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Tune Identifier:"^fade_fade_each_earthly_joy_bradbury$"

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FADE, FADE, EACH EARTHLY JOY

Meter: 6.4.6.4.6.6.6.4 Appears in 6 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: William Batchelder Bradbury, 1816-1868 Incipit: 34332 12543 34332 Used With Text: Fade, Fade, each Earthly Joy

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Jesus is mine

Author: Catherine Bonar Appears in 551 hymnals First Line: Fade, fade, each earthly joy Used With Tune: JESUS IS MINE
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Jesus is mine

Author: H. J. M. Hope Appears in 114 hymnals First Line: Now I have found a friend Used With Tune: JESUS IS MINE
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Du, som af kärlek varm

Author: S. D. Phelps Meter: 6.4.6.4.6.6.6.4 Appears in 1 hymnal Lyrics: 1 Du som, af kärlek varm, Blödde för mig, Drag mig för hvarje dag Närmare dig! Fyll du mitt hjärta så, Att jag af kärlek må Offra med fröhd också Något för dig! 2 Du, som i himlens j¨hd Beder för mig, Som, om än svag, ser upp, Herre, till dig! Gif, att jag korset bär, Nöjd med hvad du beskär, Att jag må vittna här Något om dig! 3 Bo med din Andes kraft, Herre, i mig, Att jag må hvarje stund Lefva för dig. Helande hjärtesår, Sökande vilsna får, Görande, hvar jag går, Något för dig! 4 Allt, hvad jag är och har, Skänkte du mig; Hjälp mig det helga gladt, Herre, åt dig! Och, när förutan brist Dig jag får se til sist, Blifve du, Herre Krist, Allting för mig! Topics: Bön; Prayer Used With Tune: FADE, FADE, EACH EARTHLY JOY

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Fade, Fade, each Earthly Joy

Author: Mrs. Jane Catharine Bonar, 1821-1884 Hymnal: Hymnal and Order of Service #327 (1901) Meter: 6.4.6.4.6.6.6.4 Lyrics: 1 Fade, fade, each earthly joy; Jesus is mine, Break every tender tie; Jesus is mine. Dark is the wilderness, Earth has no resting-place, Jesus alone can bless; Jesus is mine. 2 Tempt not my soul away; Jesus is mine. Here would I ever stay; Jesus is mine. Perishing things of clay, Born but for one brief day, Pass from my heart away: Jesus is mine. 3 Farewell, ye dreams of night; Jesus is mine. Lost in this dawning bright, Jesus is mine. All that my soul has tried, Left but a dismal void; Jesus has satisfied; Jesus is mine. 4 Farewell, mortality; Jesus is mine. Welcome, eternity; Jesus is mine. Welcome, O loved and blest, Welcome, sweet scenes of rest, Welcome, my Saviour’s breast; Jesus is mine. Amen. Topics: Death and Resurrection Languages: English Tune Title: FADE, FADE, EACH EARTHLY JOY
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Fade, Fade, Each Earthly Joy

Author: Jane Catharine (Lundie) Bonar Hymnal: The Hymnal and Order of Service #601 (1926) Meter: 6.4.6.4.6.6.6.4 Lyrics: 1 Fade, fade, each earthly joy; Jesus is mine. Break ev'ry tender tie; Jesus is mine. Dark is the wilderness, Earth has no resting place, Jesus alone can bless; Jesus is mine. 2 Tempt not my soul away; Jesus is mine. Here would I ever stay; Jesus is mine. Perishing things of clay, Born but for one brief day, Pass from my heart away; Jesus is mine. 3 Farewell, ye dreams of night; Jesus is mine. Lost in this dawning bright Jesus is mine. All that my soul has tried Left but a dismal void; Jesus has satisfied; Jesus is mine. 3 Farewell, mortality; Jesus is mine. Welcome, eternity; Jesus is mine. Welcome, O loved and blest, Welcome, sweet scenes of rest, Welcome, my Saviour’s breast: Jesus is mine. Amen. Topics: Last Things Death and Burial Languages: English Tune Title: FADE, FADE, EACH EARTHLY JOY
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Fade, Fade, Each Earthly Joy

Author: Jane Catherine (Lundie) Bonar Hymnal: The Junior Hymnal, Containing Sunday School and Luther League Liturgy and Hymns for the Sunday School #294 (1928) First Line: Fade, fade, each earthly joy, Jesus is mine Languages: English Tune Title: [Fade, fade, each earthly joy, Jesus is mine]

