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Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^preste_el_mortal_al_salvador_white$"

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Tunes

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[Often at evening comes a glowing thought]

Appears in 8 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: T. B. White Incipit: 17655 65171 16665 Used With Text: Often at evening comes a glowing thought

Texts

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Father, in Thy mysterious presence kneeling

Author: Rev. Samuel Johnson (1822-1882) Appears in 126 hymnals Used With Tune: WHITE
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O Thou great Friend to all the sons of men

Author: Rev. Theodore Parker (1810-1859) Appears in 115 hymnals Used With Tune: WHITE
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From soul to soul, quick as the sunbeam's ray

Appears in 2 hymnals Used With Tune: [From soul to soul, quick as the sunbeam's ray] Text Sources: Beard's Coll.

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Preste el mortal al Salvador oído

Author: J. Mora Hymnal: Himnario Cristiano para uso de las Iglesias Evangélicas #24 (1908) Languages: Spanish Tune Title: [Preste el mortal al Salvador oído] (White)
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Loor á tí, mi Dios, en esta noche

Author: J. B. Cabrera Hymnal: El Himnario Evangelico #22 (1893) Languages: Spanish Tune Title: [Loor á tí, mi Dios, en esta noche]
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Rise, crowned with light, imperial Salem, rise

Author: Alexander Pope (1688-1744) Hymnal: Hymnal Amore Dei #227b (1897) Languages: English Tune Title: WHITE

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Juan Bautista Cabrera Ivars

1837 - 1916 Person Name: J. B. Cabrera Author of "Loor á tí, mi Dios, en esta noche" in El Himnario Evangelico Juan Bautista Cabrera Ivars was born in Benisa, Spain, April 23, 1837. He attended seminary in Valencia, studying Hebrew and Greek, and was ordained as a priest. He fled to Gibraltar in 1863 due to religious persecution where he abandoned Catholicism. He worked as a teacher and as a translator. One of the works he translated was E.H. Brown's work on the thirty-nine articles of the Anglican Church, which was his introduction to Protestantism. He was a leader of a Spanish Reformed Church in Gibraltar. He continued as a leader in this church when he returned to Spain after the government of Isabel II fell, but continued to face legal difficulties. He then organized the Spanish Reformed Episcopal Church and was consecrated as bishop in 1894. He recognized the influence of music and literature on evangelism which led him to write and translate hymns. Dianne Shapiro, from Real Academia de la Historia (https://dbe.rah.es/biografias/39825/juan-bautista-cabrera-ivars) and Himnos Cristanos (https://www.himnos-cristianos.com/biografia-juan-bautista-cabrera/) (accessed 7/30/2021)

Samuel Johnson

1822 - 1882 Person Name: Rev. Samuel Johnson (1822-1882) Author of "Father, in Thy mysterious presence kneeling" in Hymnal Amore Dei Johnson, Samuel, M.A, was born at Salem, Massachusetts, Oct. 10, 1822, and educated at Harvard, where he graduated in Arts in 1842, and in Theology in 1846. In 1853 he formed a Free Church in Lynn, Massachusetts, and remained its pastor to 1870. Although never directly connected with any religious denomination, he was mainly associated in the public mind with the Unitarians. He was joint editor with S. Longfellow (q. v.) of A Book of Hymns for Public and Private Devotion, Boston, 1846; the Supplement to the same, 1848; and Hymns of the Spirit, 1864. His contributions to these collections were less numerous than those by S. Longfellow, but not less meritorious. He died at North Andover, Massachusetts, Feb. 19, 1882. His hymns were thus contributed:— i. To A Book of Hymns, 1846. 1. Father [Saviour] in Thy mysterious presence kneeling. Divine Worship. 2. Go, preach the gospel in my name. Ordination. 3. Lord, once our faith in man no fear could move. In Time of War. 4. O God, Thy children gathered here. Ordination. 5. Onward, Christians, [onward] through the region. Conflict. In the Hymns of the Spirit, 1864, it was altered to "Onward, onward through the region." 6. Thy servants' sandals, Lord, are wet. Ordination. 7. When from Jordan's gleaming wave. Holy Baptism. ii. To the Supplement, 1848. 8. God of the earnest heart. Trust. iii. To the Hymns of the Spirit, 1864. 9. City of God, how broad, how far. The Church the City of God. 10. I bless Thee, Lord, for sorrows sent. Affliction— Perfect through suffering. 11. Life of Ages, richly poured. Inspiration. 12. Strong-souled Reformer, Whose far-seeing faith. Power of Jesus. 13. The Will Divine that woke a waiting time. St. Paul. 14. Thou Whose glad summer yields. Prayer for the Church. 15. To light that shines in stars and souls. Dedication of a Place of Worship. Of these hymns No. 8 was "Written for the Graduating Exercises of the Class of 1846; in Cambridge Divinity Schools ; and No. 10 “Written at the request of Dorothea L. Dix for a collection made by her for the use of an asylum." It is undated. A few only of these hymns are in use in Great Britain. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Thomas B. White

1795 - 1873 Person Name: T. B. White Composer of "WHITE" in Hymnal Amore Dei Writer of hymns and editor of hymnal; member of firm, T.B. & E.L. White, booksellers and stationers at Newburyport, Mass.; moved to New Bedford, Mass. where he was cashier of the National Bank of Commerce
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