CHRISTIAN LIFE >> FAITH & TRUST
SDAH 527
From every stormy wind that blows, From every swelling tide of woes,
There is a calm, a sure retreat: ‘Tis found beneath the mercy seat.
Text
1
From every stormy wind that blows, From every swelling tide of woes,
There is a calm, a sure retreat: ‘Tis found beneath the mercy seat.
2
There is a place where Jesus sheds The oil of gladness on our heads,
A place than all besides more sweet; It is the blood-bought mercy seat.
3
There is a scene where spirits blend, Where friend holds fellowship with friend;
Though sundered far, by faith they meet Around one common mercy seat.
4
There, there, on angel’s wings we soar, And earthly cares molest no more,
And heaven comes down our souls to greet, And glory crowns the mercy seat.
5
Ah! whither should we flee for aid, When tempted, desolate dismayed?
Or how the hosts of sin defeat, Had suffering saints no mercy seat?
Hymn Info
Biblical Reference
(a) Ex 25:22 (b) Heb 1:9 (c) Heb 4:16
Author
Hugh Stowell (1799-1865)
Year Published
1828
Hymn Tune
RETREAT
Metrical Number
L.M.
Composer
Thomas Hastings (1784-1872)
Year Composed
1842
Hymn Score
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Piano Accompaniment
[wonderplugin_audio id=”527″]
Notes
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Hugh Stowell printed this hymn in the Winter’s Wreath, 1828, under the title “Peace at the Mercy Seat.” There were six stanzas, revised in 1831. SDAH’s stanzas 5 should precede stanza 4 as in the original, for the latter answers the former.
Stowell was born in Douglas, Isle of Man, England, on December 3, 1799. He earned a B.A. at Oxford in 1822 and received his M.A. in 1826. He began his ministry as a curate in Gloucestershire, then moved to Huddersfield in Yorkshire and then to Salford, in Lancashire. He was appointed rector in Christ Church, Salford, in 1831 and then in 1845 canon of Chester Cathedral. In 1851 he became chaplain to the bishop of Manchester. He was an excellent preacher, and published many sermons and pamphlets and several books. He wrote nearly 50 hymns, mostly for Sunday school anniversaries in Christ Church, Salford. He died in Salford on October 8, 1865.
RETREAT was composed by Thomas Hastings (1784-1872; see SDAH 300). It was so named because it was especially written for these words, which describe the retreat from life’s cares and problems that can be found at the mercy seat. It consists of chords of the tonic (more than half), the dominant, and the subdominant, with the upper parts moving generally in thirds and sixths. Hastings also composed SDAH 300, TOPLADY; and SDAH 601, ZION; and wrote the words of the third stanza of SDAH 477, “Come, Ye Disconsolate.”
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