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Tune Identifier:"^who_will_be_the_next_to_follow_bilhorn$"

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[Wer will heut' ein Jünger Jesu werden?]

Appears in 5 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: P. P. Bilholrn Incipit: 51356 54326 74444 Used With Text: Ruf zum Dienst

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Who Will Be the Next

Author: Ina Duley Ogdon Appears in 4 hymnals First Line: Who will be the next to follow Jesus Refrain First Line: Shall it not be you? Used With Tune: [Who will be the next to follow Jesus]
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Ruf zum Dienst

Author: Ina Duley Ogdon; Elias Roser Appears in 1 hymnal First Line: Wer will heut' ein Jünger Jesu werden? Refrain First Line: Sag, willst nicht auch du? Used With Tune: [Wer will heut' ein Jünger Jesu werden?]

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Who Will Be the Next

Author: Ina Duley Ogdon Hymnal: International Gospel Hymns and Songs #9 (1905) First Line: Who will be the next to follow Jesus Refrain First Line: Shall it not be you? Languages: English Tune Title: [Who will be the next to follow Jesus]

Who Will Be the Next

Author: Ina Duley Ogdon Hymnal: Hymns of Heavenly Harmony #64 (1910) First Line: Who will be the next to follow Jesus? Refrain First Line: Shall it not be you? Languages: English Tune Title: [Who will be the next to follow Jesus?]
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Who Will Be the Next

Author: Ina Duley Ogdon Hymnal: Hymns of His Grace #82 (1907) First Line: Who will be the next to follow Jesus? Refrain First Line: Shall it not be you? Languages: English Tune Title: [Who will be the next to follow Jesus?]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Ina Duley Ogdon

1872 - 1964 Author of "Who Will Be the Next" in International Gospel Hymns and Songs Ogdon, Ina Duley. (Rossville, Illinois, 1872--May 18, 1964, Toledo, Ohio). Disciples of Christ. Granddaughter of a Methodist minister, she was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William W. Duley. Married James Ogdon. She wrote: "My father went with my mother to her church after his marriage to her, so I was brought up in the church of the Disciples of Christ." She wrote over three thousand hymns, anthems, cantatas, and miscellaneous verse. Her hymns include "Brighten the corner where you are," 1912; "Carry your cross with a smile," 1916; "My Lord abides;" "When you know Jesus too;" "Tell Jesus;" "Lighten the burden for someone;" "I have been saved," Her first hymn was "Open wide the window." Composer Charles Gabriel wrote, "Loved by thousands who have sung her hymns, she shrinks from celebrity in the knowledge that her songs are God-given and that without Him she could do nothing." See: Beattie, David J. (1931). The Romance of Sacred Song. London: Marshall, Morgan and Scott, Ltd. The Presbyterian Survey November 1952. The Toledo Blade, 19 May 1964. --Ernest K. Emurian, DNAH Archives Photo from Joseph Gardner collection from website "Ina Duly Ogdon Home" by Melissa Archibald (http://www.freewebs.com/marchi/inaphotosarticles.htm)

P. P. Bilhorn

1865 - 1936 Composer of "[Who will be the next to follow Jesus]" in International Gospel Hymns and Songs Pseudonyms: W. Ferris Britcher, Irene Durfee; C. Ferris Holden, P. H. Rob­lin (a an­a­gram of his name) ================ Peter Philip Bilhorn was born, in Mendota, IL. His father died in the Civil War 3 months before he was born. His early life was not easy. At age 8, he had to leave school to help support the family. At age 15, living in Chicago, he had a great singing voice and sang in German beer gardens there. At this time, he and his brother also formed the Eureka Wagon & Carriage Works in Chicago, IL. At 18 Peter became involved in gospel music, studying under George F. Root and George C. Stebbins. He traveled to the Dakotas and spent some time sharing the gospel with cowboys there. He traveled extensively with D. L. Moody, and was Billy Sunday's song leader on evangelistic endeavors. His evangelistic work took him into all the states of the Union, Great Britain, and other foreign countries. In London he conducted a 4000 voice choir in the Crystal Palace, and Queen Victoria invited him to sing in Buckinghm Palace. He wrote some 2000 gospel songs in his lifetime. He also invented a folding portable telescoping pump organ, weighing 16 lbs. It could be set up in about a minute. He used it at revivals in the late 19th century. He founded the Bilhorn Folding Organ Company in Chicago. IL, and his organ was so popular it was sold all over the world. He edited 10 hymnals and published 11 gospel songbooks. He died in Los Angeles, CA, in 1936. John Perry

Elias Roser

Translator of "Ruf zum Dienst" in Lobe den Herrn!
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