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Tune Identifier:"^old_50th$"

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OLD 50TH

Meter: 10.10.10 D Appears in 6 hymnals Tune Sources: The Whole Book of Psalmes by Sternhold & Hopkins, 1562. Tune Key: g minor Incipit: 54324 54321 15545 Used With Text: Almighty Father, Unoriginate

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Almighty Father, Unoriginate

Author: Ernest E. Dugmore Meter: 10.10.10 D Appears in 4 hymnals Lyrics: 1. Almighty Father, unoriginate, Whom no man hath seen ever, nor can see; Who reignest blest and only potentate, Light unapproachable encircling Thee: Almighty Father, hallowed be Thy name; Who ever art, unchangeably the same. 2. Thou lovest us, else had we never been: Before we were, in ages long ago, Thy love had us and all our wants foreseen, Creating us that we Thy love might know, Yea, Father, Thou, in whom we live and move, Hast loved us with an everlasting love. 3. Thou madest man immortal at the first, An image of Thine own eternity; And when he fell from life, through sin accursed, And lost his right to the life giving tree, Thy love, unconquered would to him restore His life ennobled and forevermore. 4. Such was Thy love, Thou didst not even spare Thy Best-beloved, but gav’st Him for us all; To live that human life beyond compare, And dying, by His death retrieve our fall. In Him Thy love unbounded we behold, For, giving Him, Thou canst not aught withhold. 5. Thou knowest what we are, how frail and blind, Thou still rememberest that we are but dust: Like as a father pitieth, Thou art kind, Thy justice kindness, and Thy kindness just. Then hear Thy children’s prayer from Heav’n Thy throne; Father, Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done. Used With Tune: OLD 50TH Text Sources: Hymns for Adoration for Church Use, 1900

Az erős Isten uraknak

Appears in 2 hymnals Scripture: Psalm 50 Used With Tune: [Az erős Isten uraknak]
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Deus Deorum

Author: W. W. Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: The mighty God Lyrics: 1 The mighty God, th'Eternal hath thus spoke, And all the world he will call and provoke. E'en from the East, and so forth to the West. 2 From toward Sion, which place he liketh best: God will appeare in beauty most excellent Our God will come before long time be spent. 3 Devouring fire shall go before his face: A great tempest shall round about him trace. 4 Then shall he call the earth and heavens bright, To judge his folk with equity and right. 5 Saying to to, and now my saints assemble: My pact they keep, their gifts do not dissemble. 6 The heavens shall declare his righteousnesse, For God is Judge of all things more and lesse, 7 Heare my people, for I will now reveale: List Israel, I will thee nought conceale: Thy God, thy God am I and will not blame thee, 8 For giving not all manner offrings to me. 9 I have no need to take of thee at all, Goats of thy fold, or Calfe out of thy stall: 10 For all the beasts are mine within the woods: On thousand hills cattell are mine own goods. 11 I know for mine all birds that are on mountaines: All beasts are mine, which haunt the fields and fountaines. 12 Hungry if I were, I would not thee it tell: For all is mine that in the world doth dwell. 13 Eat I the flesh of great Bulls or Bullocks? Or drink the blood of Goats, and of the flocks? 14 Offer to God praise and hearty thanksgiving: And pay thy vowes unto God ever-living. 15 Call upon me, when troubled thou shalt be: Then will I help, and thou shalt honoru me. 16 To the wicked, thus saith th'Eternal God: Why dost thou preach my lawes and hests abroad? 17 Seeing thou hast them with thy mouth abused, And hat'st to be by discipline reformed. My words, I say, thou dost reject and hate, 18 If that thou see a thiefe as with thy mate, Thou run'st with him, and so your prey do seek: And art all one with bawds amd riffoams ele. 19 Thou giv'st thy selfe to back bites and to slander: And how thy tongue deceives, it is a wonder. 20 Thou sittest musing, thy brother how to blame: And how to put thy mother's sonne to shame. 21 These things thou didst and whilst I held my tongue, Thou didst me judge, because I staid so long, Like to thy selfe: yet though I kept long silence, Once shalt thou feel of thy wrongs just recompence. 22 Consider this, ye that forget the Lord: And feare not when he threatneth with his word: Lest without help I spoile you as a prey: 23 But he that thanks offer'th, praiseth me aye, Saith the Lord God, and he that walketh this trace, I will him teach God's saving health to imbrace. Scripture: Psalm 50 Used With Tune: [The mighty God]

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Almighty Father, Unoriginate

Author: Ernest E. Dugmore Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #47 Meter: 10.10.10 D Lyrics: 1. Almighty Father, unoriginate, Whom no man hath seen ever, nor can see; Who reignest blest and only potentate, Light unapproachable encircling Thee: Almighty Father, hallowed be Thy name; Who ever art, unchangeably the same. 2. Thou lovest us, else had we never been: Before we were, in ages long ago, Thy love had us and all our wants foreseen, Creating us that we Thy love might know, Yea, Father, Thou, in whom we live and move, Hast loved us with an everlasting love. 3. Thou madest man immortal at the first, An image of Thine own eternity; And when he fell from life, through sin accursed, And lost his right to the life giving tree, Thy love, unconquered would to him restore His life ennobled and forevermore. 4. Such was Thy love, Thou didst not even spare Thy Best-beloved, but gav’st Him for us all; To live that human life beyond compare, And dying, by His death retrieve our fall. In Him Thy love unbounded we behold, For, giving Him, Thou canst not aught withhold. 5. Thou knowest what we are, how frail and blind, Thou still rememberest that we are but dust: Like as a father pitieth, Thou art kind, Thy justice kindness, and Thy kindness just. Then hear Thy children’s prayer from Heav’n Thy throne; Father, Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done. Languages: English Tune Title: OLD 50TH
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Almighty Father, Unoriginate

