Kingo’s church hymns naturally
differ from his spiritual songs. They are more
objective in form and less fiery in spirit. Most
of them follow their themes quite closely, reproducing
in many instances even the words of their text.
Kingo is too vital, however, to confine himself wholly
to an objective presentation. Usually the last
stanzas of his hymns are devoted to a brief and often
striking application of their text. He possessed
to a singular degree the ability to express a thought
tersely, as for instance in the following stanza,
the last of a hymn on the baptism of the Lord:
Our Lord is then our brother
In whom we may confide,
The Church of God our mother,
The Holy Ghost our guide;
Our blest baptismal dower
The bands of hell has riven
And opened us God’s
heaven,
This is our faith each hour.
The hymns may be classed under four
headings: Festival Hymns, Sacramental Hymns,
Historical Hymns and Hymns on the Gospels and Epistles.
With the exception of his Easter anthem,
his festival hymns cannot compare with those of later
authors. Some of his Pentecost hymns, such as
the hymns given below, are, however, still favorites.
The day of Pentecost draws
nigh;
Come, Holy Spirit from on
high,
Who with the Father and the
Son
Is God eternal, three in one.
O God triune, Thy grace impart
Into my carnal, sinful heart,
That it a temple blest may
be
Prepared and set aside for
Thee.
Come, Holy Ghost, and witness
bear
That I the life of Christ
do share,
And that I know no other name
To save my soul from guilt
and shame.
O Counselor of truth and light,
Teach me to know my Lord aright,
That from the way of faith
I may
Not even for a moment stray.
Blest Spirit of my God and
Lord,
Preserve me in Thy way and
word,
Imbue me with Thy life and
breath,
Console me in the hour of
death.
Kingo frequently is referred to as
“the Easter Singer of Denmark”. His
claim to this title rests mainly on one song.
Easter with its story of triumphant victory appealed
especially to him; and he wrote several excellent
hymns on the theme, but they are all overshadowed by
the splendid anthem presented below.
Like the golden sun ascending
In the darkly clouded sky
And on earth its glory spending
Until clouds and darkness
fly,
So my Jesus from the grave,
From death’s dark, abysmal
cave,
Rose triumphant Easter morning,
Brighter than the sun returning.
Thanks, O thanks, to Thee
arisen
Lord and God Immanuel,
That the foe could not imprison
Thee within his hell-dark
cell.
Thanks that Thou didst meet
our foe
And his kingdom overthrow.
Jubilant my spirit raises
New Thy never ending praises.
Sin and death and every arrow
Satan hence may point at me
Fall now broken at the narrow
Tomb that saw Thy victory;
There Thou didst them all
destroy
Giving me the cup of joy
That Thou glorious resurrection
Wrought my pardon and protection.
Thou wilt hence to life awake
me
By Thy resurrection power;
Death may wound and overtake
me,
Worms my flesh and bones devour,
But I face the threat of death
With the sure and joyful faith
That its fearful reign was
ended
When Thy might its portal
rended.
Blessed Jesus, let the Spirit
So imbue my heart with grace
That I walk by Thy blest merit
And no more the way retrace
To the vile and miry pit
Where I lay condemned, unfit,
Till redeemed to life victorious
By Thy resurrection glorious.
In this rugged hymn Kingo is at his
best fiery, vital, a master of imagery
and graphic expression.
His hymns on the sacraments faithfully
reflect the doctrines of the Lutheran Church.
Here he most clearly shows his ability to present
objective truths in a devotional spirit. We meet
in these a Christian who humbly and prayerfully accepts
the whole mystery of God. For centuries these
rugged songs have served to express the sentiments
of millions as they met at the baptismal font or knelt
before the altar. The following is one of the
most favored baptismal hymns both in the Danish and
Norwegian churches:
Whoso believes and is baptized
God’s kingdom shall
inherit,
For he is cleansed by Jesus
Christ
Who, by His grace and merit,
Adopts him as His child and
heir,
Grants him in heaven’s
bliss to share
And seals him with His Spirit.
We ask with earnest faith
of Thee,
Our Lord and blest Defender,
That Thou wilt guide us constantly
And, in Thy mercy tender,
Keep us in our baptismal grace
Until at last we take our
place
With Thee ’midst heaven’s
splendor.
Kingo’s communion hymns have
to a large extent been superseded by later hymns of
Grundtvig and others. But some of them are still
in common use. The following characteristic hymn
is frequently used before the communion.
Lord Jesus Christ receive
me now
As with a heart contrite I
bow
Before Thine altar, blessed
Lamb,
Who bore my sorrow, sin and
shame.
I am today my Saviour’s
guest.
Bethink, my soul, the honor
blest,
That He, Thy Lord, will sup
with thee
And will Himself Thy nurture
be.
He offers to thee with the
bread
His body riven for thy aid,
And with the wine His precious
blood,
The price of thy eternal good.
How this can be, I cannot
tell;
He did not on the mystery
dwell;
No mind the secret can perceive,
It is enough that I believe.
Rejoice, then, O my soul today
That God’s appointed
servant may
Now offer thee the gift so
free
Through which thy Lord unites
with thee.
O Lord, I offer Thee my soul
To nourish, strengthen and
make whole.
Uphold me by Thy means of
grace
Until I see Thee face to face.
The short hymn given below is a favorite
after the communion in numerous
Danish and Norwegian churches.
O dearest Lord, receive from
me
The heartfelt thanks I offer
Thee,
Who through Thy body and Thy
blood
Hast wrought my soul’s
eternal good.
