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The Primitive Hymns, Spiritual Songs and Sacred Poems Regularly Selected, Classified and Set in Order (1858) [569] The Baptist Hymn Book: comprising a large and choice collection of psalms, hymns and spiritual songs (1859) [570] The Primitive Baptist Hymnal: a choice collection of hymns and tunes of early and late composition (1881) [571]
Fawcett's hymn in Spiritual Songs is no. 267, "All fulness resides in Jesus our Head". The original text of this hymn is in Baptist Psalms and Hymns, 1858–80) The first line is "A Fulness resides in Jesus our Head" and is rendered in this way in George Vicesimus Wigram 's 1856 Little Flock Hymnbook , and in J.N.D's 1881 edition; also in ...
"He Lives" is a Christian hymn, otherwise known by its first line, "I Serve a Risen Savior". It was composed in 1933 by Alfred Henry Ackley (1887–1960), and remains popular today within most of the body of Christ. It is not delegated to a specific denomination, nor should it be represented as such.
The 1956 edition was the first Southern Baptist Convention publication to use the title "Baptist Hymnal". The 1956, 1975, 1991 and 2008 editions have all been printed by LifeWay Christian Resources , formerly known as the Sunday School Board of the Southern Baptist Convention; however, the 1956 printing names Convention Press as the printer and ...
The poem contains 2126 dodecasyllabic lines, with caesurae after the sixth syllable, composed in six books (libars). The linguistic basis of the book is Split Čakavian speech and the Štokavian lexis, and the Glagolitic original of the legend; the work thus foreshadows the unity of Croatian language .
Tillman was not first in publishing the song, an honor which goes to G. D. Pike in his 1873 Jubilee Singers and Their Campaign for Twenty Thousand Dollars. [5] Rather, Tillman's contribution was that he culturally appropriated the song into the repertoire of white southerners , whose music was derived from gospel , a style that was a distinct ...
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The Benedictus was the song of thanksgiving uttered by Zechariah on the occasion of the circumcision of his son, John the Baptist. [ 1 ] The canticle received its name from its first words in Latin (" Benedictus Dominus Deus Israel ", “Blessed be the Lord God of Israel”).