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Hymnal, Number:cphp1789
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Ye humble souls, in God rejoice!

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #XXXIX (1789) Lyrics: 1 Ye humble souls, in God rejoice! Your Maker's praise becomes your voice, Great is your theme, your songs be new: Sing of his name, his word, his ways, His works of nature and of grace, How wise and holy, just and true! 2 Justice and truth he ever loves, And the whole earth his goodness proves, His word the heavenly arches spread; How wide they shine from north to south! And by the spirit of his mouth Were all the starry armies made. 3 He gathers the wide flowing seas Those wat'ry treasures know their place In the vast storehouse of the deep: He spake, and gave all mature birth; And fires, and seas, and heav'n, and earth, His everlasting orders keep. 4 Ye that delight to serve the Lord, The honours of his name record, His sacred name forever bless; Where'er the circling sun displays His rising beams, or setting rays, Let ev'ry tongue his pow'r confess. Topics: Blessings temporal and spiritual Creation and Providence Languages: English
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Ye humble souls complain no more

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #CVIII (1789) Lyrics: 1 Ye humble souls complain no more, Let faith survey your future store, How happy, how divinely blest, The sacred words of truth attest. 2 When conscious grief laments sincere, And pours the penitential tear; Hope points to your dejected eyes A bright reversion in the skies: 3 A kingdom of immense delight, Where health, and peace, and joy unite, Where undeclining pleasures rise, And every wish hath full supplies: 4 A kingdom which can ne'er decay, Tho' time sweeps earthly thrones away; The state, which power and truth sustain, Unmov'd for ever must remain. 5 Great God, to thee we breathe our prayer; If thou confirm our interest there, Enroll'd among thy happy poor, Our largest wishes ask no more. Topics: Faith, Holiness and moral Virtues Blessed are the Poor in Spirit Languages: English
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Ye nations round the earth, rejoice

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #XXI (1789) Lyrics: 1 Ye nations round the earth, rejoice Before the Lord, your sov'reign King; Serve him with cheerful heart and voice; With all your tongues his glory sing. 2 The Lord is God; 'tis he alone Doth life, and breath, and being, give; We are his work, and not our own; The sheep that on his pastures live. 3 Enter his gates with songs of joy, With praises to his courts repair; And make it your divine employ To pay your thanks and honours there. 4 The Lord is good, the Lord is kind; Great is his grace, his mercy sure; And the whole race of man shall find His truth from age to age endure. Topics: Creation, Preservation, and temporal Blessings All Nations invoked to praise the Creator Languages: English
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Ye sons of men, with joy record

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #XVIII (1789) Lyrics: 1 Ye sons of men, with joy record The various wonders of the Lord; And let his power and goodness sound Through all your tribes the earth around. 2 Let the high heavens your songs invite, Those spacious fields of brilliant light; Where sun, and moon, and planets roll, And stars, that shine from pole to pole. 3 Sing, earth, in verdant robes array'd, Its herbs and flowers, its fruit and shade; Peopled with life of various forms, Of fish, and fowl, and beasts, and worms. 4 View the broad sea's majestick plains, And think how wide its Maker reigns; That band remotest nations joins, And on each wave his goodness shines. 5 Ye sons of men, with joy record The various wonders of the Lord; And let his power and goodness sound Through all your tribes the earth around. 6 Praise ye the Lord; our hearths shall join In work so pleasant, so divine; Our days of praise shall ne'er be past, While life, and thought, and being last. Topics: Creation, Preservation, and temporal Blessings Praise to God for his Wonderful Works Languages: English
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Ye tribes of earth, in God rejoice

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #LXVIII (1789) Lyrics: 1 Ye tribes of earth, in God rejoice; His presence hail, with thankful voice; To him your willing homage pay, And wake the tributary lay; Submissive to his will, in him Behold the God of Gods supreme. 2 With conscious wonder oft survey'd, He, not ourselves, our frame has made; The subjects of his pow'r we stand, The sheep that own his guiding hand; O enter then his gates with praise, To him your loudest accents raise. 3 With grateful hearts his love proclaim, And bless, O bless his awful name; For truth in him, and mercy, live; That truth shall time itself survive; That mercy, thro' the length of days, Unclouded, pour its healing rays. Topics: General Forms of Praise and Thanksgiving Invocation to Praise God Languages: English
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Father of all! in ev'ry age

