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Meter:9.8.9.8.8.6

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Thee will I love, my Strength, my Tower

Author: Angelus Silesius; Catherine Winkworth Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Appears in 48 hymnals First Line: Thee will I love, my Strength, my Tower, Thee will I love my hope my joy (Winkworth)

Thee Will I Love, My Strength, My Treasure

Author: E. Glahn; J. C. Aaberg Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Thee will I love, my Strength, my Treasure, My heart in Thee finds peace and joy (Glahn) Text Sources: German

Thee will I love, my strength, my Treasure, My heart in thee

Author: Hans Adolf Brorson ; J. C. Aaberg Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal

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THE LOVE OF GOD

Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Appears in 64 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Frederick M. Lehman Tune Key: D Major Incipit: 11235 65535 53243 Used With Text: 그 크 신 하 나 님 의 사 낭 (The Love of God
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ICH WILL DICH LIEBEN

Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Appears in 36 hymnals Tune Sources: Harmonischer Lieder-Schatz, Frankfurt, 1738; Christian Worship, 1993 (Setting) Tune Key: D Major Incipit: 13515 65432 34517 Used With Text: Thee Will I Love, My Strength, My Tower

MOUNT AIRY

Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Luther D. Reed, b. 1873; Leland B. Sateren, b. 1913 Tune Key: B Flat Major

Instances

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Thee will I love, my Strength, my Tower

Hymnal: Evangelical Lutheran Hymn-book #349 (1918) Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Lyrics: 1 Thee will I love, my Strength, my Tower, Thee will I love, my Hope, my Joy, Thee will I love with all my power, With ardor time shall ne'er destroy. Thee will I love, O light divine, So long as life is mine! 2 Thee will I love, my Life, my Savior, Who art my best and truest Friend; Thee will I love and praise forever, For never shall Thy kindness end; Thee will I love with all my heart, For Thou my Bridegroom art. 3 Alas! that I so late have known Thee, Who art the Fairest and the Best; Nor sooner for my Lord could own Thee, Our highest Good, our only Rest! Now bitter shame and grief I prove O'er this my tardy love. 4 I wandered long in willing blindness, I sought Thee, but I found Thee not, For still I shunned Thy beams of kindness, The creature-light filled all my thought. And if at last I see Thee now, 'Twas Thou to me didst bow! 5 I thank Thee, Jesus, Sun from heaven, Whose shining hath brought light to me; I thank Thee, who hast richly given All that could make me glad and free; I thank Thee that my soul is healed By what Thy lips revealed. 6 O keep me watchful, then, and humble, And suffer me no more to stray; Uphold me when my feet would stumble, Nor let me loiter by the way; Fill all my nature with Thy light, O Radiance strong and bright! 7 O teach me, Lord, to love Thee truly With soul and body, head and heart, And grant me grace that I may duly Practice fore'er love's sacred art; Grant that my every thought may be Directed e'er to Thee. 8 Thee will I love, my Crown of gladness, Thee will I love, my God and Lord, Amid the darkest depths of sadness, Not for the hope of high reward, For Thine own sake, O Light divine, So long as life is mine. Topics: Sanctification Languages: English

You Will I Love

Author: Johann Scheffler; Catherine Winkworth Hymnal: Break Forth in Joyous Song #19 (2006) Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Languages: English Tune Title: RADIANCE
Text

Thee will I love, my strength, my Treasure, My heart in thee

Author: Hans Adolf Brorson , 1694-1764; J. C. Aaberg Hymnal: Hymns and Hymnwriters of Denmark #44 (1945) Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Lyrics: Thee will I love, my strength, my Treasure; My heart in Thee finds peace and joy. Thee will I love in fullest measure, And in Thy cause my life employ. Thee will I love and serve alone. Lord, take me as Thine own. Thee will I love, my Life Eternal, My Guide and Shepherd on Life’s way. Thou leadest me to pastures vernal, And to the light of endless day. Thee will I love, Whose blood was spilt To cleanse my soul from guilt. Long, long wert Thou to me a stranger, Though Thou didst love me first of all, I strayed afar in sin and danger And heeded not Thy loving call Until I found that peace of heart Thou canst alone impart. Lord, cast not out Thy child, returning A wanderer, naked and forlorn. The tempting world, I sought with yearning, 75 Had naught to give but grief and scorn. In Thee alone for all its grief My heart now finds relief. Thee will I love and worship ever, My Lord, my God and Brother dear! Must every earthly tie I sever And naught but sorrow suffer here, Thee will I love, my Lord divine; O Jesus, call me Thine. Languages: English

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Frederick M. Lehman

1868 - 1953 Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Author of "그 크 신 하 나 님 의 사 낭 (The Love of God" in 찬송과 예배 = Chansong gwa yebae = Come, Let Us Worship Frederick Martin Lehman, 1868-1953 Born: August 7, 1868, Mecklenburg, Schwerin, Germany. Died: February 20, 1953, Pasadena, California. Buried: Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, California. Lehman emigrated to America with his family at age four, settling in Iowa, where he lived most of childhood. He came to Christ at age 11, as he relates: One glad morning about eleven o’clock while walking up the country lane, skirted by a wild crab-apple grove on the right and an osage fence, with an old white-elm gate in a gap at the left, suddenly Heaven let a cornucopia of glory descend on the eleven-year old lad. The wild crab-apple grove assumed a heavenly glow and the osage fence an unearthly lustre. That old white-elm gate with its sun-warped boards gleamed and glowed like silver bars to shut out the world and shut him in with the ’form of the fourth,’ just come into his heart. The weight of conviction was gone and the paeans of joy and praise fell from his lips. Lehman studied for the ministry at Northwestern College in Naperville, Illinois, and pastored at Audubon, Iowa; New London, Indiana; and Kansas City, Missouri. The majority of his life was devoted to writing sacred songs; his first was written while a pastor in Kingsley, Iowa, in 1898. He wrote and published hundreds of songs, and compiled five song books. In 1911, he moved to Kansas City, where he helped found the Nazarene Publishing House. --www.hymntime.com/tch

