Saturday, July 03, 2021

Spreading the Lord's Table: History of an Idiom (2)

Two more hymns indicate that the language of "spreading the Lord's Table" remained current among the Churches of Christ and Christian Churches in America up to the dawn of the twentieth century. "Shepherd of souls, refresh and bless," was composed by James Montgomery (1771-1854), a Scottish poet and hymn writer. It appears in The Christian Hymn-Book (1865), The Christian Hymnal (1871), and The Christian Hymnal, Revised (1882). Its lyrics include the two following stanzas:

Be known to us in breaking bread,
But do not then depart--
Savior, abide with us, and spread
Thy table in our heart.

Then sup with us in love divine;
Thy body and thy blood,
That living bread and heavenly wine,
Be our immortal food.

Edward Henry Bickersteth (1825-1906), an Anglican clergyman, composed "Till he come, O let the words," which was included in the New Christian Hymn and Tune Book (1882). In this song, worshippers are reminded of the eschatological feast as well as the present one:

See, the feast of love is spread:
Drink the wine, and break the bread-
Sweet memorials-till the Lord
Call us round his heavenly board-
Some from earth, from glory some,
Severed only - "Till he come."

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