Break forth, my soul, in joy
and praise;
What wealth is mine this day
of days!
My Jesus dwells within my
soul;
Let every tongue His grace
extol.
Kingo’s historical hymns, that
is, his hymns on the stories of the Gospels, usually
are not counted among the best. Yet there are
many fine hymns among them, such as the annunciation
hymn, “There Came a Message from the Sky”;
the hymn about the wedding at Cana, “How Blessed
Was that Wedding Feast”; and the splendid hymn
on the transfiguration of the Lord, “I Lift
My Eyes and Spirit Up unto the Hallowed Mountain Top
Where Jesus Once Ascended”. Best known
among this group of hymns is, however, his great sequence
of songs on our Lord’s passion. In these
inspired hymns we meet again the Kingo that we know
from his spiritual songs, fiery, eloquent, imaginative,
seeking to picture every detail and mood of the Savior’s
suffering from the garden to the cross. Though
it is difficult to choose among hymns so universally
fine, the one given below is, at least, fairly representative
of the group.
Over Kedron Jesus passes
Ready for His passion day,
While the Prince of Darkness
masses
All his legions for the fray.
Wily foes with evil hearts
Bend their bows and point
their darts,
Aiming at the Savior solely,
As the world forsakes Him
wholly.
David once in great affliction
Crossed the Kedron’s
narrow stream,
While his foes without restriction
Hatched their vile and cunning
scheme.
Darker far the shadows now
Bend about the Savior’s
brow
As He hastens to His passion
For the sinful world’s
salvation.
See Him, torn by woe appalling,
Kneeling in the garden still,
And upon His Father calling
That, if possible, He will
Take the bitter cup away.
But how meekly He doth pray!
What the Father shall Him
offer,
He obediently will suffer.
See, what agony assails Him
In that dark and fearful hour;
Every friend deserts or fails
Him;
Satan strikes with all his
power;
And the flowers beneath Him
grow
Crimson with the purple flow
From His anguished frame distilling
As His cup of woe is filling.
But, O flower, whose tender
blossom
Caught that precious, purple
dew
From the Saviour’s riven
bosom,
In a blessed hour you grew!
Éden’s flowers
did not bear
Fruits that could with yours
compare:
By the blood your petals staining,
I am now salvation gaining.
When I like the flower must
wither,
When I wilt and fade like
grass,
When the hour of death draws
hither,
When I from this world shall
pass,
When my heart has ceased to
beat
When I face God’s judgment
seat,
Then His blood, which stained
the garden,
Shall procure my lasting pardon.
Kingo’s hymns on the pericopes
have proved less resistant to time than most of his
other work. They are in reality brief commentaries,
presenting a practical rather than a poetical exposition
and application of their texts. But even so,
the singular freshness of their thought and style
has preserved many of them until our day. The
following hymn on Matthew 8, 23-27, the stilling of
the storm, furnishes a characteristic example of this
group of hymns.
What vessel is that passing
Across the boundless deep,
On which the billows massing
In foaming fury sweep?
She seems in sore distress
As though she soon would founder
Upon the shoals around her
And sink without redress.
It is the storm-tossed vessel
Of God’s own church
on earth,
With which the world doth
wrestle,
And send its fury forth,
While Jesus oft appears
As though He still were sleeping,
With His disciples weeping
And crying out in fears.
But let the world with fury
Against the church but rave,
And spend its might to bury
Her in the roaring wave!
It only takes a word
To hush the wild commotion
And show the mighty ocean
Her Lord is still aboard.
Kingo is often called the singer of
orthodoxy. His hymns faithfully present the accepted
doctrines of his church. No hymnwriter is more
staunchly Lutheran than he. But he was too vital
to become a mere doctrinaire. With him orthodoxy
was only a means to an end, a more vigorous Christian
life. Many of his hymns present a forceful and
straightforward appeal for a real personal life with
God. The following hymn may be called an orthodox
revival hymn. It was a favorite with the great
Norwegian lay preacher, Hans Nielsen Hauge.
The power of sin no longer
Within my heart shall reign;
Faith must grow ever stronger
And carnal lust be slain;
For when I was baptized,
The bonds of sin were severed
And I by grace delivered
To live for Jesus Christ.
Would I accept the merit
Of my baptismal grace
And with my faith and spirit
The Savior’s cross embrace,
How great would be my blame
Should I abide in evil
And not renounce the devil
In Christ my Savior’s
name.
It can bestow no treasure
On me that Christ arose.
If I will not with pleasure
The power of death oppose,
And with my heart embrace
The Savior, who is risen
And has from error’s
prison
Redeemed me by His grace.
Lord Jesus, help me ever
To fight “the old man”
so
That he shall not deliver
Me to eternal woe,
But that I here may die
From sin and all offences
And, by the blood that cleanses,
Attain my home on high.
Thus, the permanent value of Kingo’s
hymns rests not only on their rugged and expressive
poetry but on the earnest and warm-hearted Christian
spirit that breathes through them. In the perennial
freshness of this spirit succeeding generations have
experienced their kinship with the poet and found
expression for their own hope and faith. The following
ageless prayer expresses not only the spirit of the
poet but that of earnest Christians everywhere and
of every age.
Print Thine image pure and
holy
On my heart, O Lord of Grace;
So that nothing high nor lowly
Thy blest likeness can efface.
Let the clear inscription
be:
Jesus, crucified for me,
And the Lord of all creation,
Is my refuge and salvation.