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #CLXIII (1789) Lyrics: 1 Father of all! in ev'ry age, In ev'ry clime ador'd, By saint, by savage, and by sage, JEHOVAH, JOVE, or LORD! 2 Thou great First Cause! least understood! Who all my sense confin'd To know but this — that thou art good, And that myself am blind; 3 Yet gave me, in this dark estate, To see the good from ill, And, binding nature fast in fate, Left free the human will: — 4 What conscience dictates to be done, Or warns me not to do, This teach me more than hell to shun, That, more than heav'n pursue: 5 What blessings thy free bounty gives, Let me not cast away; For God is paid, when man receives; T' enjoy is to obey. 6 Yet not to earth's contracted span Thy goodness let me bound, Or think thee Lord alone of man, When thousand worlds are round. 7 Let not this weak, unknowing hand Presume thy bolts to throw, And deal damnation round the land, On each I judge thy foe. 8 If I am right, O teach my heart Still in the right to stay; If I am wrong, thy grace impart, To find the better way. 9 Save me alike from foolish pride, Or impious discontent, At aught thy wisdom has deny'd, Or aught thy goodness lent. 10 Teach me to feel another's wo, To hide the fault I see; That mercy I to others show, That mercy show to me. 11 Mean tho' I am, not wholly so, Since quicken'd by thy breath; O lead me wheresoe'er I go, Thro' this day's life or death. 12 This day, be bread and peace my lot; All else beneath the sun Thou know'st if best bestow'd, or not — And let thy will be done. 13 To THEE, whose temple is all space — Whose altar, earth, sea, skies — One chorus let all being raise! All nature's incense rise! Topics: Universal Prayer Languages: English
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How blest is he, who ne'er consents

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #P.XXXIII (1789) Lyrics: 1 How blest is he, who ne'er consents By ill advice to walk; Nor stands in sinners' ways, nor fits Where men profanely talk: 2 But makes the perfect law of God His bus'ness and delight; Devoutly reads therein by day, And meditates by might. 3 Like some fair tree, which, fed by streams, With timely fruit does bend, He still shall flourish, and success All his designs attend. 4 Ungodly men, and their attempts, No lasting root shall find; Untimely blasted, and dispers'd, Like chaff before the wind. 5 For God approves the just man's ways; To happiness they tend: But sinners, and the paths they tread, Shall both in ruin end. Topics: Instructive Psalms Scripture: Psalm 1 Languages: English
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The Lord abounds with tender love

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #P.XXVIII (1789) Lyrics: 1 The Lord abounds with tender love, And unexampled acts of grace: His waken'd wrath doth slowly move, His willing mercy flows apace. 2 God will not always harshly chide, But with his anger quickly part; And loves his punishments to guide, More by his love than our desert. 3 As high as heav'n its arch extends Above this little spot of clay, So much his boundless love transcends The small respects that we can pay. 4 As far as 'tis from east to west, So far has he our sins remov'd; Who with a father's tender breast, Has such as fear him always lov'd. Topics: Psalms of Thanksgiving Scripture: Psalm 103 Languages: English
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Bless God, my soul! Thou Lord, alone