Johann Scheffler

1624 - 1677 Person Name: J. Scheffler Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Author of "Thee Will I Love, My Strength, My Treasure" in American Lutheran Hymnal Used Angelus Silesius as a pen name. See also Angelus Silesius, 1624-1677

Leland B. Sateren

1913 - 2007 Person Name: Leland B. Sateren, b. 1913 Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Harmonizer of "MOUNT AIRY" From the obituary in the Star Tribune, Nov. 11-13, 2007:Sateren, Leland B. 94, Edina, died Saturday, Nov. 10, 2007. Sateren, a renowned composer and conductor, served as chairman of the Augsburg College Department of Music from 1950 to 1973, and as director of the Augsburg Choir from 1950 until his retirement in 1979. Survived by devoted wife, Pauline; sons, Terry, Mark (Judi), Roald (Shelley); daughter, Kirsten Bergherr (Jon); and grandchildren, Stacy Lindholm (Pete), Anne Sateren Burow (Matt), Ben Bergherr, Sara Bergherr, Erik Sateren, and Anders Sateren. Sateren is also survived by sisters, Margaret Trautwein, Norma (Ray) Anderson, Sylvia (Dean) Elness; and brother, Donald Sateren. The family would like to thank the staff at Redeemer Residence in Minneapolis for their concern and care. Memorial service at 11 am Saturday, Nov. 17 at the Augsburg College Foss Chapel. Visitation will be from 9:30-10:30 am. Memorials preferred to the Leland B. Sateren Choral Scholarship Fund at Augsburg. From Inside Augsburg:The campus community mourns the death of one of Augsburg’s music giants, composer and conductor Leland Sateren ‘35, who died on Saturday, Nov. 10, at the age of 94. His work includes more than 400 choral pieces he composed, which are sung in churches around the county. Sateren was passionate about Scandinavian choral music and introduced the work of many Scandinavian composers to American choral directors. Sateren graduated from Augsburg in 1935, and for the next 10 years, he attended graduate school at the University of Minnesota, was music director at the university’s KUOM radio station, and served in public service during World War II. In 1946, he returned to Augsburg; 4 years later, he became chair of the Music Department and director of the Augsburg Choir, which he led until his retirement in 1979. He is recognized for the excellence he brought to the Augsburg Choir and Augsburg’s choral arts program. During his long tenure, the choir developed a more contemporary sound and expanded its reach beyond churches into the community, and beyond the Midwest into Europe and international locations. Among Sateren’s many notable accomplishments are premieres of works with the Minnesota Symphony Orchestra and a commissioned piece at the United Nations to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Sateren was the first recipient of the F. Melius Christiansen Memorial Award for choral directors. In 2002 he was awarded the Weston Noble Choral Directors Award. He was also honored with the St. Olaf Medal, presented by King Olav V of Norway, and received two honorary doctorates. Sateren’s impact on the many hundreds of Augsburg students who sang in his choir was remarkable. Peter Hendrickson ’76, director of choral activities and current conductor of the Augsburg Choir, studied with Sateren. A number of other choir alumni who studied under Sateren currently sing in the Masterworks Chorale at Augsburg, also directed by Hendrickson. Sateren’s first wife, Eldora, died in 1968. He is survived by his second wife, Pauline. He is also survived by four siblings, all of whom attended Augsburg — Margaret Trautwein ’37, Norma Anderson ’46, Sylvia Elness ’48, and Donald. Sateren’s four children also all graduated from Augsburg — Terry ’68, Mark ’69, Kirsten Bergherr ’78, and Roald ’80.

Hymnals

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Published hymn books and other collections

Small Church Music

Meter: 9.8.9.8.8.6 Editors: Johann Scheffler Description: The SmallChurchMusic site was launched in 2006, growing out of the requests from those struggling to provide suitable music for their services and meetings. Rev. Clyde McLennan was ordained in mid 1960’s and was a pastor in many small Australian country areas, and therefore was acutely aware of this music problem. Having also been trained as a Pipe Organist, recordings on site (which are a subset of the smallchurchmusic.com site) are all actually played by Clyde, and also include piano and piano with organ versions. All recordings are in MP3 format. Churches all around the world use the recordings, with downloads averaging over 60,000 per month. The recordings normally have an introduction, several verses and a slowdown on the last verse. Users are encouraged to use software: Audacity (http://www.audacityteam.org) or Song Surgeon (http://songsurgeon.com) (see http://scm-audacity.weebly.com for more information) to adjust the MP3 number of verses, tempo and pitch to suit their local needs. Copyright notice: Rev. Clyde McLennan, performer in this collection, has assigned his performer rights in this collection to Hymnary.org. Non-commercial use of these recordings is permitted. For permission to use them for any other purposes, please contact manager@hymnary.org. Home/Music(smallchurchmusic.com) List SongsAlphabetically List Songsby Meter List Songs byTune Name About