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Come, Thou Almighty King

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Come, Thou Almighty King (1756)
by Anonymous, attributed to Charles Wesley

The earliest known publication of this hymn is a leaflet that was bound into the 6th edition of George Whitefield's Collection of Hymns for Social Worship, 1757. In this leaflet, the hymn had five verses of seven lines each, and was titled "An Hymn to the Trinity." The leaflet also contained the hymn "Jesus, Let Thy Pitying Eye" by Charles Wesley, and because of this hymnologist Daniel Sedgwick attributed "Come Thou Almighty King" to Wesley as well. However, there is no record of this hymn in any of Wesley's collections of hymns, nor is there any hymn known to be Wesley's that uses the same meter as this hymn (6,6,4,6,6,6,4).

"Come Thou Almighty King" is usually sung to the tune "Italian Hymn" (also called "Moscow" or "Trinity"), which was written as a musical setting for this hymn by Felice de Giardini.

Anonymous1786510Come, Thou Almighty King1756Charles Wesley
Versions of Come, Thou Almighty King include:

This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.

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