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Text Identifier:"^woe_to_the_gamblers$"

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Woe, woe, woe, how fast to the judgment they go

Author: Charles Price Jones Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Woe to the gamblers

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[Woe to the gamblers]

Appears in 4 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Charles P. Jones Tune Key: B Flat Major Incipit: 17653 51112 12313 Used With Text: Woe to the Gamblers!

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Woe to the Gamblers!

Author: Charles P. Jones Hymnal: His Fullness Songs #92 (1977) Refrain First Line: Woe, woe, woe! How fast to the judgment they go Lyrics: 1 Woe to the gamblers! The leeches of passion and greed! Dread parasites they, who work not, nor pray, On other men's toil they do feed; A dishonest store lies a curse at their door, The vultures of passion and greed! Refrain: Woe, woe, woe! How fast to the judgment they go! No God and no hope, in darkness they grope, By passion and greed, by habit and need Bound hard unto sin, and no Saviour within, To judgment, dead judgment they go. 2 Woe to the gamblers! The soul-snaring demons of night! And many's the lad now gone to the bad, That might have been happy and right; They've led them to sin, to be useless and mean, Those mother's own darlings so bright. [Refrain] 3 Woe to the gamblers! The drunkards and wife-beaters, too! Adulterers vile with their demon-born smile! Oppressors, woe, woe unto you! The worlding so gay who lives only to play, The covetous miser and shrew! [Refrain] Topics: Judgment Languages: English Tune Title: [Woe to the gamblers]

Woe, woe, woe, how fast to the judgment they go

Author: Charles Price Jones Hymnal: Jesus Only, Songs and Hymns #d162 (1901) First Line: Woe to the gamblers Languages: English

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Charles Price Jones

1865 - 1949 Person Name: Charles P. Jones Author of "Woe to the Gamblers!" in His Fullness Songs Charles Price Jones born December 9, 1865, near Rome, Georgia. He grew up in Kingston, Georgia, and attended the Baptist church. He was converted in 1884 while living in Cat Island, Arkansas. In 1885 he was called to the ministry and began preaching. In 1888 he attended Arkansas Baptist College and taught school in Grant County, Arkansas. He preached and pastored several Baptist churches. After asking God for a deeper experience of grace and fasting and praying for three days, Jones experienced a closeness with God, and in 1895, along with other Baptist holiness adherents, who taught that a second work of grace can cleanse the Christian of original sin. They started a holiness movement in the Baptist church, and he began teaching holiness in his congregation, Mount Helm Baptist Church in Jackson, Mississippi. He faced much opposition from some members of his congregation and other Baptist churches. Eventually the church voted to remove "Baptist" and change it to "Church of Christ." For several years, Jones led a non-denominational holiness movement. In 1899 he began to write songs for his church. Most of his hymns were inspired by a scripture passage. The congregation built the Christ Temple campus which included a 1000 seat sanctuary, a printing press, a school building, and a girl's dormitory. In 1917, Jones organized Christ Temple Church in Los Angeles and moved the printing press there. He died January 19, 1949 in Los Angeles Dianne Shapiro, from Church of Christ (Holiness) U.S.A. website and "Charles Price Jones (1865-1949) Religious Leader" by David Daniels, Mississippi Encyclopedia website (both accessed 10/9/2020)
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