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Hymnal, Number:ga1888

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The Gospel Awakening

Publication Date: 1888 Publisher: F. A. Blackmer Publication Place: Springfield, Mass. Editors: F. A. Blackmer; F. A. Blackmer

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Jesus, Lover of my soul

Appears in 3,262 hymnals Lyrics: 1. Jesus, Lover of my soul, Let me to Thy bosom fly, While the nearer waters roll, While the tempest still is high! Hide me, O my Saviour, hide, Till the storm of life is past; Safe into the heaven guide, O receive me home at last. 2. Other refuge have I none; Hangs my helpless soul on Thee: Leave, O leave me not alone, Still support and comfort me: All my trust on Thee is stayed, All my help from Thee I bring; Cover my defenceless head With the shadow of Thy wing! 3. Thou, O Christ, art all I want; More than all in Thee I find; Raise the fallen, cheer the faint, Heal the sick, and lead the blind. Just and holy is Thy name, I am all unrighteousness: False and full of sin I am, Thou art full of truth and grace. Used With Tune: MARTYN
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The Saviour is Coming

Author: Mrs. M. B. C. Slade Appears in 120 hymnals First Line: From all the dark places Refrain First Line: The Savior is coming, Oh, tell ye the story Lyrics: 1. From all the dark places Of earth's heathen races, Oh, see how the thick shadows fly! The voice of salvation Awakes ev'ry nation, "Come over and help us," they cry. Chorus: The Saviour is coming, Oh, tell ye the story, His banner exalted shall be! The earth shall be full of his knowledge and glory, As waters that cover the sea! 2. The sunlight is glancing O'er armies advancing To conquer the kingdoms of sin; Our Lord shall possess them, His presence shall bless them, His beauty shall enter them in. [Chorus] 3. With shouting and singing, And jubilant ringing Their arms of rebellion cast down, At last ev'ry nation, The Lord of salvation, Their King and Redeemer, shall crown! [Chorus] Scripture: Isaiah 11:9 Used With Tune: [From all the dark places]
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Blessed Assurance

Author: Fanny J. Crosby Appears in 1,081 hymnals First Line: Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine! Refrain First Line: This is my story, this is my song Lyrics: 1. Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine! Oh, what a foretaste of glory divine! Heir of salvation, purchased of God, Born of His Spirit, wash'ed in His blood. Chorus: This is my story, This is my song, Praising my Saviour all the day long; This is my story, this is my song Praising my Saviour all the day long. 2. Perfect submission, perfect delight, Visions of rapture burst on my sight; Angels descending, bring from above, Echoes of mercy, whispers of love. [Chorus] 3. Perfect submission, all is at rest, I in my Saviour am happy and blest; Watching and waiting, looking above, Fill'd with His goodness, lost in His love. [Chorus] Used With Tune: [Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine!]

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[I've found a friend in Jesus, He's everything to me]

Appears in 236 hymnals Tune Key: F Major Incipit: 13556 55312 11651 Used With Text: The Lily of the Valley
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[On Jordan's stormy banks I stand]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Chas. Edw. Pollock Tune Key: C Major Incipit: 51531 35156 61655 Used With Text: On Jordan's Banks
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[O happy day that fixed my choice]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: F. A. Blackmer Tune Key: G Major Incipit: 53332 16511 22221 Used With Text: Happy Day

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The Gospel Call

Author: Fanny J. Crosby Hymnal: GA1888 #1 (1888) First Line: Wake! and hear the gospel trumpet Refrain First Line: Swell the song, proclaim the story Lyrics: 1. Wake! and hear the gospel trumpet, With a loud and earnest call, To a feast of love and mercy, Jesus welcomes ev'ry one. Chorus: Swell the song, proclaim the story, Let the joyful echo ring; Jesus died the world to ransom, Jesus lives, our Priest and King. 2. Wake!! and hear the gospel, telling What redeeming grace has done; To a feast of love and mercy, Jesus welcomes ev'ry one. [Chorus] 3. Wake! and hear the gospel mandate Fight against the host of sin; Join the ranks that now are marching, Precious souls for Christ to win. [Chorus] 4. Wake! and hear the gospel promise, Unto those that faithful prove, "I will give them life eternal, They shall dwell with me in love." [Chorus] Topics: Dedication Hymn Tune Title: [Wake! and hear the gospel trumpet]
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"The Lord is There"

