About J. M. Neale
Short Name: J. M. Neale
Full Name: Neale, John Mason
Birth Year: 1818
Death Year: 1866
John Mason Neale was an English Anglican priest, scholar, and hymn writer, born on January 24, 1818, in Conduit Street, London. He was the son of the Reverend Cornelius Neale, a distinguished academic associated with the University of Cambridge, and a mother descended from John Mason Good, a noted scholar. Both parents were associated with evangelical Anglicanism. After his father’s death in 1823, Neale’s early education was directed primarily by his mother.
Neale was educated at Sherborne Grammar School and later prepared privately for university study. In 1836 he entered Trinity College, Cambridge, where he gained a scholarship. Although regarded as one of the strongest students of his cohort, he did not pursue advanced mathematical study, which limited his formal degree classification under the academic regulations then in force. He graduated in 1840 and later became a Fellow and Tutor of Downing College. During his academic years, he won the Seatonian Prize for religious poetry on eleven occasions.
He was ordained in the Church of England in 1842. Shortly thereafter, he married Sarah Norman Webster. Due to persistent respiratory illness, he was unable to take up normal parish duties and spent extended periods abroad for health reasons, including time in Madeira. In 1846 he was appointed Warden of Sackville College in East Grinstead, Sussex, an almshouse institution for elderly men. He remained in this position until his death. Although the post was not a standard ecclesiastical benefice, it provided him stability and an environment for sustained literary work.
At East Grinstead, Neale expanded the charitable scope of Sackville College and founded the Sisterhood of St. Margaret, which later developed into an organized religious and nursing community. This initiative faced social and ecclesiastical opposition, including periods of official restriction from diocesan authorities. Despite this, the sisterhood continued to operate and expanded its activities to include care for the sick, the poor, and orphans.
Neale was a prolific writer in both prose and verse. His scholarly works included studies in liturgy, church history, and Eastern Christianity, such as The History of the Holy Eastern Church and Essays on Liturgiology and Church History. His most lasting influence, however, was in hymnody. He wrote original hymns and produced influential English translations of Latin and Greek hymns. His translations introduced many medieval and Eastern Christian hymns to English speaking churches and appeared in collections such as Mediaeval Hymns and Sequences, Hymns of the Eastern Church, and Hymns Chiefly Mediaeval.
Neale died on August 6, 1866, in East Grinstead. His contributions had a lasting impact on Anglican worship and English hymnody, particularly through the transmission of ancient hymn texts into modern congregational use.
Hymns by J. M. Neale
| # | Title | Year | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | A Great and Mighty Wonder | 1862 | 1226 | View |
| 2 | All Glory, Laud And Honor | 1854 | 694 | View |
| 3 | All Glory, Laud, And Honour | 1851 | 697 | View |
| 4 | Art Thou Weary, Art Thou Languid? | 775 | 855 | View |
| 5 | Christ Is Made The Sure Foundation | 1851 | 1039 | View |
| 6 | Come, Ye Faithful, Raise The Strain | 1859 | 689 | View |
| 7 | Creator of the Stars of Night | 900 | 480 | View |
| 8 | For Thee, O Dear, Dear Country | 1145 | 209 | View |
| 9 | Good Christian Friends, Rejoice! | 1853 | 333 | View |
| 10 | Good Christian Men, Rejoice | 1853 | 1967 | View |
| 11 | Good Christians, Now Rejoice | 1853 | 130 | View |
| 12 | Good King Wenceslas | 1853 | 3188 | View |
| 13 | Jerusalem The Golden | 1145 | 1149 | View |
| 14 | O Come, O Come, Emmanuel | 1851 | 6970 | View |
| 15 | Of the Father's Heart Begotten | 1861 | 834 | View |