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Text Identifier:"^jesus_died_that_we_through_him_might_liv$"

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He Is Calling for You

Author: B. B. Edmiaston Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Jesus died that we through Him might live Refrain First Line: He is calling, gently calling Used With Tune: [Jesus died that we through Him might live]

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[Jesus died that we through Him might live]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: V. O. Fossett Used With Text: He Is Calling for You

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He Is Calling for You

Author: B. B. Edmiaston Hymnal: Garden of Melody #59 (1947) First Line: Jesus died that we through Him might live Refrain First Line: He is calling, gently calling Languages: English Tune Title: [Jesus died that we through Him might live]

He is calling, gently calling

Author: B. B. Edmiaston Hymnal: Blessed Hope #41 (1942) First Line: Jesus died that we through him might live Languages: English

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B. B. Edmiaston

1881 - 1955 Author of "He Is Calling for You" Benard Bates Edmiaston Born: Ju­ly 16, 1881, Ben­netts, Bax­ter Coun­ty, Ar­kan­sas. Died: De­cem­ber 2, 1964, Bronte, Tex­as. Buried: Fair­view Ce­me­te­ry, Bronte, Tex­as. Bernard was the son of Da­vid W. Ed­mi­as­ton and Geor­gia Ann Flu­ty, and hus­band of El­la Al­len. He stu­died mu­sic un­der Ru­fus Tur­ner, Frank­lin Ei­land, W. H. Law­son, Ber­ry Mc­Gee, Em­mett Dean, G. W. Fields, John Her­bert, and ma­ny oth­ers, and taught sing­ing schools for at least 38 years. He wrote and pub­lished songs through the Trio Mu­sic Com­pa­ny, Wa­co, Tex­as, and was di­rec­tor of the South­ern De­vel­op­ment Nor­mal School of Mu­sic in W­aco. © The Cyber Hymnal™ (www.hymntime.com/tch)

V. O. Fossett

1904 - 1964 Composer of "[Jesus died that we through Him might live]" in Garden of Melody Died: December 20, 1964. Buried: Laurel Land Memorial Park, Dallas, Texas. A native of DeKalb County, Alabama, Fossett attended his first Gospel Music School at age 12. At age 16, he attended Thomas Mosley’s Normal School. By age 19, he began singing and playing in a quartet. By 1937, he was teaching in High Point, North Carolina, where he married Katherine Strother. Three years later, he joined the Chattanooga, Tennessee, office of the Stamps-Baxter music publishers. Fossett’s works include: Fossett’s Inspirational Melodies (Dallas, Texas: Stamps-Baxter Music & Printing Company, 1952) --www.hymntime.com/tch/
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