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #P.VIII (1789) Lyrics: 1 Bless God, my soul! Thou, Lord, alone Possessest empire without bounds, With honour thou art crown'd; thy throne Eternal majesty surrounds. 2 With light thou dost thyself enrobe, And glory for a garment take; Heav'n's curtains stretch beyond the globe, Thy canopy of state to make. 3 God builds on liquid air, and forms His palace chambers in the skies; The clouds his chariots are, and storms The swift-wing'd steeds with which he flies. 4 As bright as flame, as swift as wind, His ministers heav'n's palace fill, To have their sundry tasks assign'd; All proud to serve their sov'reign's will. 5 Earth on her centre fix'd he set, Her face with waters overspread; Nor proudest mountains dar'd as yet, To lift above the waves their head. 6 But when thy awful face appear'd, Th' insulting waves dispers'd; they fled, When once thy thunder's voice they heard, And by their haste confess'd their dread. 7 Thence up by secret tracks they creep, And, gushing from the mountains side, Thro' vallies travel to the deep, Appointed to receive their tide. 8 There hast thou fix'd the ocean's bounds, The threat'ning surges to repel; That they no more o'erpass their mounds, Nor to a second deluge swell. 9 Yet thence in smaller parties drawn, The sea recovers her lost hills; And starting springs, from ev'ry lawn, Surprise the vales with plenteous rills. 10 The fields' tame beasts are thither led, Weary with labour, faint with drought; And asses, on wild mountains bred, Have sense to find these currents out. 11 There shady trees from scorching beams, Yield shelter to the feather'd throng; They drink, and to the bounteous streams Return the tribute of their song. 12 His rains from heav'n parch'd hills recruit, That soon transmit the liquid store; 'Till earth is burden'd with her fruit, And nature's lap can hold no more. 13 Grass, for our cattle to devour, He makes the growth of every field; Herbs, for man's use, of various pow'r, That either food or physick yield. 14 With cluster'd grapes he crowns the vine, To cheer man's heart, oppress'd with cares; Gives oil, that makes his face to shine; And corn, that wasted strength repairs. 15 The trees of God, without the care Or art of man, with sap are fed; The mountain cedar looks as fair, As those in royal gardens bred. 16 Safe in the lofty cedar's arms The wand'rers of the air may rest; The hospitable pine from harms Protects the stork, her pious guest. 17 Wild goats the craggy rock ascend, Its tow'ring heights their fortress make, Whose cells in labyrinths extend, Where feebler creatures refuge take. 18 The moon's inconstant aspect shows Th' appointed season of the year; Th' instructed sun his duty knows, His hours to rise and disappear. 19 Darkness he makes the earth to shroud, When forest-beasts securely stray; Young lions roar their wants aloud To Providence, that sends them prey. 20 They range all night, on slaughter bent, 'Till, summon'd by the rising morn To skulk in dens, with one consent, The conscious ravagers return. 21 Forth to the tillage of his soil The husbandman securely goes, Commencing with the sun his toil, With him returns to his repose. 22 How various, Lord, thy works are found! For which thy wisdom we adore! The earth is with thy treasure crown'd, Till nature's hand can grasp no more. 23 But still, the vast unfathom'd main Of wonders a new scene supplies, Whose depths inhabitants contain Of ev'ry form and ev'ry size. 24 Full freighted ships from ev'ry port, There cut their unmolested way; Leviathan, whom there to sport Thou mad'st, has compass there to play. 25 These various troops of sea and land In sense of common want agree; All wait on thy dispensing hand, And have their daily alms from thee. 26 They gather what thy stores disperse, Without their trouble to provide; Thou op'st thy hand, the universe, The craving world, is all supply'd. 27 Thou for a moment hid'st thy face, The num'rous ranks of creatures mourn: Thou tak'st their breath, all nature's race Forthwith to mother earth return. 28 Again thou send'st thy spirit forth, T' inspire the mass with vital seed; Nature's restor'd, and parent earth Smiles on her new created breed. 29 Thus through successive ages stands Firm fix'd, thy providential care; Pleas'd with the work of thy own hands, Thou dost the wastes of time repair. 30 In praising God, while he prolongs My breath, I will that breath employ; And join devotion to my songs, Sincere as in him is my joy: Topics: Psalms of Praise and Adoration Scripture: Psalm 104 Languages: English
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O render thanks to God above

Hymnal: CPHP1789 #P.XXIX (1789) Lyrics: 1 O render thanks to God above, The fountain of eternal love; Whose mercy firm through ages past Has stood, and shall for ever last. 2 Who can his mighty deeds express, Not only vast but numberless? What mortal eloquence can raise His tribute of immortal praise? 3 Happy are they, and only they, Who from thy judgments never stray: Who know what's right, not only so, But always practice what they know. 5 O may I worthy prove to see Thy saints in full prosperity! That I the joyful choir may join, And count thy people's triumph mine. Topics: Psalms of Thanksgiving Scripture: Psalm 106 Languages: English

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