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Text Identifier:"^thou_mayest_shun_the_lord_jesus_today$"

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Texts

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What Then?

Author: A. C. F. Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Thou mayest shun the Lord Jesus today Refrain First Line: What then, what then, O soul, what then Used With Tune: [Thou mayest shun the Lord Jesus today]

Tunes

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[Thou mayest shun the Lord Jesus today]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Albert C. Fisher Incipit: 33355 56663 44466 Used With Text: What Then?

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

What Then?

Author: A. C. F. Hymnal: Songs of the Great Salvation #148 (1918) First Line: Thou mayest shun the Lord Jesus today Refrain First Line: What then, what then, O soul, what then Languages: English Tune Title: [Thou mayest shun the Lord Jesus today]

What then

Author: Albert C. Fischer Hymnal: Songs of Redemption #d214 (1920) First Line: Thou mayest shun the Lord Jesus today Refrain First Line: What then, what then, O soul Languages: English

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Albert C. Fisher

1886 - 1946 Person Name: Albert C. Fischer Author of "What Then?" Born: March 10, 1886, New Berne, North Carolina. Died: February 6, 1946, Dallas, Texas. Buried: Mount Olivet Cemetery, Fort Worth, Texas. Fisher attended Fort Worth University and Polytechnic College, Fort Worth, Texas; Vanderbilt University; Southern Methodist University; and earned his Doctor of Divinity degree at Asbury College, Kentucky. He moved to Fort Worth in 1908, and for a decade served as a general evangelist for the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. In World War I, he was a military chaplain. After the war, he worked in the East Oklahoma Conference and (beginning in 1944), the North Texas Conference. His works include: Best Revival Songs (Nashville, Tennessee: The Cokesbury Press, 1924) (music editor) © The Cyber Hymnal™ (www.hymntime.come/tch)
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