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Text Identifier:"^it_is_a_faith_sublime_and_sure$"

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Spiritual Presence

Author: J. H. Perkins Meter: 8.6.8.6 Appears in 3 hymnals First Line: It is a faith sublime and sure Lyrics: It is a faith sublime and sure, That ever round our head Are hovering, on noiseless wing, The spirits of the dead. It is a faith sublime and sure, When ended our career, That it will be our ministry To watch o’er others here; To bid the mourners cease to mourn, The trembling be forgiven, To bear away from ills of clay The deathless soul to heaven.

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It is a faith sublime and sure

Author: J. H. Perkins Hymnal: The Psalms of Life #166 (1857)
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It is a faith sublime and sure

Author: J. H. Perkins Hymnal: A Book of Hymns for Public and Private Devotion. (10th ed.) #356 (1848) Languages: English
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Spiritual Presence

Author: J. H. Perkins Hymnal: A Book of Hymns for Public and Private Devotion (15th ed.) #356 (1866) Meter: 8.6.8.6 First Line: It is a faith sublime and sure Lyrics: It is a faith sublime and sure, That ever round our head Are hovering, on noiseless wing, The spirits of the dead. It is a faith sublime and sure, When ended our career, That it will be our ministry To watch o’er others here; To bid the mourners cease to mourn, The trembling be forgiven, To bear away from ills of clay The deathless soul to heaven. Languages: English

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James H. Perkins

1810 - 1849 Person Name: J. H. Perkins Author of "It is a faith sublime and sure" in A Book of Hymns for Public and Private Devotion. (10th ed.) Perkins, Rev. James Handasyd. (Boston, Massachusetts, July 31, 1810--December 14, 1849, near Cincinnati, Ohio). He was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy and at Round Hill School. Northampton, Mass. After a brief business experience in Boston he moved to Cincinnati, where he was admitted to the bar in 1837, but two years later he took up the Ministry-at-Large organized by the First Congregational Society (Unitarian) of Cincinnati, and later became pastor of the church. He was active in social reforms and as a lecturer, and was author of a number of essays descriptive of life in what was then the far west. The hymn in 3 stanzas, C.M., beginning "It is a faith sublime and sure" attributed to "J.H. Perkins" in Longfellow and Johnson's Book of Hymns (1846-1848) is presumably by him, although it is not included with his poems printed in the Memoir and Writings of James Handasyde Perkins, edited by W.H. Channing, Cincinnati, 1851. --Henry Wilder Foote, DNAH Archives
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