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William B. Bradbury

1816 - 1868 Person Name: William Batchelder Bradbury, 1816-1868 Composer of "FADE, FADE, EACH EARTHLY JOY" in Hymnal and Order of Service William Bachelder Bradbury USA 1816-1868. Born at York, ME, he was raised on his father's farm, with rainy days spent in a shoe-shop, the custom in those days. He loved music and spent spare hours practicing any music he could find. In 1830 the family moved to Boston, where he first saw and heard an organ and piano, and other instruments. He became an organist at 15. He attended Dr. Lowell Mason's singing classes, and later sang in the Bowdoin Street church choir. Dr. Mason became a good friend. He made $100/yr playing the organ, and was still in Dr. Mason's choir. Dr. Mason gave him a chance to teach singing in Machias, ME, which he accepted. He returned to Boston the following year to marry Adra Esther Fessenden in 1838, then relocated to Saint John, New Brunswick. Where his efforts were not much appreciated, so he returned to Boston. He was offered charge of music and organ at the First Baptist Church of Brooklyn. That led to similar work at the Baptist Tabernacle, New York City, where he also started a singing class. That started singing schools in various parts of the city, and eventually resulted in music festivals, held at the Broadway Tabernacle, a prominent city event. He conducted a 1000 children choir there, which resulted in music being taught as regular study in public schools of the city. He began writing music and publishing it. In 1847 he went with his wife to Europe to study with some of the music masters in London and also Germany. He attended Mendelssohn funeral while there. He went to Switzerland before returning to the states, and upon returning, commenced teaching, conducting conventions, composing, and editing music books. In 1851, with his brother, Edward, he began manufacturring Bradbury pianos, which became popular. Also, he had a small office in one of his warehouses in New York and often went there to spend time in private devotions. As a professor, he edited 59 books of sacred and secular music, much of which he wrote. He attended the Presbyterian church in Bloomfield, NJ, for many years later in life. He contracted tuberculosis the last two years of his life. John Perry

Mrs. Catherine J. Bonar

1821 - 1884 Person Name: Catherine Bonar Author of "Jesus is mine" in The National Baptist Hymnal Bonar, Jane Catharine, née Lundie, daughter of the Rev. Robert Lundie, some time minister of the parish of Kelso, born at Kelso Manse, December, 1821, married, in 1843, to Dr. H. Bonar, and died in Edinburgh, Dec. 3, 1884. Her hymns appeared in Dr. Bonar's Songs for the Wilderness, 1843-4, and his Bible Hymn Book, 1845. Their use is very limited. Mrs. Bonar is chiefly known through her hymn:— Pass away, earthly joy. Jesus, all in all, which appeared in the Songs for the Wilderness, 2nd Series, 1844, and again in the Bible Hymn Book, 1845, No. 108, in 4 stanzas of 8 lines, including the refrain, "Jesus is mine!" The original text is given in Dr. Hatfield's Church Hymn Book. 1372, No. 661. Sometimes this is altered to "Fade, fade, each earthly joy," as in the American Songs for the Sanctuary, 1865, No. 114, and others. The last stanza of this hymn is also st. iv. of the cento, "Now I have found a friend," &c. (q. v.) -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

S. Dryden Phelps

1816 - 1895 Person Name: S. D. Phelps Author of "Du, som af kärlek varm" in Lutherförbundets Sångbok Phelps, Sylvanus Dryden, D.D., was born at Suffield, Connecticut, May 15, 1816, and educated at Brown University, where he graduated in 1844. In 1846 he became pastor of the first Baptist Church, New Haven. Dr. Phelps is the Editor of The Christian Secretary, Hartford. His publications include, Eloquence of Nature, and Other Poems, 1842; Sunlight and Hearthlight, 1856; the Poet's Song, 1867, &c. He is the author of the following hymns:— 1. Christ, Who came my soul to save. Holy Baptism. 2. Did Jesus weep for me? Lent. 3. Saviour, Thy dying love. Passiontide. 4. Sons of day, arise from slumber. Home Missions. 5. This rite our blest Redeemer gave. Holy Baptism. Of these Nos. 1 and 4 appeared in the Baptist ed. of the Plymouth Collection, 1857; Nos. 2 and 5 in the Baptist Devotional Hymn Book, 1864; and No. 3 in Gospel Hymns, 1st series, and Laudes Domini, 1884. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ==================== Phelps, Sylvanus Dryden, p. 893, ii. Additional hymns in common use by Dr. Phelps include (1) "Father, from Thy throne above" (Temperance); (2) "When over our land hung oppression's dark pall" (Temperance), both written in 1841. To J. Aldrich's Sacred Lyre, 1858, he contributed (3) "Sweet is the hour of prayer" (Prayer); (4) "Sweet Sunday-school! I love the place" (Sunday Schools); and (5) "Come friends, and let our hearts awake" (Divine Worship). There are also (6) "Once I heard a sound at my heart's dark door" (Voice of God within), in Pure Gold, with a refrain by Dr. Lowry; (7) "While on life's stormy sea" (Trust in God), written in 1862; and (8) "Come, trembling soul, be not afraid" (Confidence), "written after visiting a sick man, who, feeling his need of Christ, found it difficult to believe." Concerning his popular hymn "Saviour! Thy dying love," Burrage says it was written in 1862, and published in the Watchman and Reflector, and then, with music by Dr. R. Lowry in Pure Gold. It has been translated into Swedish and other languages. Burrage gives a revised version of the text, recently made by the author. (Burrage's Baptist Hymn Writers, 1888, p. 384.) --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907)
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