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Oyeyemi-Hymnal
CAC Hymn Book
Hymn 0001
Great shepherd of thy people hear
Olus’agutan eni Re
Meter
8.6.8.6
Author
John Newton - 1725-1807
Bible Verse
Ps. 84:1
English
Yoruba
1. Great shepherd of thy people hear
Thy presence now display,
As Thou hast giv'n a place for pray'r
So give us hearts to pray.

2. Show us some token of thy love
Our fainting hope to raise,
And pour thy blessing from above
That we may render praise.

3. Within this walls let holy peace
And love and concord dwell,
Here give the trouble conscience ease
The wounded spirits heal

4. The hearing ear, the seeing eye,
The contrite heart bestow:
And shine upon us from on high
That we in grace may grow.

5. May we in faith receive Thy word,
In faith address our pray'rs,
And in the presence of our Lord
Unburden all our cares.
Amen.

1.Olus’agutan eni Re
Fi ara Re han wa,
‘Wo fun wa n’ile adura
M’okan wa gbadura

2.Fi ami ife Re han wa
So ireti wa ji
Se’ri’bukun Re s’ori wa
K’awa le ma yin O

3. K’ife ati alafia
K’o ma gbe ile yi!
F’irora f’okan iponju
M’okan ailera le

4. F’eti igbo, aya ‘gbase,
Oju ‘riran fun wa;
Tan imole Re lat’oke
K’a dagba l’or’ofe

5. K’a fi gbagbo gbo oro Re
K’a f’igbagbo bebe
Ati niwaju Oluwa
K’a se aroye wa. Amin.

About The Author
  • Newton, John, who was born in London, July 24, 1725, and died there Dec. 21, 1807, occupied an unique position among the founders of the Evangelical School, due as much to the romance of his young life and the striking history of his conversion, as to his force of character. His mother, a pious Dissenter, stored his childish mind with Scripture, but died when he was seven years old. At the age of eleven, after two years' schooling, during which he learned the rudiments of Latin, he went to sea with his father. His life at sea teems with wonderful escapes, vivid dreams, and sailor recklessness. He grew into an abandoned and godless sailor. The religious fits of his boyhood changed into settled infidelity, through the study of Shaftesbury and the instruction of one of his comrades. Disappointing repeatedly the plans of his father, he was flogged as a deserter from the navy, and for fifteen months lived, half-starved and ill-treated, in abject degradation under a slave-dealer in Africa. The one restraining influence of his life was his faithful love for his future wife, Mary Catlett, formed when he was seventeen, and she only in her fourteenth year. A chance reading of Thomas à Kempis sowed the seed of his conversion; which quickened under the awful contemplations of a night spent in steering a water-logged vessel in the face of apparent death (1748). He was then twenty-three. The six following years, during which he commanded a slave ship, matured his Christian belief. Nine years more, spent chiefly at Liverpool, in intercourse with Whitefield, Wesley, and Nonconformists, in the study of Hebrew and Greek, in exercises of devotion and occasional preaching among the Dissenters, elapsed before his ordination to the curacy of Olney, Bucks (1764).

  • The Olney period was the most fruitful of his life. His zeal in pastoral visiting, preaching and prayer-meetings was unwearied. He formed his lifelong friendship with Cowper, and became the spiritual father of Scott the commentator. At Olney his best works—-Omicron's Letters (1774); Olney Hymns (1779); Cardiphonia, written from Olney, though published 1781—were composed. As rector of St. Mary Woolnoth, London, in the centre of the Evangelical movement (1780-1807) his zeal was as ardent as before. In 1805, when no longer able to read his text, his reply when pressed to discontinue preaching, was, "What, shall the old African blasphemer stop while he can speak!" The story of his sins and his conversion, published by himself, and the subject of lifelong allusion, was the base of his influence; but it would have been little but for the vigour of his mind (shown even in Africa by his reading Euclid drawing its figures on the sand), his warm heart, candour, tolerance, and piety. These qualities gained him the friendship of Hannah More, Cecil, Wilberforce, and others; and his renown as a guide in experimental religion made him the centre of a host of inquirers, with whom he maintained patient, loving, and generally judicious correspondence, of which a monument remains in the often beautiful letters of Cardiphonia. As a hymnwriter, Montgomery says that he was distanced by Cowper. But Lord Selborne's contrast of the "manliness" of Newton and the "tenderness" of Cowper is far juster. A comparison of the hymns of both in The Book of Praise will show no great inequality between them. Amid much that is bald, tame, and matter-of-fact, his rich acquaintance with Scripture, knowledge of the heart, directness and force, and a certain sailor imagination, tell strongly. The one splendid hymn of praise, "Glorious things of thee are spoken," in the Olney collection, is his. "One there is above all others" has a depth of realizing love, sustained excellence of expression, and ease of development. "How sweet the name of Jesus sounds" is in Scriptural richness superior, and in structure, cadence, and almost tenderness, equal to Cowper's "Oh! for a closer walk with God." The most characteristic hymns are those which depict in the language of intense humiliation his mourning for the abiding sins of his regenerate life, and the sense of the withdrawal of God's face, coincident with the never-failing conviction of acceptance in The Beloved. The feeling may be seen in the speeches, writings, and diaries of his whole life. [Rev. H. Leigh Bennett, M.A.]
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