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Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^otterspoor_klusmeier$"

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Tunes

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Tune authorities

OTTERSPOOR

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 4 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Ron Klusmeier Tune Key: f minor Incipit: 33243 17133 24317 Used With Text: How Great the Mystery of Faith

Texts

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Text authorities

O Holy Spirit, root of life

Author: Jean Janzen, 1933- Appears in 10 hymnals Topics: God the Holy Spirit; Healing / Health; Jesus Christ Word; Jesus Christ Incarnation; Trinity Scripture: Proverbs 8 Used With Tune: OTTERSPOOR Text Sources: Based on a Latin text by Hildegard of Bingen, 1098-1179
Text

How Great the Mystery of Faith

Author: Brian Wren Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 2 hymnals Lyrics: 1 How great the mystery of faith, how deep the purposes of God, in birth and ageing, life and death, unveiled, yet never understood! 2 Attracted by life's deepest claim we wait, assembled in this place, with needs and hopes we cannot name, athirst for healing, truth, and grace. 3 The best that we can do and say, the utmost care of skill and art, are sweepers of the Spirit's way to reach the depths of every heart. 4 Come, walk among us, Holy Friend, as all are gathered and prepared, that scattered lives may meet and mend through open Word and table shared. Topics: The Church at Worship Opening and Morning Hymns; liturgical Opening Hymns; Opening Hymns; Reverence/Wonder Before God; Service Music Gathering, Call to Worship, Greeting; Proper 27 Year C Used With Tune: OTTERSPOOR
Text

Lord, make us servants of your peace

Author: Francis of Assisi, 1182-1226; James Quinn, 1919- Appears in 17 hymnals Lyrics: 1 Lord, make us servants of your peace: where there is hate, may we sow love; where there is hurt, may we forgive; where there is strife, may we make one. 2 Where all is doubt, may we sow faith; where all is gloom, may we sow hope; where all is night, may we sow light; where all is tears, may we sow joy. 3 Jesus, our Lord, may we not seek to be consoled, but to console, nor look to understanding hearts, but look for hearts to understand. 4 May we not look for love's return, but seek to love unselfishly, for in our giving we receive, and in forgiving are forgiven. 5 Dying, we live, and are reborn through death's dark night to endless day; Lord, make us servants of your peace, to wake at last in heaven's light. Topics: Children and Youth Peace; Discipleship; One Life in Christ Peace; Reconciliation; Servant / Service Scripture: Matthew 6:12-15 Used With Tune: OTTERSPOOR

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Receive, O God, my anguished prayer

Author: David G. Preston Hymnal: Praise! psalms hymns and songs for Christian worship #64 (2013) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Topics: The Christian Life Spiritual Warfare Scripture: Psalm 64 Languages: English Tune Title: OTTERSPOOR
Text

How Great the Mystery of Faith

Author: Brian Wren Hymnal: Voices United #390 (1996) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Lyrics: 1 How great the mystery of faith, how deep the purposes of God, in birth and ageing, life and death, unveiled, yet never understood! 2 Attracted by life's deepest claim we wait, assembled in this place, with needs and hopes we cannot name, athirst for healing, truth, and grace. 3 The best that we can do and say, the utmost care of skill and art, are sweepers of the Spirit's way to reach the depths of every heart. 4 Come, walk among us, Holy Friend, as all are gathered and prepared, that scattered lives may meet and mend through open Word and table shared. Topics: The Church at Worship Opening and Morning Hymns; liturgical Opening Hymns; Opening Hymns; Reverence/Wonder Before God; Service Music Gathering, Call to Worship, Greeting; Proper 27 Year C Tune Title: OTTERSPOOR

O Holy Spirit, root of life

Author: Jean Janzen, 1933- Hymnal: The Book of Praise #391 (1997) Topics: God the Holy Spirit; Healing / Health; Jesus Christ Word; Jesus Christ Incarnation; Trinity Scripture: Proverbs 8 Languages: English Tune Title: OTTERSPOOR

