Sunday, 7 October 2007

We plough the fields with tractors

Last week M gave me the words of a hymn she had sung at a Harvest Festival in Yorkshire. She said the congregation had enjoyed it, although the last line was missing so there was some confusion when people tried to sing the first line of the chorus to the melody of the last line of the verse. She pointed out I would need to complete the final stanza: "Why do folks in foreign lands / Still starve and children die? / Because we have not learned..." (suggestions on a postcard...)

I looked up the hymn on the internet and found two further versions of it. None of the three versions were identical and in some places they were radically different. None of them had an author attributed. So I took the best lines from each, and in the few places (especially the last verse) where I didn't like any version I made the words up myself. We sang it tonight. No-one passed comment on it afterwards, which I take to be a sign of disinterest rather than active dislike.

Anyway, these words may never be sung again in this precise form, so I preserve them here for posterity. If anyone knows who the original author is, please say so.

We plough the fields with tractors,
With drills we sow the land;
But growth is still dependent
On God’s almighty hand.
Organic fertilizers
Will help the growing grain,
But for its full fruition
It needs God’s sun and rain.


All good gifts around us
Are sent from heaven above;
Then thank the Lord, O thank the Lord
For all his love.


To gather in the harvest
Machines now lead the way.
We reap the the fields with combines,
We bale the new mown hay;
But it is God who gives us
Inventive skills and drive;
Which lighten daily labour
And give us fuller lives!


Then why are people starving
When we have life so good?
And some in crowded cities
Search dustbins for their food;
And even some go hungry
Who farm in distant lands;
Lord, help us learn more swiftly
To share with open hands.

14 comments:

foxglove said...

Hi,
Please could you tell me who wrote this hymn
Thanks

mathmethman said...

Sorry, foxglove, I can't tell you who wrote this. As explained above I was given an incomplete printed copy and I found two versions on the internet, but none had an author attributed.

There are a few lines in the hymn as given here which are definitely mine, but it's some time since I wrote it and can't now remember exactly what my contributions were - I think it was mainly the phrase "organic fertilisers" and the ending of the third verse. The majority is the work of some unidentified writer.

mathmethman said...

P.S.
Foxglove, if you are looking for permission to use these words at a harvest festival - feel free. There are a few versions available on the internet (by googling the first line) for you to choose from. Naturally I think mine is the best ;-) but it's up to you. You'll just have to put "author unknown" at the end.

Earlybird said...

thanks for this, I think it may appear in Junior Praise in some version but I don't have that and wanted it for tomorrow morning!

Anonymous said...

I believe it's by Fred Kaan.

There's another verse which is my favourite which begins:
'He only is the maker
Of galaxies and stars
Of birds and beasts and flowers
And any life on Mars'

Anonymous said...

This hymn was written by Reverend Chisholm of Newbigging Church, Angus, Scotland, in the early 1970's for harvest thanksgiving, for the young farmers to sing.

Anonymous said...

Je me demande maintenant si nous pouvons parler de vos statistiques de sites - le volume de recherche, etc, je suis en train de sites que je peux acheter par le biais adspace - permettez-moi de savoir si on peut parler de prix et ainsi de suite. Cheers mate vous faites un excellent travail bien.

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Anonymous said...

attributed to Frank Low (1912-- )

Anonymous said...

The priest found it on the internet recently and we sang it on Rogation Sunday during our service on one of the local farms. We all loved it and very modern and applicable.

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Unknown said...

In that version I believe it was written by children of Year 6 (2010-2011) of Church Broughton Church of England Primary School in Derbyshire. I was rector of that Parish and a governor of the school at the time. I believe that its was first sung in public at the school Harvest Festival
Micael Bishop