Draw Nigh and Take the Body of the Lord
“This is My body, which is broken for you; do this in remembrance of Me.” 1 Corinthians 11:24
Draw nigh and take the body of the Lord;
And drink the holy blood for you outpoured.
Saved by that body and that holy blood,
With souls refreshed, we render thanks to God.
Salvation’s Giver, Christ, the only Son,
By His dear cross and blood the victory won.
Offered was He for greatest and for least,
Himself the Victim, and Himself the Priest.
Victims were offered by the law of old,
Which in a type this heavenly mystery told.
He, Ransomer from death, and Light from shade,
Now gives His holy grace His saints to aid.
Approach ye then with faithful hearts sincere,
And take the safeguard of salvation here.
He, that His saints in this world rules and shields,
To all believers life eternal yields.
With heavenly bread makes them that hunger whole,
Gives living waters to the thirsting soul,
Alpha and Omega, to Whom shall bow
All nations at the doom, is with us now.
Words: From the
Antiphonarium Benchorense, a late 7th Century manuscript from the Monastery of Bangor, County Down, Ireland (
Sancti venite, corpus Christi sumite); translated from Latin to English by
John M. Neale,
Mediæval Hymns, 1851.
Music: Penitentia,
Edward Dearle, 1874
(MIDI, score). Alternate tunes:
- Cœna Domini, Arthur S. Sullivan, in Church Hymns, 1874 (MIDI, score)
- Ellers, Edward J. Hopkins, 1869 (MIDI, score)
- Lammas, Arthur H. Brown, 1868 (MIDI, score)
- Morecambe, Frederick C. Atkinson, 1870 (MIDI, score)
- The Sacred Heart, J. St. O. Dykes (MIDI, score)
- Sancti Venite, John B. Dykes, in Hymns Ancient and Modern, 1875 (MIDI, score)
Labels: 7th c., eucharist, Neale