Page 85
HAPPY
MATCHES.
8s,
8s,
6s,
or
C.
P.
M.
"
Draw
nigh
to
God
and
he
will
draw
nigh
to
you,
.
.
.
and
purify
your
hearts,
ye
double-minded."-JAS.
4:8.
LADY
HUNTINGTON,
1764.
Key
of
A
Major.
B.
F.
WHITE
AND
B.
J.
KING,
1844.
1. When
Thou,
my
right
-
eous
Judge,
shall
come
To
take
Thy
ran-somed
peo
-
ple
home,
Shall
I
a
-
mong
them
stand?
2.
I
love
to
meet
Thy
peo
-
ple
now,
Be
-
fore
Thy
feet
with
them
to
bow,
Though
vil
-
est
of
them
all;
3.
O
Lord,
pre
-
vent
it
by
Thy
grace,
Be
Thou
my
on
-
ly
hid
-
ing
-
place,
In
this
the
ac
-
cept-ed
day;
Shall
such
a
worth
-
less
worm
as
I,
Who
some-times
am
a
-
fraid
to
die,
Be
found
at
thy
right
hand
?
But
can
I
bear
the
pierc
-
ing
thought,
What
if
my
name
should
be
left
out,
When
Thou
for
them
shalt
call
?
Thy
pard
-
'ning
voice
O
let
me
hear
To
still
my
un
-
be
-
liev
-
ing
fear,
Nor
let
me
fall,
I
pray.
Lady
Huntington
(Countess)
was
born
in
1707.
Her
maiden
name
was
Selina
Sherly.
She
was
married
in
1728
to
Theophilus,
Earl
of
Huntingdon,
with
whom
she
lived
happily
until
his
death
in
1746.
She
was
one
of
the
most
pious,
noble,
and
benevolent
women
whose
name
adorns
the
Christian
Church.
She
supported
by
her
large
income
the
cause
of
the
Methodists,
which
was
so
ably
presented
by
John
and
Charles
Wesley.
George
Whitfield
was
one
of
her
many
chaplains,
in
connection
with
whom
may
be
said
to
have
founded
the
Calvanistic
branch
of
Methodism.
She
was
an
earnest
Christian
worker
all
her
life.
She
died
in
1791.
The
above
hymn
portrays
unaffected
humanity
of
a
Christian
character.
She
was
one
of
the
great
women
having
unbounded
influence
in
her
day.
Sketches
of
B.
F.
White
and
E.
J.
King
are
given
in
other
parts
of
this
book.