In Our Day of Thanksgiving is a Christian hymn written in 1894 by the English hymnodistWilliam Henry Draper. It was first published in The Victoria Book of Hymns in 1897, and appears in a number of current hymnbooks. The text of the hymn is about remembrance of the dead and is often sung on All Saints' DayorAll Souls' Day, or for the dedication of a church.[1][2]
Draper was a Church of Englandclergyman. From 1889 to 1899 he served as vicar of the Abbey Church of the Holy CrossinShrewsbury, Shropshire. During his incumbency there, the Abbey underwent restoration. Draper wrote the hymn "In Our Day of Thanksgiving" for the thanksgiving service marking the completion of the restoration in 1894. The hymn was titled "Remembrance of Past Worshippers" and distributed on a leaflet.[3][2][4][5] After it was sung at the 1896 Church Congress in Shrewsbury, printed copies went on sale for 2d.[1]
The text of the hymn is concerned with giving thanks to God for the lives of Christians who have died and passed into the afterlife.
In our day of thanksgiving one psalm let us offer
for the saints who before us have found their reward;
The hymn also makes reference to earthly church buildings and their significance as a place of pilgrimage.[5]
These stones that have echoed their praises are holy, and dear is the ground where their feet have once trod; yet here they confessed they were strangers and pilgrims, and still they were seeking the city of God.
"In Our Day of Thanksgiving" has a metre of 13.12.13.11. When first published by Draper, it was originally set to a hymn tune entitled Victory, by Sir Joseph Barnby.[12] In the 1904 edition of Hymns Ancient and Modern it was set to the hymn tune Montgomery, variously attributed to John Stanley or S. Jarvis.[7] Other alternate tunes include Kremser, a 17th-century Dutch melody composed by Adrianus Valerius and arranged by Eduard Kremser;[13] and a German tune, Was lebet was schwebet.[10][14]
Today, the hymn is commonly sung to the tune St Catherine's Court. This tune was composed in 1925 by Richard Strutt for the golden jubilee in of the Girls' Friendly Society and published in their Jubilee Hymn Book. It was named the tune after Strutt's country house, St Catherine's Court. The hymn was published with this tune in the 1950 edition Hymns Ancient and Modern.[3]