11. Give to our God immortal praise

Isaac Watts, 1674-1748

Recognized as the best of three versions which Watts made of Psalm 136. The hymn expresses with dignity and fervor the high praise of God.

Isaac Watts, scholar, poet, and pastor of the Independent Church in Mark Lane, London, ranks among the greatest of English hymn writers. He is the author of about 600 hymns and versions, many of which are still in common use. The Hymnary contains 19 of his works. Watts is often referred to as the “father of English hymnody.” Though suffering from bodily ailments during the greater part of his adult life, he was robust in his thinking and became a bold and sturdy fighter for the cause of intellectual and religious freedom. Watts was one of the gentlest and kindest of men and a friend of the young. His wide intellectual interests enabled him to write textbooks on logic, geography, and astronomy, which were used in the universities of England as well as Harvard and Yale. Though he was never married and had no children of his own, Watts was a lover of children and wrote one of the world’s most beautiful cradle songs—“Hush, my dear, lie still and slumber.” In 1715, he issued a notable book of verse for children. One of the poems, entitled, “Against Quarrelling and Fighting,” runs as follows:

Let dogs delight to bark and bite

For God hath made them so;

Let bears and lions growl and fight

For ’tis their nature to.

But children, you should never let

Such angry passions rise;

Your little hands were never made

To tear each other’s eyes.

Let grown-ups in our day grasp the idea in this simple poem!

MUSIC. The tune, LASST UNS ERFREUEN, one of the most famous in any hymn book, was published in Geistliche Kirchengesäng, Cologne, 1623. It was set to an Easter hymn beginning, “Lasst uns erfreuen herzlich sehr,” from whence it derives its name. The tune is unusual for its simplicity of structure and its invariable repetition of phrases throughout. Usually the alleluias in lines 3 and 6 are sung in harmony, the rest of the song in unison. The tune lends itself well to antiphonal or echo singing on the rare occasions when such varied effects are desired. The composer is not known.