How greatly doth my soul rejoice

How greatly doth my soul rejoice

Author: Gottfried Arnold
Published in 3 hymnals

Author: Gottfried Arnold

Arnold, Gottfried, son of Gottfried Arnold, sixth master of the Town School of Annaberg in the Saxon Harz, born at Annaberg Sept. 5, 1666. His life was varied and eventful, and although much of it had little to do with hymnody from an English point of view, yet his position in German Hymnology is such as to necessitate an extended notice, which, through pressure of space, must be (typographically) compressed. After passing through the Town School and the Gymnasium at Gera, he matriculated in 1685 at the University of Wittenberg—where he found the strictest Lutheran orthodoxy in doctrine combined with the loosest of living. Preserved by his enthusiasm for study from the grosser vices of his fellows, turning to contemplate the lives of t… Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: How greatly doth my soul rejoice
German Title: Wie schön ist unsers Königs Brau
Author: Gottfried Arnold
Language: English
Copyright: Public Domain

Notes

Wie schön ist unsers Königs Braut. [Heaven.] First published 1698, No. 139, as above (Ehmann's ed. 1856, p. 72, Knapp, 1845, p. 217), in 14 stanzas of 6 lines. Included as No. 584 in Freylinghausen's Gesang-Buch, 1704. The translations are beginning with stanza x.:—"Wie freuet sich mein gamer Sinn," (1) "I'm glad, yea, sinner—likely bold," as No. 548 in pt. i. of the Moravian Hymn Book 1754. (2) “How doth my needy soul rejoice," as No. 882 in the Moravian Hymn Book, 1789. In 1801 altered to "How greatly doth my soul rejoice," (1849, No. 1230).

-- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

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