Search Results

Text Identifier:"^santo_espiritu_de_amor$"

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.

Texts

text icon
Text authorities

Santo Espíritu, Sé Mi Guía

Author: Mildred Cope; H. T. Reza Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Santo Espíritu de amor Refrain First Line: Santo Espíritu de amor Scripture: Romans 5:5 Used With Tune: HOLY SPIRIT, BE MY GUIDE

Tunes

tune icon
Tune authorities

HOLY SPIRIT, BE MY GUIDE

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Mildred Cope Tune Key: D Major Used With Text: Santo Espíritu, Sé Mi Guía

Instances

instance icon
Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Santo Espíritu, Sé Mi Guía

Author: Mildred Cope; H. T. Reza Hymnal: Himnario Bautista #133 (1978) First Line: Santo Espíritu de amor Refrain First Line: Santo Espíritu de amor Scripture: Romans 5:5 Languages: Spanish Tune Title: HOLY SPIRIT, BE MY GUIDE

Santo Espíritu, Sé Mi Guía

Author: Mildred Cope; H. T. Reza Hymnal: Himnario de Alabanza Evangélica #133 (1978) First Line: Santo Espíritu de amor Refrain First Line: Santo Espíritu de amor Scripture: Romans 5:5 Languages: Spanish Tune Title: HOLY SPIRIT, BE MY GUIDE

People

person icon
Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Honorato T. Reza

1912 - 2000 Person Name: H. T. Reza Translator of "Santo Espíritu, Sé Mi Guía" in Himnario Bautista Born: Oc­to­ber 27, 1912, Alahuixtlan, Guer­re­ro, Mex­i­co. Died: 2000, Kansas City. Reza’s ed­u­ca­tion be­gan at age six in the home of a Pro­test­ant pas­tor, and con­tin­ued in a board­ing school in Tel­o­lo­a­pan, and lat­er in Mex­i­co City. Re­za be­came a Chris­tian at age 11 af­ter hear­ing a sermon by Ruth Del­ga­do. He turned away from the faith as a teen, but was re­con­ciled in 1930. He grad­u­at­ed from the Bi­ble In­sti­tute in Mex­i­co Ci­ty in 1935, and took his first pas­tor­ate in Ma­tí­as Ro­me­ro, Oa­xa­ca. Reza en­rolled at the Un­i­ver­si­ty of Pas­a­de­na, California, in 1937, re­ceived his ba­che­lor’s de­gree in 1939, and re­turned to Mex­i­co Ci­ty in 1935 to open a new church. A few months lat­er, he mar­ried Ernes­ti­na Ten­to­ri. Continuing post gra­du­ate stu­dies in paral­lel with his pas­tor­al du­ties, Re­za earned a de­gree from the Un­i­ver­si­ty of Mex­i­co in 1941. H. Or­ton Wi­ley in­vit­ed him to Pas­a­de­na Un­i­ver­si­ty the fol­low­ing year to teach Span­ish and lit­er­a­ture. In ad­di­tion to his re­spon­si­bil­i­ties in Pa­sa­de­na, Re­za was dean and pro­fes­sor at a Bi­ble col­lege in Los An­geles for His­pan­ic pas­tors of the Church of the Nazarene in South­ern Cal­i­for­nia. In 1944, the Gene­ral As­sem­bly of the Church of the Na­za­rene cre­ate­d a Span­ish ra­dio prog­ram, with Re­za as its di­rec­tor. He moved with his fam­i­ly to Kan­sas Ci­ty in 1946 to sup­port that ef­fort. For 23 years, he host­ed the ra­dio pro­gram La Ho­ra Na­za­re­na, which was even­tu­al­ly broad­cast on 700 sta­tions. In 1980, Re­za be­came found­ing pre­si­dent of the Na­za­rene Sem­in­a­ry in Mex­i­co Ci­ty, guid­ing it in its ear­ly years of de­vel­op­ment. Reza’s works in­clude: Brazil’s Open Door (Na­za­rene Pub­lish­ing House, 1958) Our Task for To­day (Na­za­rene Pub­lish­ing House, 1963) Nuestra Ta­rea pa­ra Hoy (Ca­sa Na­za­rene de Pub­lic­ci­o­nes) Ambassadors to La­tin Lands, 1965 Prescription for Per­ma­nence: The Sto­ry of Our Schools for Train­ing Min­is­ters in La­tin Amer­i­ca, 1968 Missions: Both Sides of the Coin (Na­za­rene Pub­lish­ing House, 1973) Through a Long Tun­nel: A Sto­ry of Sur­viv­al in Cu­ba (Na­za­rene Pub­lish­ing House, 1976) After the Storm, the Rain­bow: The Church of the Na­za­rene in Cu­ba Tras la Tor­men­ta, el Arco Iris (Ca­sa Na­za­rene de Pub­lic­ci­o­nes, 1993) --hymntime/tch/bio/r/e/z/reza_ht.htm Himnario Bautista gives his year of birth as 1913.

Mildred Cope

1924 - 2008 Author of "Santo Espíritu, Sé Mi Guía" in Himnario Bautista Effie Mildred (Mickey) Cope, wrote her song, "Holy Spirit be my Guide" - lyrics and music in 48 hours. Her drive for this song stemmed from the Sunday school superintendent asking her to become the teacher for teen girls at her church (Westside Church of the Nazarene, Indianapolis) She was the perfect example of "Nancy Nazarene". She felt a challenge by God to the point of conviction. After perfecting it, in her mind, she took it to church on Sunday morning (she was a Church Pianist) and presented it with her playing and singing it with all her heart and soul. It became a hit locally. (this was 1960) She later wanted to go to a music seminar in Ohio with Wiber Vidito, a song evangelist she often played for. The cost for it was $25.00, which, in those days, was hard for her family to deal with. Note: She was convinced by Dennis Apple in Kansas City,a prior member of her church, to send her song in! Time passed and one day a check came in the mail for $25.00 from the clearing house...she went to the seminar. Charles D (Don) Cope, (Her eldest child of 2 boys and a girl)
It looks like you are using an ad-blocker. Ad revenue helps keep us running. Please consider white-listing Hymnary.org or getting Hymnary Pro to eliminate ads entirely and help support Hymnary.org.