641c. Fourfold Amen

Text Information
First Line: Amen
Title: Fourfold Amen
Publication Date: 1982
Topic: Songs for Children: Hymns; Responses; Doxologies
Tune Information
Name: [Amen]
Composer: John Stainer
Key: G Major


Text Information:

"Amen" is a Hebrew expression that means "so be it" or "let it be true." The word connotes a sense of certainty and a conviction of truthfulness. The Old Testament Hebrew people used "amen" to affirm the rightness of God's judgments (see Deut. 27:15-26). But "amen" is also the New Testament believers' affirmation of God's promises, and the concluding acclamation to orthodox Christian praise and prayer (see 1 Cor. 14:16 and Rev. 5:14; 7:12).

"Amen" is familiar as the final word of prayers, a word of faith that portrays the strong conviction that God answers prayer. It is similarly used in some hymns, especially in select hymns of petition and certain hymns of profession of faith. Some hymnals still provide an "amen" for each hymn–a practice that arose in the nineteenth century when church choirs sang much of the service music and congregations added only their spoken or sung "amen." This practice is not followed in most modern hymnals.

Liturgical Use:
As sung acclamations to spoken prayers and benedictions; congregations may want to sing the various settings at different times of the church year.

--Psalter Hymnal Handbook

Tune Information:

"Fourfold Amen"

Attributed to John Stainer (PHH 127), this setting's first publication has not been traced. The 1873 date in the Psalter Hymnal would appear to be a reference to Stainer's more familiar "Sevenfold Amen,” which was published in his A Choir Book in 1873.


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