WORSHIP >> Adoration & Praise
SDAH 30
Holy God, we praise Your name;
Lord of all, we bow before You!
All on earth Your scepter claim,
All in heaven above adore You;
Text
1
Holy God, we praise Your name;
Lord of all, we bow before You!
All on earth Your scepter claim,
All in heaven above adore You;
Infinite Your vast domain.
Everlasting is Your reign.
2
Hark! the loud celestial hymn
Angel choirs above are raising,
Cherubim and seraphim,
In unceasing chorus praising;
Fill the heavens with sweet accord:
Holy, holy, holy, Lord.
3
Holy Father, Holy Son,
Holy Spirit, three we name You;
While in essence only one,
Undivided God we claim You;
And adoring bend the knee,
While we own the mystery.
Hymn Info
Biblical Reference
(a) Ps 99:9 (b) Isa 6:2, 3 (d) 2 Cor 13:14, John 10:30
Author
German, 18th century
Translator
Clarence A. Walworth (1820-1900)
Hymn Tune
GROSSER GOTT
Metrical Number
7.8.7.8.7.7.
Tune Source
Katholisches Gesangbuch, Vienna
Year Composed
1774
Theme
ADORATION AND PRAISE
Hymn Score
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Piano Accompaniment
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Notes
Get to know the hymns a little deeper with the SDA Hymnal Companion. Use our song leader’s notes to engage your congregation in singing with understanding. Even better, involve kids in learning this hymn with our homeschooling materials.
This poem by an unknown German author is a versification of a portion of the “Te Deum laudamus” (We Praise Thee, O God), an anonymous, unmetrical Latin hymn that may date to the fourth century. The text can be found in the Hymnal 1940 and other hymnbooks. It was published in the Katholisches Gesangbuch (Catholic Hymnbook), Vienna, 1744, at the request of the Austrian empress, Maria Theresa. Walworth’s translation was included in the Catholic Psalmist, Dublin, 1858.
Clarence Augustus Walworth was born May 30, 1820, at Plattsburg, New York. He graduated from Union college and for a time practiced law in Canandaigua and Albany. At first a Presbyterian, he studied for the Episcopalian ministry but joined the Oxford movement and became a Catholic Priest in 1845. He was one of the founders of the Paulist Order in the United States, and from 1866 to his death on September 19, 1900, was rector of St. Mary’s Church, Albany, New York. He wrote a number of hymn translations and paraphrases and several books, including The Oxford Movement in America, 1895.
The tune GROSSER GOTH (Great God), by an unknown composer, gets its name from the first words of the original German text printed in Katholisches Gesangbuch. There it had a slightly different melody and was in a 6/8 time with a folk song quality. The abbreviated English form of the tune is known as HURSLEY (see SDAH 502, “Son of My Soul.”). Note that the melody proceeds by successive notes of the scale by single steps, with the exception of four uses of the interval of the 3rd.
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