Exact matches only
//  Main  //  Menu

 
☰︎ Menu | 🔍︎ Search  //  Main  //   🖖︎ Prayers & Praxes   //   🌞︎ Prayers for the Sun, Weekdays, Shabbat, and Season   //   Shabbat   //   Shaḥarit l'Shabbat ul'Yom Tov   //   Before YHVH's Awful Throne, a hymn by David Nunes Carvalho (Reformed Society of Israelites, Charleston, South Carolina, 1826)

Before YHVH’s Awful Throne, a hymn by David Nunes Carvalho (Reformed Society of Israelites, Charleston, South Carolina, 1826)

TABLE HELP

Contribute a translationSource (English)
Before YHVH’s awful throne,
Ye nations, bow with sacred joy;
Know that the Lord is God alone;
He can create and he destroy.
His Sov’reign pow’r, without our aid,
Made us of clay, and formed us men;
And when like wand’ring sheep, we stray’d,
He brought us to his fold again,
We are his people, we his care,
Our souls, and all our mortal frame
What lasting honour shall we rear,
Almighty Maker to thy name?
We’ll crowd thy gates with thankful songs,
High as the heaven our voices raise;
And earth, with her ten thousand tongues,
Shall fill thy courts with sounding praise.
Wide — wide as the world is thy command,
Vast as eternity, eternity thy love;
Firm as a rock thy truth shall stand,
When rolling years shall cease to move.

“Before YHVH’s Awful Throne” appears as Hymn 4 in The Sabbath service and miscellaneous prayers, adopted by the Reformed society of Israelites, founded in Charleston, S.C., November 21, 1825 (1830, Bloch: 1916), p. 55. Gary Zola writes that the prayer was written by David Carvalho for the Society as indicated in Abraham Moïse’s annotated copy of the 1830 prayerbook.[1] Find, “The First Reform Prayerbook in America” (p. 116 ft. 32) in Platforms and prayer books: theological and liturgical perspectives on Reform Judaism (2002)  I have replaced the vocalized Tetragramaton in the first line with ‘YHVH.’ I have preserved the wording as handwritten in the endpapers of the Constitution of the Reformed Society of Israelites, 1825. –Aharon Varady

Source(s)

Loading

 

Loading

 

Notes

Notes
1Find, “The First Reform Prayerbook in America” (p. 116 ft. 32) in Platforms and prayer books: theological and liturgical perspectives on Reform Judaism (2002)

 

 

Comments, Corrections, and Queries