top of page
Search

HYMN 287 Jesus' Name, all Names Above/I Jesu Navn skal al for gjerning ske

Updated: Jan 5, 2021

Text: Theoktistus of the Studium (9th century). Tune: Ralph Alvin Strom (1901-1977)


The Circumcision Jacopo Tintoretto 1587

1. Jesus Name all names above, Jesus, best and dearest, Jesus, fount of perfect love, Holiest, tenderest, nearest; Jesus, source of grace completest, Jesus, purest, Jesu sweetest, Jesus, well of power divine, Make me, keep me, seal me Thine.


2. Jesus, open me the gate, That the robber entered, Who in that most lost estate Wholly on Thee ventured. Thou whose wounds are ever pleading, And Thy passion interceding, From my misery let me rise To a home in paradise.


3. Jesus, crowned with thorns for me, Scourged for my transgression, Witnessing through agony, That Thy good confession; Jesus, clad in purple raiment, For my evil making payment, Let not all Thy woe and pain, Let not Calvary be in vain.


4. When I reach death’s bitter sea, And its waves mount higher, Earthly help forsaking me As the storm draws nigher, Jesus, leave me not to languish Helpless, homeless, full of anguish; Jesus, let me hear Thee say, Thou shalt be with Me today. Tr. John Mason Neale


I JESU NAVN SKAL AL VOR GJERNING SKE Text: Johan Fredricksen (1604-1441) Tune: Kingo’s Gradual 1699


1 In Jesus' name Our work must all be done If it shall compass our true good and aim, And not end in shame alone; For ev'ry deed Which in it doth proceed, Success and blessing gains Till it the goal attains. Thus we honor God on high And ourselves are blessed thereby; Wherein our true good remains.


2 In Jesus' name We praise our God on high, He blesses them who spread abroad His fame, And we do His will thereby. E'er hath the Lord Done great things by His Word, And still doth bare His arm His wonders to perform; Hence we should in ev'ry clime Magnify His name sublime, Who doth shield us from all harm.


3 In Jesus' name We live and we will die; If then we live, His love we will proclaim; If we die, we gain thereby. In Jesus' name, Who from heav'n to us came, We shall again rise To meet Him in the skies, When at last, saved by His grace, We shall see Him face to face, Live with Him in Paradise. Tr. George Rygh (18



Circumcision In the Menologion of Basic II (980)

MEDITATION Happy New Year! Today is Jesus’ Name Day, eight days after his birth. It was customary to give the baby boy his name on the day of his circumcision and Jesus’ parents followed the command of the angels to name him Jesus—Savior: “For he shall save his people from their sins.” Matt 1:21; Luke 1:31. The eighth day has an important resonance throughout the life of Jesus and thus the church. Jesus rose on the eighth day—Sunday is known as the eighth day-- so in celebrating Sunday every week we are remembering the resurrection and the new reality that Jesus established in his resurrection.


Christian theology also understood that in the circumcision Jesus shed his first blood for us. Richard Crashaw, a Catholic English poet of the Baroque era, and John Milton, wrote some of their best poetry on the ceremony. The occasion was included as the first of what the medieval church named the Seven Sorrows of Mary. Luther in a sermon on the tradition noted that the name was given by the angels, as well as Joseph, who in giving him the name, officially adopted him, like the Pharaoh’s daughter who named Moses and took him as her own. Luther loved that we received our names when we are christened—made Christians—and we now have names that God knows and can use in calling us. In this rite, “we receive a name that is over all names and a blessing so great that our hearts can be joyful and free.”



Elisabeth Fedde painting by Dale Redpath

It was common in the past and still may be a custom observed by many to begin the year in the name of Jesus. Elisabeth Fedde, the founder of the Deaconess Hospital in Brooklyn and Minneapolis made a practice of doing so, looking back over the previous year and then toward the future. She prayed the prayer of the hymn, the first hymn in the Norwegian hymnal at the time: “In Jesus Name let all our work be done.” It was the hymn with which many Norwegian institutions began their work and with which they greeted the New Year. Musekgo Lutheran Church began its ministry with this song as did Mindekirken and thousands of Norwegian congregations here and in Norway. It is the motto of Menighetsfakultet in Oslo.


So with our ancestors in the faith, begin this New Year in Jesus’ Name! Rejoice in what we have been given by our Savior: a new name, a new life, a new beginning, a wonderful way to begin the New Year!


HYMN INFO

The first text is by a rather unknown Greek writer Theoktistus of the Studium, a monk in Constantinople, during the 9th century. John Mason Neale (1818-1866), is the translator.


The tune by Ralph Alvin Strom, who lived and worked in St. Paul in congregations associated with The Augustana Synod, was composed for this text in the SBH, but used in the LBW for a marriage text. The tune, probably preferred over the text, really got buried in the marriage section, but it is a lovely romantic tune in which one can hear Swedish echoes.


"In Jesus Name shall all our work be done" was the first hymn in the Landstad hymnal. Fredricksen wrote it as a hymn for his wedding in 1639. He served as rector in Roskilde. The tune appeared in the Kingo gradual in 1699. It was known and loved, but it is difficult to sing if one does not know it.


Other hymns for this day which I have already used

At the Name of Jesus--Hymn 62--


Navnet Jesus--by the Oslo Gospel Choir Hymn 117


Bach has several cantata's for New Year's Day. See the links below)


LINKS

JESUS NAME, ALL NAMES ABOVE

Strom’s tune by Gerard Sundberg, lovely version


Ralph Strom’s tune/bad recording but you can hear the lovely tune


Jesus Name all names above, another tune St. Theoktistus by F. A. Gore Ouseley (1825-1889)


St. Theoktistus tune/piano https://youtu.be/ObsMAmFReF4


IN JESUS NAME, LET ALL OUR WORK BE DONE Organ playing In Jesus Name shall all our work be done


Hans Iversen--the old folk way of singing a tune https://youtu.be/Vju29GpaPfk


BACH CANTATAS

The Christmas Oratorio 4-6 Harnoncort directing

Four is for New Year's Day, Five, the Sunday after Christmas, Six Epiphany


Bach's Cantata BWV 41 for the New Year









152 views0 comments
bottom of page