A triumphant song setting forth the ultimate victory of truth, and encouraging young people to stand loyally for the truth, even “though men deride.”
For comments on the author, Frederick L. Hosmer, see [Hymn 72].
MUSIC. WINCHESTER OLD. For comments on this tune see [Hymn 588].
192. Jesus, and shall it ever be
Joseph B. Grigg, 1720-68
Entitled by the author “Ashamed of Me.” The hymn is based on Mark 8:38: “Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed, when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.”
The original poem, composed when the author was only ten years of age, has been altered somewhat by Benjamin Francis, an English Baptist preacher who was born in Wales in 1734. Francis was an earnest and popular minister and received flattering calls to London and elsewhere but chose to remain with his flock at the Baptist Church at Shortwood where he ministered from 1757 until his death in 1799.
For comments on Joseph B. Grigg see [Hymn 141].
MUSIC. FEDERAL STREET is the name of a street in Salem, Mass., where the composer lived and where his wife was born, lived, and died. The tune was written in 1832 to a child’s funeral hymn by Anne Steele, which began, “So fades the lovely, blooming flower.”
Henry Kemble Oliver, 1800-85, was a great lover of music even though his father disapproved of music and forbade the son having anything to do with it. After graduating from Dartmouth, he had a varied career as teacher, manager of cotton mills, adjutant-general of his state, treasurer of the State of Massachusetts, and mayor of Salem. He had acquired some musical education and found time to compose and publish a considerable amount of sacred music.