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Text Identifier:"^we_are_on_the_winning_side_while_in_jesu$"

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We Are On the Winning Side

Author: Jennie Wilson Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: We are on the winning side while in Jesus we confide Refrain First Line: We are on the winning side, for with Christ we are allied

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[We are on the winning side while in Jesus we confide]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Flavil Hall Incipit: 34555 55321 11235 Used With Text: We Are On the Winning Side

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We Are On the Winning Side

Author: Jennie Wilson Hymnal: The Gospel Message in Song (Revised and Enlarged) #160 (1910) First Line: We are on the winning side while in Jesus we confide Refrain First Line: We are on the winning side, for with Christ we are allied Languages: English Tune Title: [We are on the winning side while in Jesus we confide]

We are on the winning side while in Jesus

Author: Jennie Wilson Hymnal: The More Perfect Gospel Hymnal, a Revision of the Cross and Resurrection in Song #d296 (1946)

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Jennie Wilson

1857 - 1913 Author of "We Are On the Winning Side" Wilson, Jennie Bain. (d. 3 September 1913). Obituaries available in the DNAH Archives. =============================== Jennie Bain Wilson, 1857-1913 Born: 1857, on a Farm Near South Whitley, Indiana. Died: Cir­ca 1913. Afflicted with a spin­al con­di­tion at age four, Wil­son spent her life in a wheel chair. She ne­ver at­tend­ed school, but was ed­u­cat­ed at home. She is said to have writ­ten over 2,200 texts. © The Cyber Hymnal™ (www.hymntime.com/tch)

Flavil Hall

1876 - 1952 Composer of "[We are on the winning side while in Jesus we confide]" in The Gospel Message in Song (Revised and Enlarged) Flavil Hall was born June 22, 1876 near Trion, Georgia. He began preaching for the Church of Christ there in 1896, and later attended the Nashville Bible School. His gospel meeting work was extensive, and led him to extended stays in Michigan and Ohio as well as in the Southeast. Though primarily a pulpit minister, Hall's firm opposition to instrumental music in worship caused him to devote considerable time to teaching singing schools, sometimes in conjunction with his gospel meetings, in order to build up congregational singing and train song leaders. Hall died August 16, 1952 in Greenville, Alabama. He authored two collections of devotional poetry, Pearls of Truth (Cincinnati: F. L. Rowe, 1913), and Pearls of Grace and Glory (Pine Apple, AL, 1950), and Hall's Rudiments of Music (Cincinnati: F. L. Rowe, 1925). Scott Harp, "Flavil Hall", History of the Restoration Movement. https://therestorationmovement.com/_states/georgia/hall,fj.htm --David Russell Hamrick
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