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5 Jesus, my Shepherd, Husband, Friend, my Prophet, Priest, and King, my Lord, my Life, my Way, my End, accept the praise I bring. 6 Weak is the effort of my heart, and cold my warmest thought; but when I see Thee as Thou art, I'll praise Thee as I ought, 7 Till then I would Thy love proclaim with every fleeting breath; and may the music of Thy name
This seven-stanza version has been commonly reprinted, although some hymnals shorten the text further to just four or five stanzas. [7] The phrases "Name him, brothers, name him" and "Brothers, this Lord Jesus" are sometimes altered in the interest of gender-inclusivity, [7] substituting "Christians" for "brothers" or making larger but similar ...
Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet is a 1971 composition by Gavin Bryars based on a loop of an unknown homeless man singing a brief improvised stanza. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The loop was possibly the singer's recollection of the chorus of a gospel hymn, by James M Black , published in 1911.
It was voted the 21st best album of 1991 in The Village Voice ' s annual Pazz & Jop critics poll. [14] In a retrospective review, AllMusic's Michael Gallucci felt Hymns to the Silence was Morrison's best album during the 1990s, although he also found it too long and essentially a "spirited rewrite" of his previous record Enlightenment. [1]
In the original version of the video, the "toll-free number" referred to in the lyrics was shown as 1-555-GEN-ESIS. [10] This was covered up by a scroll bar in later edits of the video. (The 555 area code actually does not prefix any known toll-free telephone numbers.) At the Brit Awards in 1993 the video was nominated for British Video of the ...
The album version of the song is in Ministry's 2001 compilation album Greatest Fits; [54] remixed and re-recorded versions appear on several Ministry compilations, including 2005's Rantology, [55] [56] 2008's Cover Up, [21] 2010's Every Day Is Halloween: The Anthology/Undercover and 2011's The Very Best of Fixes and Remixes. [57]
"In Jesus Name (God of Possible)" debuted at number four on the Christian Digital Song Sales chart dated February 5, 2022. [15] The following week, the song debuted at number 30 on the US Hot Christian Songs chart dated February 12, 2022, [ 16 ] concurrently peaking at number 26 on the Christian Airplay chart, [ 17 ] and number one on the ...
The last line of the last stanza repeats the first line of the first stanza. The song is written in the first person, addressing Jesus. The theme of turning away from the world and to Jesus made the hymn suitable for funerals, seen as the ultimate turning away from the world: Jesu, meine Freude (Jesus, my joy)