Who can bind the raging sea

Scriptures:
  • Genesis 1:16
  • Joshua 3:11
  • Job 28:25-26
  • Job 38:22
  • Job 39
  • Psalms 104:3-18
  • Psalms 135:5-7
  • Psalms 147:16-19
  • Psalms 147:9
  • Psalms 29:3-10
  • Psalms 33:7
  • Psalms 47:2
  • Psalms 78:6-7
  • Psalms 93:2-4
  • Ezekiel 27
  • Amos 4:13
  • Amos 5:8
  • Amos 9:6
  • Zechariah 6:5
  • Luke 12:24
Book Number:
  • 213

Who can bind the raging sea
or walk the ocean floor?
Who can find where snow is made
or hail is kept in store?
Who can know how light begins
or darkness ends the day?
Who can go where planets grow
or show someone the way?

2. Who directs the rushing stream
and steers the rolling storm?
Who protects the lion cubs
and ravens’ young from harm?
Who decides when deer shall breed
or mountain goats give birth?
Who provides, defends and guides?
The Lord of all the earth!

3. In God’s hands the awesome power
that hurls the stars through space:
God commands—the lightning strikes,
the thunderclouds embrace!
God’s arm flings the waters high
and trims the foam-flecked waves;
glory, sing to heaven’s King —
our God who loves and saves!

© Mrs B Perry / Jubilate Hymns This is an unaltered JUBILATE text. Other JUBILATE texts can be found at www.jubilate.co.uk
Michael Perry

Approaching God - Creator and Sustainer

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Tune

  • Marion
    Marion
    Metre:
    • 76 76 D mixed metre
    Composer:
    • Ninnis, Peter James

The story behind the hymn

Michael Perry’s text here makes a good sequel to 211 above, based as it is on the poetic grandeur of Job chs 38–39. Written in 1989, by which time the author had moved to Tonbridge as vicar, it came too late for HTC and is first published here in a main hymnal. The author points to the series of questions by which God answers Job; ‘They establish in the poem not only God’s sovereignty but [also] his role in creation’. So the hymn also poses at least 8 questions in its first two stzs. Michael Perry adds, ‘I wrote out of admiration for the passage, and not for any particular publication.’

When the words were published in the author’s own collection Singing to God (1995), a footnote said ‘Tune: none as yet’. Peter Ninnis’s MARION, which was requested for Praise! c1998, is therefore among the first to be composed for them, and is the first to appear in a hymn-book. It is named after the composer’s wife.

A look at the author

Perry, Michael Arnold

b Beckenham, Kent 1942, d Tonbridge, Kent 1996. Dulwich Coll, Oak Hill and Ridley Hall Theological Colls, London and Southampton Univs (BD, MTh). Ordained (CofE) 1965; after curacies at St Helen’s, Lancs and Bitterne, Southampton, he became incumbent of Bitterne (1972), Eversley, Hants (1981), where Charles Kingsley was a predecessor, and finally Tonbridge from 1989. A contributor to Youth Praise 2 in 1969, he was then an editorial team member for Psalm Praise (1973) and Hymns for Today’s Church (1982, 1987), Canon of Rochester, member of General Synod, Chairman of Church Pastoral Aid Society and (from 1982) succeeding Jim Seddon as Hon Sec of Jubilate Hymns. Under Jubilate auspices he edited a stream of hymn, song, carol and Psalm and prayer books, in collaboration with David Iliff, David Peacock, Noël Tredinnick, Norman Warren and others. He edited The Dramatized Bible (1989), compiled the reference-handbook Preparing for Worship (1995), and wrote and spoke widely on many aspects of worship, in the UK and on visits to W Africa and N America. Over all, he possessed the gift of being able to handle vast amounts of work with a light touch and ready (but never unkind) humour. His 183 texts were collected in Singing to God: Hymns and Songs 1965–1995, a slightly Americanised volume, in the year before his early death from a brain tumour. His first published song (words and music) was ‘The Calypso Carol’ in 1963; see no.374, note. Including paraphrases, 40 of his texts are in HTC (1987 edn), 8 in Baptist Praise and Worship (1991), 18 in Sing Glory (1999), 8 in the N American Worship and Rejoice (2001), 15 in Carols for Today (2005) and 27 in Carol Praise (2006), not counting several versions attributed to ‘Word and Music’ which are predominantly his. For some 20 years he and Christopher Idle would exchange friendly mutual criticism of each other’s texts. MAP believed that ‘Our preparation for worship can only go so far. It is doomed if the Spirit of the Lord is not in it. On the other hand, God is sovereign; he can “take over” any kind of worship, provided that those who lead and those who participate are open to his grace’. He also consistently urged that ‘to be obscure is an indulgence we cannot allow ourselves’.
Michael is published by Praise! numbers 49, 75, 82, 88, 137, 128, 148, 153, 172, 187, 211, 213, 277, 323, 332, 373, 374, 382, 481, 624, 694, 872, 929, 947 and by Praise! online at numbers 1082, 1132.