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Text Identifier:"^shall_i_crucify_my_savior_when_for_me$"

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Shall I Crucify My Savior?

Author: Mrs. Frank A. Breck Appears in 28 hymnals First Line: Shall I crucify my Savior Used With Tune: [Shall I crucify my Savior]

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SHALL I CRUCIFY HIM

Meter: 8.7.8.7 with refrain Appears in 20 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Grant Colfax Tullar, 1869-1950 Incipit: 33234 33224 44444 Used With Text: Shall I Crucify My Saviour
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TULLAR

Appears in 46 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Grant Colfax Tullar Tune Key: D Major Incipit: 54435 11765 57665 Used With Text: Shall I Crucify My Savior

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Shall I Crucify My Savior?

Author: Mrs. Frank A. Breck Hymnal: The Majestic Hymnal, number two #284 (1959) First Line: Shall I crucify my Savior Topics: Cross; Cross Languages: English Tune Title: [Shall I crucify my Savior]
Text

Shall I Crucify My Saviour

Author: Carrie E. Breck, 1855-1934 Hymnal: The Christian Hymnary. Bks. 1-4 #558 (1972) Meter: 8.7.8.7 with refrain Refrain First Line: Shall I crucify my Saviour? Lyrics: 1 Shall I crucify my Saviour, When for me He bore such loss? Shall I put to shame my Savior? Can I nail Him to the cross? Chorus: Shall I crucify my Savior? Crucify my Lord again? Once! oh, once! I crucified Him! Shall I crucify again? 2 Are temptations so alluring? Do earth pleasures so enthrall? That I cannot love my Savior Well enough to leave them all? [Chorus] 3 'T was my sins that crucified Him, Shall they crucify Him yet? Blackest day of nameless anguish, Can my thankless soul forget? [Chorus] 4 Oh, the kindly hands of Jesus, Pouring blessings on all men! Bleeding nail-scarred hands of Jesus! Can I nail them once again? [Chorus] Topics: Book One: Hymns, Songs, Chorales; Warning Message Backsliding, Apostasy Scripture: Hebrews 6:6 Languages: English Tune Title: SHALL I CRUCIFY HIM

Shall I Crucify Him?

Author: Mrs. Frank A. Breck Hymnal: Men's Gospel Quartets new and old #59 (1957) First Line: Shall I crucify my Savior Refrain First Line: Shall I crucify my Savior? Languages: English Tune Title: [Shall I crucify my Savior]

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Carrie Ellis Breck

1855 - 1934 Person Name: Carrie E. Breck Author of "Shall I Crucify My Savior" in Great Songs of the Church (Revised) Carrie Ellis Breck was born 22 January 1855 in Vermont and raised in a Christian home. She later moved to Vineland, New Jersey, and then to Portland, Oregon. She wrote verse and prose for religious and household publications, In 1884 she married Frank A. Breck. She has written between fourteen and fifteen hundred hymns. Dianne Shapiro, from "The Singers and Their Songs: sketches of living gospel hymn writers" by Charles Hutchinson Gabriel (Chicago: The Rodeheaver Company, 1916) See also Mrs. Frank A. Breck.

Grant Colfax Tullar

1869 - 1950 Composer of "TULLAR" in Great Songs of the Church (Revised) Grant Colfax Tullar was born August 5, 1869, in Bolton, Connecticut. He was named after the American President Ulysses S. Grant and Vice President Schuyler Colfax. After the American Civil War, his father was disabled and unable to work, having been wounded in the Battle of Antietam. Tullar's mother died when he was just two years old so Grant had no settled home life until he became an adult. Yet from a life of sorrow and hardship he went on to bring joy to millions of Americans with his songs and poetry. As a child, he received virtually no education or religious training. He worked in a woolen mill and as a shoe clerk. The last Methodist camp meeting in Bolton was in 1847. Tullar became a Methodist at age 19 at a camp meeting near Waterbury in 1888. He then attended the Hackettstown Academy in New Jersey. He became an ordained Methodist minister and pastored for a short time in Dover, Delaware. For 10 years he was the song leader for evangelist Major George A. Hilton. Even so, in 1893 he also helped found the well-known Tullar-Meredith Publishing Company in New York, which produced church and Sunday school music. Tullar composed many popular hymns and hymnals. His works include: Sunday School Hymns No. 1 (Chicago, Illinois: Tullar Meredith Co., 1903) and The Bible School Hymnal (New York: Tullar Meredith Co., 1907). One of Grant Tullar's most quoted poems is "The Weaver": My Life is but a weaving Between my Lord and me; I cannot choose the colors He worketh steadily. Oft times He weaveth sorrow And I, in foolish pride, Forget He sees the upper, And I the under side. Not til the loom is silent And the shuttles cease to fly, Shall God unroll the canvas And explain the reason why. The dark threads are as needful In the Weaver's skillful hand, As the threads of gold and silver In the pattern He has planned. He knows, He loves, He cares, Nothing this truth can dim. He gives His very best to those Who chose to walk with Him. Grant Tullar --http://www.boltoncthistory.org/granttullar.html, from Bolton Community News, August 2006.

I. H. Meredith

1872 - 1962 Person Name: I. H. M. Arranger of "[Shall I crucify my Savior]" in New Songs for Service Pseudonyms Charles C. Ack­ley (tak­en from his wife’s name, Cla­ris­sa Ack­ley Cow­an) Broughton Ed­wards Floyd En­gle (from his ad­dress on Floyd Street in En­gle­wood Cliffs, New Jer­sey) Arthur Grant­ley Bruce Ken­ne­dy See also Ackley, Chas. C. 1872-1962 See also Edwards, Broughton
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