Alternate 
    Closing Hymn Information, Spirit of Prophecy Sabbath, October 22, 2005
 
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"Take 
  Time to Be Holy"
  (SDAH 500, CH 603) 
Verse 
  One:
 Take time to be holy,
  Speak oft with thy Lord;
  Abide in Him always
  And feed on His word;
  Make friends of God's children,
  Help those who are weak,
  Forgetting in nothing
  His blessing to seek.
Verse 
  Two:
 Take time to be holy,
  The world rushes on;
  Spend much time in secret
  With Jesus alone;
  By looking to Jesus,
  Like Him thou shalt be;
  Thy friends in thy conduct
  His likeness shall see.
Verse 
  Three:
 Take time to be holy,
  Let Him be thy Guide,
  And run not before Him,
  Whatever betide;
  In joy or in sorrow,
  Still follow thy Lord,
  And, looking to Jesus,
  Still trust in His word.
Verse 
  Four:
Take time to be holy,
  Be calm in thy soul
  Each thought and each motive
  Beneath His control;
  Thus led by His Spirit
  To fountains of love,
  Thou soon shalt be fitted
  For service above.
Background 
  Information for Hymn #500
 
  William Dunn Longstaff, a wealthy Englishman, heard a sermon preached by Griffith 
  John, a missionary returned from China, on the text: “Be ye holy; for 
  I am holy” (1 Pet. 1:16). The verse is a direct quotation from the Old 
  Testament (Lev. 11:44), where it appears as a description of a future event 
  rather than an imperative command. Longstaff was a friend of D. L. Moody and 
  Ira D. Sankey, and when this evangelistic duo visited the northeastern part 
  of England he showed them the poem he had written as a result of hearing the 
  sermon.
 
  The poem was written in 1882 and given to Sankey. He passed it on to George 
  Coles Stebbins, who laid it aside for further attention. Not until eight years 
  later, in 1890, when Stebbins was in India, did he remember its existence. He 
  was leading the music in an evangelistic revival meeting and the subject of 
  holiness was mentioned, triggering his memory. He searched for the poem among 
  his papers, found it, and set the words to this tune, “Holiness.” 
  He sent the complete hymn to Sankey, who published it later that same year.
 
  Longstaff was born on January 28, 1822, in Sunderland, England, the son of a 
  wealthy ship owner. He was a faithful steward of his riches and was known to 
  be a most philanthropic and generous individual. He was a friend of Moody and 
  Sankey, and also of William Booth, the founder of the Salvation Army. He died 
  on April 2, 1894, in his hometown of Sunderland.
 
  Adapted from Wayne Hooper and Edward E. White, Companion to the Seventh-day 
  Adventist Hymnal (Hagerstown, Md.: Review and Herald Publishing Association, 
  1988).
SDAH 
  = Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal
 CH = Church Hymnal