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Brian A. Wren

b. 1936 Person Name: Brian Wren Author of "How Great the Mystery of Faith" in Voices United Brian Wren (b. Romford, Essex, England, 1936) is a major British figure in the revival of contemporary hymn writing. He studied French literature at New College and theology at Mansfield College in Oxford, England. Ordained in 1965, he was pastor of the Congregational Church (now United Reformed) in Hockley and Hawkwell, Essex, from 1965 to 1970. He worked for the British Council of Churches and several other organizations involved in fighting poverty and promoting peace and justice. This work resulted in his writing of Education for Justice (1977) and Patriotism and Peace (1983). With a ministry throughout the English-speaking world, Wren now resides in the United States where he is active as a freelance lecturer, preacher, and full-time hymn writer. His hymn texts are published in Faith Looking Forward (1983), Praising a Mystery (1986), Bring Many Names (1989), New Beginnings (1993), and Faith Renewed: 33 Hymns Reissued and Revised (1995), as well as in many modern hymnals. He has also produced What Language Shall I Borrow? (1989), a discussion guide to inclusive language in Christian worship. Bert Polman

Jean Janzen

b. 1933 Person Name: Jean Janzen, 1933- Author of "O Holy Spirit, root of life" in The Book of Praise Jean Janzen was born on December 5, 1933, the seventh of Henry Peter Wiebe and Anna Schultz Wiebe's eventual eight children (Three Mennonite Poets 5). For the first five years of her life, Janzen lived in Dalmeny, Saskatchewan (A Cappella 25). In 1938, she moved to Mountain Lake, Minnesota when her schoolteacher father began his second ministry as a pastor (“Coming into Voice”). A year later, the family moved to Kansas (“Coming into Voice”). Janzen says she cannot remember when she wrote her first poem, but the first evidence of her work is a handwritten book of five poems that she made in third or fourth grade, which was saved by her mother through the family’s many moves (E-mail Interview). She had very little exposure to poetry and literature as a child, except for hymns and Bible stories. She values these elements of her childhood and “treasure[s] the artful rhythms of the King James [Bible]” (E-mail Interview). Janzen attended Meade Bible Academy, Tabor College, and Grace College (A Cappella 25). It was in college that she had her first real exposure to literature. She was “thrilled, and became a literature major.” She remembers being “enamored” with Emily Dickinson and writing papers about her whenever given the chance. However, she never considered writing poetry as a possible career (E-mail Interview). Janzen--then Jean Wiebe--married Louis Janzen, a medical student, and the couple moved to Chicago where she worked as a medical secretary while taking courses at Northwestern University (Hostetler, A Cappella 25). Janzen cites this period of her life as the beginning of her love for visual art, calling the Chicago Art Institute the “open gate” for her and her husband where they “became hooked” (Mennonite Life Interview). In 1961, they moved to Fresno, Cal., where Louis worked as a pediatrician in a private practice. Here they raised their two daughters and two sons. When her youngest child was in school, Janzen “joined a writer’s group at the encouragement of [her] husband and nephew after they read some poems [she] had written as a gift to [her] husband” (E-mail Interview). As her children became older, Janzen went back to college, earning a BA in English from Fresno Pacific College and an MA in Creative Writing and English from California State University at Fresno in 1982. There she studied with poets Peter Everwine, Philip Levine, and C.G. Hanzlicek. Janzen says that after one semester of writing poetry in college, she took the work “seriously” and “imagined the possibility of growing into a poet,” but it took her several years “to be willing to say that out loud” (E-mail Interview). Rudy Wiebe, a Mennonite novelist, served as a mentor who influenced Janzen's writing career. She received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1995 (“Coming into Voice”). Janzen grew up in the Evangelical Mennonite Brethren Church and many of her relatives, including her father, were pastors (“Coming into Voice”). This strong connection with the church has had a significant influence on her poetry. Music has also played an important role in Janzen’s life. Her mother loved music and music was an important part of worship in her church. She learned to play the piano when she was young, later studying music in college and teaching piano for many years (“Coming into Voice”). Janzen finds harmony between the religious and artistic elements of her life, integrating them in a way that enriches both. She also uses her gifts in the church, serving as a minister of worship at the College Community Mennonite Brethren Church in Clovis, Cal., as well as writing hymn texts, which have been set to music and are included in several hymn books. Other prominent themes in her work include art, history, family, the earth, and her Russian Mennonite ancestors (“Coming into Voice”). Janzen says that “the sensual and spiritual are inevitably intertwined” (Mennonite Life Interview) and it is this element of her work that has attracted the most attention from critics and readers. She emphasizes “the presence of spirit in the flesh,” using rich description of physical objects to reveal deeper emotions and truths. Janzen has taught poetry writing at Fresno Pacific University and Eastern Mennonite University in Virginia. --www.goshen.edu/mennonitepoetry/

Ron Klusmeier

Person Name: Ron Klusmeier, 1946- Composer of "OTTERSPOOR" in The Book of Praise
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