Author: Samuel Peach Hymnal: GA1888 #2 (1888) First Line: In Zion's courts below Lyrics: 1. In Zion's courts below, "The Lord is there," Where pilgrims love to go, "The Lord is there." He's promis'd there to be, In the midst of two or three, Who in His name agree, "The Lord is there." 2. All one in Christ, how good! "The Lord is there," Sav'd by His precious blood, "The Lord is there." For pow'r divine they plead, That they might be His indeed, And find in times of need, "The Lord is there." 3. Where saints exalt His name, "The Lord is there," Bearing the Cross and shame, "The Lord is there." He will their strength renew, Who His precious precepts do, And prove the promise true, "The Lord is there." 4. When souls for mercy cry, "The Lord is there," To broken hearts how nigh! "The Lord is there." With joy behold Him bring Unto such the robe and ring, While saints and angels sing, "The Lord is there." 5. In yon bright world above, "The Lord is there," Where all is peace and love, "The Lord is there." No sin, no griefs, or pains; Evil there no entrance gains, Where endless glory reigns, "The Lord is there." Scripture: Ezekiel 48:35 Tune Title: [In Zion's courts below]
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Will You Come?

Author: Carrie M. Wilson Hymnal: GA1888 #3 (1888) First Line: There's a message from the Lord, will you come? Refrain First Line: He is calling you today will you come? Lyrics: 1. There's a message from the Lord, will you come? Hear it sounding from his word, will you come? Whosoever on his name will believe Life eternal shall from him receive. Chorus: He is calling you today will you come? To the only living way will you come? Will you plunge beneath the flood of his all-atoning blood? Will you be a child of God; will you come? 2. He has tarried long for you; will you come? See his locks are wet with dew; will you come? He alone your many sins can forgive; Will you look to him by faith and live? [Chorus] 3. Will you heed the Saviour's call? will you come To the feast prepared for all, will you come? You will find him at the cross waiting there With the garment that your soul must wear. [Chorus] Tune Title: [There's a message from the Lord, will you come?]

People

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Mary Ann Baker

1832 - 1925 Person Name: Miss M. A. Baker Hymnal Number: 102 Author of "Peace! Be Still!" in The Gospel Awakening Baker, Mary A.. Miss Baker, who is a member of the Baptist denomination, and a resident in Chicago, Illinois, is an active worker in the temperance cause, and the author of various hymns and temperance songs.    Her most popular hymn:-— 1. Master, the tempest is raging, Peace, was written in 1874 at the request of Dr. H. R. Palmer, who desired of her several songs on the subjects of a series of Sunday School Lessons for that year. Its theme is "Christ stilling the tempest."   During the same year it was set to music by Dr. Palmer, and pub. in his Songs of Love for the Bible School, 1874. It is found in other collections, including I. D. Sankey's Sacred Songs and Solos, London, 1881. Its home popularity was increased by its republication and frequent use during the illness of Pres. Garfield. It was sung at several of the funeral services held in his honour throughout the States. 2. Why perish with cold and with hunger? Invitation. This is another of her hymns set to music by I. D. Sankey, and included in his Sacred Songs and Solos, Lond., 1881. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) _______ Mary Ann Baker (sometimes known as Mary Eddy Baker), daughter of Joshua Baker and Catherine Eddy, was born 16 Sept. 1832 in Orwell, Oswego, NY. As a young child, her family moved to Branch County, Michigan. Her father died there in 1839 at age 39. A few years later, in 1843, her mother married David Ripley and had two more children, but by 1850, her mother was a single parent again with five children, living in Kinderhook, Branch, Michigan. By 1855, her mother had remarried to Ephraim Potter, and they were living in Boonville, Oneida, New York. In 1860, she and her sister Rhoda Ripley were living in Kalamazoo, Michigan, where she found work as a compositor. Some time between 1867 and 1868 (her sister Rhoda married George Ely in 1868 in Kalamazoo), she moved to Chicago, where she similarly worked as a compositor for Horton & Leonard. While in Chicago, she met composer Horatio R. Palmer and was associated with the Second Baptist Church. In 1900, she was still living in Chicago. Mary never married. In her final years, she was living in the Baptist Old People's Home in nearby Maywood, Cook County, Illinois, where she died at age 93 on 29 Sept. 1925. by Chris Fenner, 14 Feb. 2022

Russell Kelso Carter

1849 - 1928 Person Name: R. K. C. Hymnal Number: 65 Author of "Standing on the Promises" in The Gospel Awakening Russel Kelso Carter was a professor in the Pennsylvania Military College of Chester. While there he was licensed to preach by the Methodist Episcopal Church. He became very active in leading camp meetings and revivals. After failing health forced him to abandon this work, he studied and became a medical doctor as well as a writer. He wrote novels as well as hymns. Dianne Shapiro, from "The Singers and Their Songs: sketches of living gospel hymn writers" by Charles Hutchinson Gabriel (Chicago: The Rodeheaver Company, 1916)

