Keep Your Lamp Trimmed and Burning

"Keep Your Lamp(s) Trimmed and Burning" is a traditional gospel blues song. It alludes to the Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins, found in the Gospel of Matthew at 25:1-13, and also to a verse in the Gospel of Luke, at 12:35.

The song has been attributed to Blind Willie Johnson, who recorded it in 1928; to Reverend Gary Davis, who recorded it in 1956; and to Mississippi Fred McDowell, who recorded it in 1959.

The song has been included in several hymnals.

Lyrics
The song is in call-and-response format. As is common with traditional songs, lyrics vary between performers – in this instance, often very widely. A usual first verse is:

"The world" and "the time" relate to the apocalyptic prophecies of the New Testament. "The work" can do so also, but suggests that the song may derive from an African-American work song.

Recordings
Recordings by people with Wikipedia articles include:
 * 1928 – Blind Willie Johnson
 * 1956 – Reverend Gary Davis
 * 1959 – Mississippi Fred McDowell
 * 1967 – Skip James
 * 1970 – Hot Tuna, on the album Hot Tuna
 * 1970 – Wizz Jones, on the album The Legendary Me
 * 1971 – Hot Tuna, on the album First Pull Up, Then Pull Down
 * 1975 – Pearly Brown, on the album It's a Mean Old World to Try to Live In
 * 1975 – John Fahey and his Orchestra, on the album Old Fashioned Love
 * 1978 – Hot Tuna, on the album Double Dose
 * 1984 – Hot Tuna, on the album Splashdown
 * 1986 – Hot Rize, on the album Traditional Ties
 * 1990 – Kaiser/Mansfield, on the 1990 album Trimmed & Burnin'
 * 1993 – Wizz Jones, on the album Late Nights and Long Days
 * 1995 – Corey Harris, on the album Between Midnight and Day
 * 1996 – Hot Rize, on the 2002 album So Long of a Journey: Live at the Bouder Theater
 * 2001 – The Word, on the album The Word
 * 2002 – Andrew Bird, on the album Fingerlings
 * 2008 – The 77s, on the album Holy Ghost Building
 * 2008 – Catfish Keith, on the album Live at the Half Moon
 * 2011 – Catfish Keith, on the album A True Friend is Hard To Hard: A Gospel Retrospective
 * 2013 – Luke Winslow-King on the album The Coming Tide
 * 2013 – Marisa Anderson on the album Traditional and Public Domain Songs
 * 2015 – Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams, on the album Larry Campbell and Teresa Williams
 * 2016 – Hugh and Katy Moffatt, on the album Now and Then
 * 2016 – Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi, on the album God Don't Never Change: The Songs Of Blind Willie Johnson
 * 2016 – Red Molly, on the album Love and Other Tragedies
 * 2023 – Nefesh Mountain