My faith looks up to Thee

1
My faith looks up to Thee,
Thou Lamb of Calvary,
  Savior Divine;
Now hear me while I pray;
Take all my guilt away;
Oh, let me from this day
  Be wholly Thine.
2
May Thy rich grace impart
Strength to my fainting heart,
  My zeal inspire;
As Thou hast died for me,
Oh, may my love to Thee
Pure, warm, and changeless be,
  A living fire.
3
While life’s dark maze I tread,
And griefs around me spread,
  Be Thou my Guide;
Bid darkness turn to day,
Wipe sorrow’s tears away,
Nor let me ever stray
  From Thee aside.
4
All thru life’s transient dream,
Until death’s sullen stream
  Shall o’er me roll,
Blest Savior, with Thy love,
Fear and distrust remove;
Make me Thy grace to prove
  Transform my soul.
175
Ubanagu Udah Edith

Lagos, Nigeria

This hymn is so inspiring my heart is being lifted up to trust God more even in the time of pain and sorrow, knowing He is there for me.


Micheal

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Nice one


Dee

Ely, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom

Timeless and timely, My prayer for this season: "Bid darkness turn to day, wipe sorrow's tears away".


Rt Rev Prof Israel Okoye

Ihiala, Anambra, Nigeria

This is a hymn for all seasons. Through it, those who are downcast are lifted up, while those whose faith is going through challenges are inspired to rise in faith, for with the risen Lord, they shall overcome.


Lucky Cheelo Munakampe

Lusaka, Zambia

Such a soul inspiring song. It gives me courage when I feel weak.


Jumoke

Ikeja, Lagos

Soul lifting. This is appropriate for the situation I found myself in. When I need to put my trust in God only.


Wankey Enyinnaya

Lagos, Nigeria

May God use this hymn to touch every soul that has gone astray to return to the Lord Jesus. Amen!


Chikodi Chi

Porthacourt, Riverstate, Nigeria

This hymn came to my mind when I needed the direction of the Holy Spirit.


Martin

Boltimore, Maryland, United States

At the moment when my spiritual strength was low and I was some sort of struggling to measure up and transient to that glorious height I really needed to be. I came across this hymn as the title came into my consciousness. l found it as the right tonic in that faithful morning. I have done this hymn over and over from elementary school but the experience that morning was different, refreshing, inspiring and much awakening to the meaning and l am back on my spiritual track faithfully journeying on.


Steve Miller

Detroit, Michigan, United States

A lonely 22 year old school teacher who had experienced a discouraging year of illness and other difficulties lifted up his eyes one evening in desperation to God and was led to write the thoughtful words of this beloved hymn, which is one of our finest hymns on the subject of personal faith.

When just 13 years of age, Palmer was forced to drop out of school and take a job as a clerk in a dry-goods store in Boston. He began attending historic Park Street Congregational Church and there professed Christ as his Savior. Soon he felt the call of God to become a minister of the gospel. He resumed his education at Andover Academy and later was graduated from Yale University.

While at Yale, Ray Palmer took a part-time teaching position in a private girls' school in New York City. It was a difficult job that eventually affected his health and brought him to a state of depression.

One night while reading a German poem picturing a needy sinner kneeling before the cross, Ray Palmer was so moved that he translated the lines into English. Immediately his mind was filled with the thoughts of "My Faith Looks Up to Thee".

"The Words for these stanzas were born out of my own soul with very little effort. I recall that I wrote the verses with tender emotion. There was not the slightest thought of writing for another eye, least of all writing a hymn for Christian worship. It is well remembered that while writing the last line, 'Oh, bear me safe above, a ransomed soul,' the thought of the whole work of redemption and salvation was involved in those words, suggesting the theme of eternal praises, and this brought me to a degree of emotion that caused abundant tears."

Palmer copied his verses into a small notebook and thought no more of them except to read them occasionally for his own devotions. Two years later, while walking down a busy street in Boston, he chanced to meet his friend, Dr. Lowell Mason, who was well-known in 19th century musical circles. Mason was compiling a new hymnal and asked if by any chance Palmer might have some lines that would lend themselves to a new hymn.

"I showed him the verses in my little notebook. We stepped into a store together, and a copy of the poem was made and given to him. Without much notice, Mason put it into his pocket. Several days later, however, when we met again in the street, he scarcely waited to greet me:"

"Mr. Palmer, you may live many years and do many good things, but I think you will be best known to posterity as the author of 'My Faith Looks Up to Thee.'"

Dr. Lowell Mason's prediction about Palmer and his hymn certainly came true. Ray Palmer did accomplish much for God until his death at the age of 79. He became recognized as an outstanding evangelical minister and pastored 2 large Congregational churches in the east for 39 years.

Palmer was the author of several popular volumes of religious verse and devotional essays. He also wrote 37 other fine hymns, for which he would never accept payment.

Yet Dr. Palmer is best remembered today for his very first hymn text, a statement of personal faith in Christ written when he was just 22 yeas of age. - '52 Hymn Stories Dramatized' by Kenneth W. Osbeck

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The original title of this hymn was 'Self Consecration'

The final stanza originally says:

4 When ends life's transient dream,

when death’s cold, sullen stream

shall o'er me roll,

blest Savior, then in love,

fear and distrust remove;

O bear me safe above,

a ransomed soul.