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Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^i_cannot_sing_the_old_songs_claribel$"

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Tunes

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[Stand up, stand up for Jesus!]

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: S. W. S. Incipit: 53221 17446 76533 Used With Text: Stand Up for Jesus

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I Cannot Sing the Old Songs

Appears in 1 hymnal First Line: I cannot sing the old songs I sang long years ago Used With Tune: [I cannot sing the old songs I sang long years ago]
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Stand Up for Jesus

Author: Geo. Duffield, Jr. Appears in 1,838 hymnals First Line: Stand up, stand up for Jesus! Used With Tune: [Stand up, stand up for Jesus!]
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Singing the New Song

Author: Chas. H. Reynolds Appears in 3 hymnals First Line: Some day I'll sing the new song Lyrics: 1 Some day I’ll sing the new song, With angels in the skies; Where pain and grief will vanish, And tears bedim no eyes. When saved by grace I see Christ’s face, And never know a care; ‘Twill pay for all the anguish, Which I have suffered here; ‘Twill pay for all the anguish, Which I have suffered here 2 So if the load of sorrow Rests heavy on thy heart, The sun will shine tomorrow And darkness will depart. The lonely years with all their fears Will soon from us be gone, And then we’ll sing the new song With angels round the throne; And then we’ll sing the new song With angels round the throne. 3 I may not know the future, But I can watch and wait; And if I do God’s bidding, I need not fear my fate. A life of faith and love and pray’r Will lead to richer grace, And such are needed ever E’en in a desert place; And such are needed ever E’en in a desert place. 4 Some day I’ll join the chorus Around the throne above, When Christ the world has conquered By His redeeming love. How sweet ‘twill be beyond the sea, To know no dismal days, But thro’ the years supernal To sing the Savior’s praise; But thro’ the years supernal To sing the Savior’s praise. Used With Tune: [Some day I'll sing the new song]

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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I Cannot Sing the Old Songs

Hymnal: Rodeheaver Collection for Male Voices #138 (1916) First Line: I cannot sing the old songs I sang long years ago Languages: English Tune Title: [I cannot sing the old songs I sang long years ago]
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Singing the New Song

Author: Chas. H. Reynolds Hymnal: Sunday School and Revival #182 (1907) First Line: Some day I'll sing the new song Lyrics: 1 Some day I’ll sing the new song, With angels in the skies; Where pain and grief will vanish, And tears bedim no eyes. When saved by grace I see Christ’s face, And never know a care; ‘Twill pay for all the anguish, Which I have suffered here; ‘Twill pay for all the anguish, Which I have suffered here 2 So if the load of sorrow Rests heavy on thy heart, The sun will shine tomorrow And darkness will depart. The lonely years with all their fears Will soon from us be gone, And then we’ll sing the new song With angels round the throne; And then we’ll sing the new song With angels round the throne. 3 I may not know the future, But I can watch and wait; And if I do God’s bidding, I need not fear my fate. A life of faith and love and pray’r Will lead to richer grace, And such are needed ever E’en in a desert place; And such are needed ever E’en in a desert place. 4 Some day I’ll join the chorus Around the throne above, When Christ the world has conquered By His redeeming love. How sweet ‘twill be beyond the sea, To know no dismal days, But thro’ the years supernal To sing the Savior’s praise; But thro’ the years supernal To sing the Savior’s praise. Languages: English Tune Title: [Some day I'll sing the new song]
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Stand Up for Jesus

Author: Geo. Duffield, Jr. Hymnal: Living Fountain #182 (1884) First Line: Stand up, stand up for Jesus! Languages: English Tune Title: [Stand up, stand up for Jesus!]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

J. B. Herbert

1852 - 1927 Arranger of "[I cannot sing the old songs I sang long years ago]" in Rodeheaver Collection for Male Voices

George Duffield

1818 - 1888 Person Name: Geo. Duffield, Jr. Author of "Stand Up for Jesus" in Living Fountain Duffield, George, Jr., D.D., son of the Rev. Dr. Duffield, a Presbyterian Minister, was born at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, Sept. 12, 1818, and graduated at Yale College, and at the Union Theological Seminary, New York. From 1840 to 1847 he was a Presbyterian Pastor at Brooklyn; 1847 to 1852, at Bloomfield, New Jersey; 1852 to 1861, at Philadelphia; 1861 to 1865, at Adrian, Michigan; 1865 to 1869, at Galesburg, Illinois; 1869, at Saginaw City, Michigan; and from 1869 at Ann Arbor and Lansing, Michigan. His hymns include;— 1. Blessed Saviour, Thee I love. Jesus only. One of four hymns contributed by him to Darius E. Jones's Temple Melodies, 1851. It is in 6 stanzas of 6 lines. In Dr. Hatfield's Church Hymnbook it is given in 3 stanzas. The remaining three hymns of the same date are:— 2. Parted for some anxious days. Family Hymn. 3. Praise to our heavenly Father, God. Family Union. 4. Slowly in sadness and in tears. Burial. 5. Stand up, stand up for Jesus. Soldiers of the Cross. The origin of this hymn is given in Lyra Sac. Americana, 1868, p. 298, as follows:— "I caught its inspiration from the dying words of that noble young clergyman, Rev. Dudley Atkins Tyng, rector of the Epiphany Church, Philadelphia, who died about 1854. His last words were, ‘Tell them to stand up for Jesus: now let us sing a hymn.' As he had been much persecuted in those pro-slavery days for his persistent course in pleading the cause of the oppressed, it was thought that these words had a peculiar significance in his mind; as if he had said, ‘Stand up for Jesus in the person of the downtrodden slave.' (Luke v. 18.)" Dr. Duffield gave it, in 1858, in manuscript to his Sunday School Superintendent, who published it on a small handbill for the children. In 1858 it was included in The Psalmist, in 6 stanzas of 8 lines. It was repeated in several collections and in Lyra Sac. Amer., 1868, from whence it passed, sometimes in an abbreviated form, into many English collections. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] - John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) See also in: Hymn Writers of the Church

Charles H. Reynolds

Person Name: Chas. H. Reynolds Author of "Singing the New Song" in Sunday School and Revival
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