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Text Identifier:"^i_love_the_voice_divine_that_speaks$"

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I love the voice divine that speaks

Appears in 4 hymnals Topics: Penitential Used With Tune: [I love the voice divine that speaks]

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[I love the voice divine that speaks]

Appears in 677 hymnals Incipit: 12321 77662 34321 Used With Text: I love the voice divine that speaks

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I love the voice divine that speaks

Hymnal: The Book of Worship #45 (1876) Topics: Penitential Tune Title: [I love the voice divine that speaks]
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I Love the Voice Divine

Author: Joseph Proud, 1745-1826 Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #2905 Meter: 8.6.8.6 First Line: I love the voice divine that speaks Lyrics: 1. I love the voice divine that speaks The words of life and peace, That bids the penitent rejoice, And sin and sorrow cease. 2. No healing balm on earth like this, Can cheer the contrite heart; No flattering dreams of earthly bliss Such pure delight impart. 3. How merciful and kind Thou art Thy goodness to reveal; Bind up, O Lord, the broken heart, The wounded spirit heal. 4. Let Thy bright presence, Lord, restore Peace to the anxious breast; Conduct me in the path that leads To everlasting rest. Languages: English Tune Title: MANOAH

I love the voice divine that speaks

Author: Thomas Jervis Hymnal: A Liturgy for the New Church #d42 (1878) Languages: English

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Gioacchino A. Rossini

1792 - 1868 Person Name: Giocchino Antonio Rossini Composer of "MANOAH" in The Cyber Hymnal Gioacchino A. Rossini; b. 1792, Pesaro; d. 1868, Ruelle near Parise Evangelical Lutheran Hymnal, 1908

Joseph Proud

Person Name: Joseph Proud, 1745-1826 Author of "I Love the Voice Divine" in The Cyber Hymnal

Thomas Jervis

1748 - 1833 Author of "I love the voice divine that speaks" Jervis, Thomas, son of a Presbyterian Minister of the same name, was born at Ipswich in 1748, and educated for the Ministry at Hoxton. In 1770 he was appointed classical and mathematical tutor at the Exeter Academy. From 1772 to 1783 he was tutor to the sons of the Earl of Shelburne, at Bowood, where Dr. Priestley was librarian. In the latter year Jervis succeeded Dr. A. Rees at St. Thomas's Southwark, moving in 1796, after the death of Dr. Kippis, to the Princes' St. Chapel, Westminster. From 1808 to 1818 he was minister at the Mill Hill Chapel, Leeds. After his retirement he lived in the neighbourhood of London, and died there in 1833. Jervis was one of the four editors of A Collection of Hymns & Psalms for Public & Private Worship, London, 1795. He contributed 17 hymns to the 1st ed., and 4 to its Supplement, 1807. Of these several are found in later Unitarian collections in Great Britain and America, including:— 1. God to correct a guilty world. Divine Providence. 2. Great God, Thine attributes divine. Confidence in God. 3. Lord of the world's majestic frame. Praise a Duty. 4. Shall I forsake that heavenly Friend? Constancy desired. 5. Sweet is the friendly voice which [that] speaks. Peace to the Penitent. 6. Thou, Lord, in mercy wilt regard. Penitence. 7. With sacred joy we lift our eyes. Divine Worship. This is given in Laudes Domini, N.Y., 1884, as: "With joy we lift our eyes." These hymns all date from 1795, and the most popular are Nos. 4 and 6. [Rev. Valentine D. Davis, B.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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