Who believes what we have heard
- Psalms 119:176
- Psalms 22:30
- Psalms 22:6
- Isaiah 52:14
- Isaiah 53:7-8
- Matthew 27:50
- Matthew 27:57-61
- Mark 15:37
- Mark 15:42-47
- Luke 22:37
- Luke 23:32-46
- Luke 23:50-53
- John 10:17-18
- John 19:38-42
- Acts 8:26-35
- Romans 4:25
- Hebrews 10:10-14
- 1 Peter 2:21-25
- 451
Who believes what we have heard,
who has seen God’s power made known?
When the Servant of the Lord
grew unnoticed and alone;
undesired by those around
and unlovely to their eyes,
like a root in desert ground
which men trample and despise.
2. Yet for us the Servant grieved,
all our sorrows he endured;
his the torment unrelieved,
his the bruising from the Lord;
here is all our guilt engraved,
here are all our wrongs revealed;
by his suffering we are saved,
by his tortures we are healed.
3. Far away like sheep we strayed,
by our own desires misled,
but the Lord our God has laid
all our sins upon his head;
to the slaughter once he came-
see the willing victim stand
as a sacrificial lamb
silent at the killer’s hand.
4. So he spent his final breath,
all his life for us he gave;
men of violence shared his death
and a rich man lent his grave;
target of his people’s hate,
by oppression snatched away-
who was mindful of his fate,
who considered it that day?
5. But he now prolongs his days,
risen from darkness into light;
sees his children bring their praise,
vindicates and sets them right;
for the criminals he prayed,
for their crimes he bled and died;
now the sacrifice is made
and the Servant satisfied.
© Author / Jubilate Hymns
Christopher Idle
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Tune
-
Little Heath Metre: - 77 77 D
Composer: - Wilson, David Gordon
The story behind the hymn
Isaiah 53 is one the great chapters of Scripture, quoted in the NT as a pointer, many times over, to what Jesus would suffer centuries after it was written, and why. This text by the author of the previous hymn predates it by 14 years; but here too the tune was a major factor in its writing, by Christopher Idle at Poplar, E London, in March 1976. It was not published until 1998, in the author’s own collection Light upon the River.
David Wilson’s LITTLE HEATH (briefly known as CHESTERFIELD, a name also used by others) was composed in 1964 when he was training for ordination at Ridley Hall, Cambridge, and two years later set to Jesu, lover of my soul in Youth Praise. The words writer thought that it ‘seemed unlikely to supplant other tunes’ for this classic (682), but it has since been set to other texts including 756 where it appears in the key of D, a semitone lower than the original. Little Heath is a road in Charlton, SE London, near the composer’s Greenwich birthplace. An alternative is Bob Eagle’s tune named CHARLES WESLEY, composed in 1987 for the same Wesley hymn.
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.