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Tune Identifier:"^we_come_o_god_with_gladness_11567$"

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[Now, host with host assembling]

Appears in 2 hymnals Incipit: 11567 12345 65432 Used With Text: Temperance Hymn

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We Come, o God, With Gladness

Appears in 18 hymnals Used With Tune: [We come, O God, with gladness]
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Temperance Hymn

Author: Rev. E. H. Chapin Appears in 20 hymnals First Line: Now, host with host assembling Used With Tune: [Now, host with host assembling]

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We Come, o God, With Gladness

Hymnal: The Carol #6a (1886) Languages: English Tune Title: [We come, O God, with gladness]
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Temperance Hymn

Author: Rev. E. H. Chapin Hymnal: The Carol #6b (1886) First Line: Now, host with host assembling Languages: English Tune Title: [Now, host with host assembling]

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E. H. Chapin

1814 - 1880 Person Name: Rev. E. H. Chapin Author of "Temperance Hymn" in The Carol Chapin, Edwin Hubbell, D.D., was the most distinguished man of the Universalists in later years. In his early days he was eminent as a lecturer; and as a preacher until his death. He was born in Union village, Washington, N. Y., Dec. 29, 1814, and educated at Bennington, Vermont. He was successively pastor at Richmond, Virginia, 1837; Charleston, Mass.; Boston, 1846; and from 1848, of the Church of the Divine Paternity, New York city. He died Dec. 26, 1880. He published several works, and edited, with J. G. Adams, Hymns for Christian Devotion, Boston, 1846. This is perhaps the most prominent Universalist Collection in the States. To it Dr. Chapin contributed the following hymns:— 1. Amid surrounding gloom and waste. During a Storm. 2. Father, at this altar bending. Installation of a Pastor. 3. Father, lo, we consecrate. Opening of a Place of Worship. 4. Hark! hark! with harps of gold. Christmas. 5. O Thou who didst ordain the word. Ordination. 6. Our Father, God! not face to face. Opening of a Place of Worship. 7. When long the soul has slept in chains. Charitable Institutions. Of these No. 6 is the most widely used. In addition Dr. Chapin is the author of:— 8. Now host with host assembling. Temperance. This was given in Longfellow and Johnson's Book of Hymns (Unitarian), 1848, and from thence has passed Into other collections. It is entitled "Triumph of Temperance." and is well known. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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