Hymnal: Small Church Music #7360 Meter: 10.10.10 D Tune Title: OLD 50TH
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Deus Deorum

Author: W. W. Hymnal: The Whole Booke of Psalmes #25 (1640) First Line: The mighty God Lyrics: 1 The mighty God, th'Eternal hath thus spoke, And all the world he will call and provoke. E'en from the East, and so forth to the West. 2 From toward Sion, which place he liketh best: God will appeare in beauty most excellent Our God will come before long time be spent. 3 Devouring fire shall go before his face: A great tempest shall round about him trace. 4 Then shall he call the earth and heavens bright, To judge his folk with equity and right. 5 Saying to to, and now my saints assemble: My pact they keep, their gifts do not dissemble. 6 The heavens shall declare his righteousnesse, For God is Judge of all things more and lesse, 7 Heare my people, for I will now reveale: List Israel, I will thee nought conceale: Thy God, thy God am I and will not blame thee, 8 For giving not all manner offrings to me. 9 I have no need to take of thee at all, Goats of thy fold, or Calfe out of thy stall: 10 For all the beasts are mine within the woods: On thousand hills cattell are mine own goods. 11 I know for mine all birds that are on mountaines: All beasts are mine, which haunt the fields and fountaines. 12 Hungry if I were, I would not thee it tell: For all is mine that in the world doth dwell. 13 Eat I the flesh of great Bulls or Bullocks? Or drink the blood of Goats, and of the flocks? 14 Offer to God praise and hearty thanksgiving: And pay thy vowes unto God ever-living. 15 Call upon me, when troubled thou shalt be: Then will I help, and thou shalt honoru me. 16 To the wicked, thus saith th'Eternal God: Why dost thou preach my lawes and hests abroad? 17 Seeing thou hast them with thy mouth abused, And hat'st to be by discipline reformed. My words, I say, thou dost reject and hate, 18 If that thou see a thiefe as with thy mate, Thou run'st with him, and so your prey do seek: And art all one with bawds amd riffoams ele. 19 Thou giv'st thy selfe to back bites and to slander: And how thy tongue deceives, it is a wonder. 20 Thou sittest musing, thy brother how to blame: And how to put thy mother's sonne to shame. 21 These things thou didst and whilst I held my tongue, Thou didst me judge, because I staid so long, Like to thy selfe: yet though I kept long silence, Once shalt thou feel of thy wrongs just recompence. 22 Consider this, ye that forget the Lord: And feare not when he threatneth with his word: Lest without help I spoile you as a prey: 23 But he that thanks offer'th, praiseth me aye, Saith the Lord God, and he that walketh this trace, I will him teach God's saving health to imbrace. Scripture: Psalm 50 Languages: English Tune Title: [The mighty God]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

William Whittingham

1524 - 1579 Person Name: W. W. Author of "Deus Deorum" in The Whole Booke of Psalmes

Ernest E. Dugmore

1843 - 1925 Author of "Almighty Father, Unoriginate" in The Cyber Hymnal Dugmore, Ernest Edward, M.A., son of William Dugmore, Q.C, was b. at Bayswater, 1843, and educated at Bruce Castle School and by private tutors, and Wadh. Coll., Oxford; B.A. 1867; M.A. 1869. Ordained in 1867, he held the curacy of St. Peter's, Vauxhall, 1867-72, when he became Vicar of Parkstone 1872, and Canon of Sarum and Preb. of Gillingham Major 1900. He published in 1884 Gospel Idylls and Other Sacred Verses; and in 1900 Hymns of Adoration for Church Use. Of his hymns the following were included in the 1904 edition of Hymns Ancient & Modern:-- 1. Almighty Father of all things that he. No. 29 of Hymns of Adoration, 1900, as "For the Opening of an Exhibition." Abbreviated and slightly altered in Hymns Ancient & Modern to adapt it as a "General" hymn. It was originally composed for and used at a small industrial Exhibition held in his Parish. 2. Father Unoriginate. "To the Eternal Father," No. 20 in Hymns of Adoration, &c, in 7 stanzas of 6 lines. Abbreviated and partly re-written in Hymns Ancient & Modern, 1904. 3. Christians, sing the Incarnation. No. 23 in Hymns of Adoration, &c., as a " Processional before the Eucharist," in 7 stanzas of 12 lines, and repeated in full, with slight alterations in Hymns Ancient & Modern, 1904. Originally published with music, separately, at Vauxhall, 1870 or thereabouts. 4. Father, Who hast gathered This dear child to rest. Given in Hymns of Adoration, &c, No. 26, in 11 stanzas of 4 lines, as "For a Child's Funeral," the first line being "Jesu, Who hath gathered," Abbreviated and slightly altered in Hymns Ancient & Modern, 1904. These excerpts from Canon Dugmore's work are by no means the best in the book. Com¬pilers of sacred song should give heed to this fact. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Hymnals

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Urania

Publication Date: 1761

Llyfr Tonau Cynulleidfaol

Publication Date: 1868 Publisher: H. J. Hughes Publication Place: New York