William Cowper

1731 - 1800 Hymnal Number: 156 Author of "Precious Fountain" in The Gospel Awakening William Cowper (pronounced "Cooper"; b. Berkampstead, Hertfordshire, England, 1731; d. East Dereham, Norfolk, England, 1800) is regarded as one of the best early Romantic poets. To biographers he is also known as "mad Cowper." His literary talents produced some of the finest English hymn texts, but his chronic depression accounts for the somber tone of many of those texts. Educated to become an attorney, Cowper was called to the bar in 1754 but never practiced law. In 1763 he had the opportunity to become a clerk for the House of Lords, but the dread of the required public examination triggered his tendency to depression, and he attempted suicide. His subsequent hospitalization and friendship with Morley and Mary Unwin provided emotional stability, but the periods of severe depression returned. His depression was deepened by a religious bent, which often stressed the wrath of God, and at times Cowper felt that God had predestined him to damnation. For the last two decades of his life Cowper lived in Olney, where John Newton became his pastor. There he assisted Newton in his pastoral duties, and the two collaborated on the important hymn collection Olney Hymns (1779), to which Cowper contributed sixty-eight hymn texts. Bert Polman ============ Cowper, William, the poet. The leading events in the life of Cowper are: born in his father's rectory, Berkhampstead, Nov. 26, 1731; educated at Westminster; called to the Bar, 1754; madness, 1763; residence at Huntingdon, 1765; removal to Olney, 1768; to Weston, 1786; to East Dereham, 1795; death there, April 25, 1800. The simple life of Cowper, marked chiefly by its innocent recreations and tender friendships, was in reality a tragedy. His mother, whom he commemorated in the exquisite "Lines on her picture," a vivid delineation of his childhood, written in his 60th year, died when he was six years old. At his first school he was profoundly wretched, but happier at Westminster; excelling at cricket and football, and numbering Warren Hastings, Colman, and the future model of his versification. Churchill, among his contemporaries or friends. Destined for the Bar, he was articled to a solicitor, along with Thurlow. During this period he fell in love with his cousin, Theodora Cowper, sister to Lady Hesketh, and wrote love poems to her. The marriage was forbidden by her father, but she never forgot him, and in after years secretly aided his necessities. Fits of melancholy, from which he had suffered in school days, began to increase, as he entered on life, much straitened in means after his father's death. But on the whole, it is the playful, humorous side of him that is most prominent in the nine years after his call to the Bar; spent in the society of Colman, Bonnell Thornton, and Lloyd, and in writing satires for The Connoisseur and St. James's Chronicle and halfpenny ballads. Then came the awful calamity, which destroyed all hopes of distinction, and made him a sedentary invalid, dependent on his friends. He had been nominated to the Clerkship of the Journals of the House of Lords, but the dread of appearing before them to show his fitness for the appointment overthrew his reason. He attempted his life with "laudanum, knife and cord,"—-in the third attempt nearly succeeding. The dark delusion of his life now first showed itself—a belief in his reprobation by God. But for the present, under the wise and Christian treatment of Dr. Cotton (q. v.) at St. Albans, it passed away; and the eight years that followed, of which the two first were spent at Huntingdon (where he formed his lifelong friendship with Mrs. Unwin), and the remainder at Olney in active piety among the poor, and enthusiastic devotions under the guidance of John Newton (q. v.), were full of the realisation of God's favour, and the happiest, most lucid period of his life. But the tension of long religious exercises, the nervous excitement of leading at prayer meetings, and the extreme despondence (far more than the Calvinism) of Newton, could scarcely have been a healthy atmosphere for a shy, sensitive spirit, that needed most of all the joyous sunlight of Christianity. A year after his brother's death, madness returned. Under the conviction that it was the command of God, he attempted suicide; and he then settled down into a belief in stark contradiction to his Calvinistic creed, "that the Lord, after having renewed him in holiness, had doomed him to everlasting perdition" (Southey). In its darkest form his affliction lasted sixteen months, during which he chiefly resided in J. Newton's house, patiently tended by him and by his devoted nurse, Mrs. Unwin. Gradually he became interested in carpentering, gardening, glazing, and the tendance of some tame hares and other playmates. At the close of 1780, Mrs. Unwin suggested to him some serious poetical work; and the occupation proved so congenial, that his first volume was published in 1782. To a gay episode in 1783 (his fascination by the wit of Lady Austen) his greatest poem, The Task, and also John Gilpin were owing. His other principal work was