Person Results

Scripture:Psalm 15
In:people

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.
Showing 31 - 40 of 95Results Per Page: 102050

S. T. Kimbrough

b. 1936 Person Name: S. T. Kimbrough, Jr Scripture: Psalm 15 Author of "Psalm 15" in The United Methodist Hymnal

John L. Bell

b. 1949 Person Name: John L. Bell (b. 1949) Scripture: Psalm 15 Author of "Lord, who may enter your house?" in Church Hymnary (4th ed.) John Bell (b. 1949) was born in the Scottish town of Kilmarnock in Ayrshire, intending to be a music teacher when he felt the call to the ministry. But in frustration with his classes, he did volunteer work in a deprived neighborhood in London for a time and also served for two years as an associate pastor at the English Reformed Church in Amsterdam. After graduating he worked for five years as a youth pastor for the Church of Scotland, serving a large region that included about 500 churches. He then took a similar position with the Iona Community, and with his colleague Graham Maule, began to broaden the youth ministry to focus on renewal of the church’s worship. His approach soon turned to composing songs within the identifiable traditions of hymnody that began to address concerns missing from the current Scottish hymnal: "I discovered that seldom did our hymns represent the plight of poor people to God. There was nothing that dealt with unemployment, nothing that dealt with living in a multicultural society and feeling disenfranchised. There was nothing about child abuse…,that reflected concern for the developing world, nothing that helped see ourselves as brothers and sisters to those who are suffering from poverty or persecution." [from an interview in Reformed Worship (March 1993)] That concern not only led to writing many songs, but increasingly to introducing them internationally in many conferences, while also gathering songs from around the world. He was convener for the fourth edition of the Church of Scotland’s Church Hymnary (2005), a very different collection from the previous 1973 edition. His books, The Singing Thing and The Singing Thing Too, as well as the many collections of songs and worship resources produced by John Bell—some together with other members of the Iona Community’s “Wild Goose Resource Group,” —are available in North America from GIA Publications. Emily Brink

Steven C. Warner

b. 1954 Scripture: Psalm 15 Author of "Lord, Who Shall Be Welcome" in Psalms for All Seasons

Thomas Sternhold

1449 - 1549 Person Name: T. S. Scripture: Psalm 15 Author of "Domine quis" in The Whole Booke of Psalmes Thomas Sternhold was Groom of the Robes to Henry VIII and Edward VI. With Hopkins, he produced the first English version of the Psalms before alluded to. He completed fifty-one; Hopkins and others composed the remainder. He died in 1549. Thirty-seven of his psalms were edited and published after his death, by his friend Hopkins. The work is entitled "All such Psalms of David as Thomas Sternhold, late Groome of the King's Majestye's Robes, did in his Lyfetime drawe into Englyshe Metre." Of the version annexed to the Prayer Book, Montgomery says: "The merit of faithful adherence to the original has been claimed for this version, and need not to be denied, but it is the resemblance which the dead bear to the living." Wood, in his "Athenae Oxonlenses" (1691, vol. I, p. 62), has the following account of the origin of Sternhold's psalms: "Being a most zealous reformer, and a very strict liver, he became so scandalized at the amorous and obscene songs used in the Court, that he, forsooth, turned into English metre fifty-one of David's psalms, and caused musical notes to be set to them, thinking thereby that the courtiers would sing them instead of their sonnets; but they did not, some few excepted. However, the poetry and music being admirable, and the best that was made and composed in these times, they were thought fit to be sung in all parochial churches." Of Sternhold and Hopkins, old Fuller says: "They were men whose piety was better than their poetry, and they had drunk more of Jordan than of Helicon." Sternhold and Hopkins may be taken as the representatives of the strong tendency to versify Scripture that came with the Reformation into England--a work men eagerly entered on without the talent requisite for its successful accomplishment. The tendency went so far, that even the "Acts of the Apostles" was put into rhyme, and set to music by Dr. Christopher Tye. --Annotations of the Hymnal, Charles Hutchins, M.A. 1872.

Norman Warren

1934 - 2019 Person Name: Norman L. Warren Scripture: Psalm 15 Composer of "STELLA CARMEL" in Psalter Hymnal (Gray)

Carlton R. Young

b. 1926 Scripture: Psalm 15 Composer of "[Justice alone is the way of the Lord]" in The United Methodist Hymnal

Tony Alonso

b. 1980 Person Name: TA Scripture: Psalm 15 Composer of "[Señor, Señor, ¿quién puede hospedarse en tu tienda?]" in Oramos Cantando = We Pray In Song Tony Alonso has published several collections of liturgical music and his music appears in many hymnals throughout the world. He has an Bachelor of Music degree from Northwestern University and a M.A. degree in theology from Loyola Marymount University.

Barney Elliott Warren

1867 - 1951 Person Name: B. E. Warren Scripture: Psalm 15 Composer of "[Who shall abide in thy tabernacle?]" in Salvation Echoes Barney Elliott Warren was an American Christian hymnwriter and minister. See more in Wikipedia

Thomas Cradock

1718 - 1770 Scripture: Psalm 15 Author of "Who in thy glorious temple, Lord, shall dwell" in New Version of the Psalms of David Rector of St. Thomas's, Baltimore County, Maryland

Gregory J. Polan

b. 1950 Person Name: Gregory J. Polan, OSB Scripture: Psalm 15 Composer (Conception Ab. Tone) of "[The just will live in the presence of the Lord]" in Worship (4th ed.)

Pages


Export as CSV