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Text Identifier:"^brethren_we_have_met_again$"

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Brethren, we have met again

Appears in 15 hymnals Used With Tune: PLEYEL'S HYMN

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VALLEY

Appears in 29 hymnals Incipit: 12175 45713 43217 Used With Text: Brethren, we have met again

MARCELLAS

Appears in 2 hymnals Incipit: 51565 43153 65455 Used With Text: Brethren, we have met again
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PLEYEL'S HYMN

Appears in 622 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Pleyel Incipit: 35234 23352 34212 Used With Text: Brethren, we have met again

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Brethren, we have met again

Author: John Leland Hymnal: A Selection of Hymns and Spiritual Songs from the Best Authors #d24 (1811) Languages: English

Brethren, we have met again

Author: John Leland Hymnal: Primitive Baptist Hymn and Tune Book. Rev. #d24 (1935)

Brethren, we have met again

Author: John Leland Hymnal: The Old School Hymnal No. 7. Rev. #d29 (1939)

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Ignaz Pleyel

1757 - 1831 Person Name: Pleyel Composer of "PLEYEL'S HYMN" in The Primitive Baptist Hymnal Ignaz Joseph Pleyel; b. Ruppertstahl, near Vienna, 1757; d. Parice France, 1831 Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal, 1908

John Leland

1754 - 1841 Person Name: Leland Author of "Brethren, we have met again" in Primitive Baptist Hymn and Tune Book Leland, John, an American Baptist minister, was born at Grafton, Massachusetts, on May 15th, 1754, and began to preach at the age of 20. From 1776 to 1790 he was in Virginia, and thereafter in Massachusetts, mostly at Cheshire. He died Jan. 14, 1841. His Sermons, Addresses, Essays and Autobiography were published by his niece, Miss L. F. Greene, at Lanesboro, Massachusetts, in 1845. His influence seems to have been equalled by his peculiarities. We hear of his "restless activity and roving disposition"; his "mad devotion to politics," wherein he had much local and temporary weight; his "ready wit and endless eccentricities;" as also of his high character. Of the hymns which have been ascribed to him, some on doubtful authority, the following are the most important:— 1. The day is past and gone, The evening, &c. Evening. This is in universal American use, and Leland's claim to the authorship has never been disputed, although it is supported by no known particulars. It was first made widely known by the invaluable Hartford Selection (Congregational) of 1799. Its first appearance, so far as known, was in Philomela, or, A Selection of Spiritual Songs, by George Roberts, Petersburg,1792, No. 82. 2. 0 when shall I see Jesus! The Christian Race. This vigorous lyric is ascribed by Dr. Hitchcock, in Hymns and Songs of Praise, 1874, to Leland. It has generally been regarded as anonymous, and is of uncertain date, cir. 1807, or probably earlier. 3. Christians, if your hearts are warm. Holy Baptism. Adult. The only hymn by Leland which can be authenticated by date and circumstances is this familiar doggerel:— "Christians, if your hearts are warm, Ice and snow can do no harm." Dr. Belcher says, in his Historical Sketches of Hymns, &c, 1859, that it was written for one of Leland's large baptisms in Virginia, 1779. [Rev. Frank M. Bird, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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