his Homer, published in 1791. The dark cloud had greatly lifted from his life when Lady Hesketh's care accomplished his removal to Weston (1786): but the loss of his dear friend William Unwin lowered it again for some months. The five years' illness of Mrs. Unwin, during which his nurse of old became his tenderly-watched patient, deepened the darkness more and more. And her death (1796) brought “fixed despair," of which his last poem, The Castaway, is the terrible memorial. Perhaps no more beautiful sentence has been written of him, than the testimony of one, who saw him after death, that with the "composure and calmness" of the face there “mingled, as it were, a holy surprise." Cowper's poetry marks the dawn of the return from the conventionality of Pope to natural expression, and the study of quiet nature. His ambition was higher than this, to be the Bard of Christianity. His great poems show no trace of his monomania, and are full of healthy piety. His fame as a poet is less than as a letter-writer: the charm of his letters is unsurpassed. Though the most considerable poet, who has written hymns, he has contributed little to the development of their structure, adopting the traditional modes of his time and Newton's severe canons. The spiritual ideas of the hymns are identical with Newton's: their highest note is peace and thankful contemplation, rather than joy: more than half of them are full of trustful or reassuring faith: ten of them are either submissive (44), self-reproachful (17, 42, 43), full of sad yearning (1, 34), questioning (9), or dark spiritual conflict (38-40). The specialty of Cowper's handling is a greater plaintiveness, tenderness, and refinement. A study of these hymns as they stood originally under the classified heads of the Olney Hymns, 1779, which in some cases probably indicate the aim of Cowper as well as the ultimate arrangement of the book by Newton, shows that one or two hymns were more the history of his conversion, than transcripts of present feelings; and the study of Newton's hymns in the same volume, full of heavy indictment against the sins of his own regenerate life, brings out the peculiar danger of his friendship to the poet: it tends also to modify considerably the conclusions of Southey as to the signs of incipient madness in Cowper's maddest hymns. Cowper's best hymns are given in The Book of Praise by Lord Selborne. Two may be selected from them; the exquisitely tender "Hark! my soul, it is the Lord" (q. v.), and "Oh, for a closer walk with God" (q. v.). Anyone who knows Mrs. Browning's noble lines on Cowper's grave will find even a deeper beauty in the latter, which is a purely English hymn of perfect structure and streamlike cadence, by connecting its sadness and its aspiration not only with the “discord on the music" and the "darkness on the glory," but the rapture of his heavenly waking beneath the "pathetic eyes” of Christ. Authorities. Lives, by Hayley; Grimshaw; Southey; Professor Goldwin Smith; Mr. Benham (attached to Globe Edition); Life of Newton, by Rev. Josiah Bull; and the Olney Hymns. The numbers of the hymns quoted refer to the Olney Hymns. [Rev. H. Leigh Bennett, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ================ Cowper, W. , p. 265, i. Other hymns are:— 1. Holy Lord God, I love Thy truth. Hatred of Sin. 2. I was a grovelling creature once. Hope and Confidence. 3. No strength of nature can suffice. Obedience through love. 4. The Lord receives His highest praise. Faith. 5. The saints should never be dismayed. Providence. All these hymns appeared in the Olney Hymns, 1779. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907) ===================== Cowper, W., p. 265, i. Prof. John E. B. Mayor, of Cambridge, contributed some letters by Cowper, hitherto unpublished, together with notes thereon, to Notes and Queries, July 2 to Sept. 24, 1904. These letters are dated from Huntingdon, where he spent two years after leaving St. Alban's (see p. 265, i.), and Olney. The first is dated "Huntingdon, June 24, 1765," and the last "From Olney, July 14, 1772." They together with extracts from other letters by J. Newton (dated respectively Aug. 8, 1772, Nov. 4, 1772), two quotations without date, followed by the last in the N. & Q. series, Aug. 1773, are of intense interest to all students of Cowper, and especially to those who have given attention to the religious side of the poet's life, with its faint lights and deep and awful shadows. From the hymnological standpoint the additional information which we gather is not important, except concerning the hymns "0 for a closer walk with God," "God moves in a mysterious way," "Tis my happiness below," and "Hear what God, the Lord, hath spoken." Concerning the last three, their position in the manuscripts, and the date of the last from J. Newton in the above order, "Aug. 1773," is conclusive proof against the common belief that "God moves in a mysterious way" was written as the outpouring of Cowper's soul in gratitude for the frustration of his attempted suicide in October 1773. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)
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