrate. 37 items are included in Sing Glory (1999); 18 are in the N American Worship and Rejoice (2001), 9 in the 2005 edn of A Panorama of Christian Hymnody and 33 in the new Anglo- Chinese Hymns of Universal Praise (new edn, 2006). His other books include A Flame of Love: A personal choice of Charles Wesley’s verse ( 1987), Praying with the English Hymn-writers (1989), and a 2 vol biography (the first) of John R W Stott (1999, 2001). He has served on editorial groups for Psalm Praise (1973) and Common Praise (2000), and has addressed and been honoured by both the N American and British Hymn Societies, respectively as Fellow and Hon Vice-President. In 2003 he was awarded the OBE ‘for services to hymnody’. Hymn festivals in Tunbridge Wells and Salisbury, together with an extended BBC ‘Sunday Half Hour’ on New Year’s Eve, marked his 80th birthday at the end of 2006, following the publication of a seasonallyarranged selection of 30 texts in A Calendar of Praise (with music, mostly traditional). In an opening address to the Hymn Soc’s Guildford conference in its 70th year (also 2006), TDS spoke of his (and our) ups and downs as ‘Snakes and Ladders’, concluding with that greatest of ‘ladders’ from Gen 28, referred to in Elizabeth’s Clephane’s text (699) which has meant everything to him: ‘so seems my Saviour’s cross to me/ a ladder up to heaven’. Nos.10, 20, 25, 26, 32, 34, 41, 56, 60, 63, 65, 69B, 72, 73, 91B, 115, 119H, 134, 141, 218, 238, 320, 327, 351, 360, 389, 402, 405, 410, 413, 436, 459, 466, 488, 497, 516, 531, 553, 558, 623, 628, 659, 688, 697, 746, 750, 784, 823, 924, 925, 939, 949, 951, 1001, 1002, 1005, 1006, 1009, 1019, 1020, 1025, 1042, 1077, 1136, 1166, 1174, 1214.