Bach wrote the cantata in his third year in Leipzig for the Second Sunday after Epiphany. The prescribed readings for the Sunday were taken from the Epistle to the Romans, we have several gifts (Romans 12:6–16), and from the Gospel of John, the Marriage at Cana (John 2:1–11). The text is taken from Georg Christian Lehms' annual of cantatas, published in Darmstadt in 1711. The single idea from the gospel is the word of Jesus: "Mine hour is not yet come". The text is divided into two parts of three movements each, the first dealing with the distress of someone feeling abandoned, the second with hope for God's help. Both parts are closed by a chorale. Movement 3 is the second stanza of Johann Heermann's hymn "Zion klagt mit Angst und Schmerzen", the closing chorale is the final stanza of Paul Fleming's "In allen meinen Taten". According to Alfred Dürr, it is unlikely that they were performed before and after the service, considering the brevity of the work.

Librettist Georg Christian Lehms (1684–1717)
Date of composition 1726
Premiered 1726, January 20th in Leipzig, Germany
First published 1852 (BGA)
Dedicated to 2nd Sunday after Epiphany
Type Cantata
Catalogue BWV 13
Spoken language German
Instruments Other - Performers
SATB
2x Recorder
Oboe da caccia
Strings
Continuo
Autotranslations beta Jean-Sébastien Bach: Meine Seufzer, meine Tränen, BWV 13 "My sighs, my tears"
Johann Sebastian Bach: Meine Seufzer, meine Tränen, BWV 13 "My sighs, my tears"
Johann Sebastian Bach: Meine Seufzer, meine Tränen, BWV 13 "My sighs, my tears"