Tuesday, September 11, 2007

O mother dear, Jerusalem

O mother dear, Jerusalem

O mother dear, Jerusalem,
when shall I come to thee?
When shall my sorrows have an end,
thy joys when shall I see?
O happy harbor of the saints!
O sweet and pleasant soil!
In thee no sorrow may be found,
no grief, no care, no toil.

No murky cloud o'ershadows thee,
nor gloom, nor darksome night;
but every soul shines as the sun,
for God Himself gives light.
there lust and lucre cannot dwell,
there envy bears no sway;
there is no hunger, heat, nor cold,
but pleasure every way.

Thy gardens and thy gallant walks
continually are green;
there grow such sweet and pleasant flow'rs,
as nowhere else are seen;
quite through the streets, with silver sound,
the flood of life doth flow,
upon whose banks on every side,
the wood of life doth grow.

There trees forevermore bear fruit,
and evermore do spring,
there evermore the angels sit,
and evermore do sing.
Jerusalem, my happy home,
would God I were in thee!
Would God my woes were at an end,
thy joys that I might see!

Words: F.B.P., sixteenth century
Melody of “Materna” written by Samuel A. Ward originally for
A hymn entitled “O Mother Dear, Jerusalem”

New Words to this Hymn “America, the Beautiful”
by Katharine Lee Bates 1904

2 comments:

Marcie said...

I like the old words better.
It goes well with my prayers for Jerusalem.

Marcie said...

copied from Joel's site:

Child of the King asked:

Marcie,

Just curious, what on earth does "O Mother Dear, Jerusalem" mean?

I've thought and thought, and I can't come up with anything.

keep on keeping on

I responded:

Child,
It's an old (sixteenth century)hymn about Jerusalem and I took it as a term of enderment.

It was the original tune for “America, the Beautiful".

Maybe you could say it's the "Mother of Cities".

Our dear old Jerusalem.