Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise
Immortal, Invisible, God Only Wise is a Christian hymn with words by Walter Chalmers Smith, usually sung to the tune, "St Denio", originally a Welsh ballad tune, which became a hymn (under the name "Palestrina") in Caniadau y Cyssegr (1839) edited by John Roberts of Henllan (1807-1876).[1] Of this hymn, musicologist Erik Routley has written:
"[Immortal Invisible] should give the reader a moment's pause. Most readers will think they know this hymn, the work of another Free Kirk minister. But it never now appears as its author wrote it, and a closer look at it in its fuller form shows that it was by no means designed to be one of those general hymns of praise that the parson slams into the praise-list when he is in too much of a hurry to think of anything else but a hymn about the reading of Scripture. Just occasionally editorial tinkering changes the whole personality of a hymn; it has certainly done so here." [2]
Lyrics
Lyrics given in most English hymnals: Immortal, invisible, God only wise, |
Original version of last two stanzas from Hymns of Christ and the Christian Life, 1867. [vv1-3 as before, then] |
External links
References
- ↑ Jacqui James, Between the Lines: Sources for Singing the Living Tradition, 2nd edition, (Boston: Skinner House Books, 2001), 35.
- ↑ Erik Routley, A Panorama of Christian Hynmnody (Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press, 1979), 132. When first published in Hymns of Christ and the Christian Life (1867), the hymn had six verses. https://archive.org/details/hymnschristandc00smitgoog (pages 210 - 211).