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Text Identifier:"^an_angel_came_down_to_bethesdas_pool$"

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The Troubled Waters

Author: F. A. Blackmer Appears in 5 hymnals First Line: An angel came down to Bethesda's pool Refrain First Line: The waters are troubled, step in, step in

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[An angel came down to Bethesda's pool]

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: F. A. Blackmer Tune Key: D Flat Major Incipit: 33433 21665 32125 Used With Text: The Troubled Waters

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The Troubled Waters

Author: F. A. B. Hymnal: Carols of Hope #159 (1906) First Line: An angel came down to Bethesda's pool Refrain First Line: The waters are troubled, step in, step in Lyrics: 1. An angel came down to Bethesda's pool Each season with healing power; But we have in Jesus a healing font, That saves dying souls each hour. Chorus: The waters are troubled, step in, step in, There's room for all; The Spirit is pleading, the Saviour waits, O list to the loving call. 2. Who entered the pool of Bethesda first Could healing alone receive, But here is a fountain that flows for all Who shall in the Lord believe. [Chorus] 3. Then haste to this fountain, O sin-sick ones, The maim'd and the halt and blind, And plunge in its waters by faith this hour, And fullest salvation find. [Chorus] 4. The Spirit is pleading this solemn hour, O turn from him not away; The waters are troubled, step in, step in, Make Jesus your own today. [Chorus] Languages: English Tune Title: [An angel came down to Bethesda's pool]
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The Troubled Waters

Author: F. A. B. Hymnal: The Golden Sheaf No. 2 #52 (1916) First Line: An angel came down to Bethesda's pool Refrain First Line: The waters are troubled, step in, step in Languages: English Tune Title: [An angel came down to Bethesda's pool]

The waters are troubled, step in, step in

Author: Francis A. Blackmer Hymnal: Blessed Hope Hymnal #d6 (1910) First Line: An angel came down to Bethesda's pool Languages: English

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F. A. Blackmer

1855 - 1930 Person Name: F. A. B. Author of "The Troubled Waters" in Carols of Hope Blackmer, Francis Augustus. (Ware, Massachusetts, February 17, 1855--October 8, 1930, Somerville, Massachusetts). Advent Christian musician. His parents, Augustus and Jane Blackmer, were among those caught up in the excitement of the Millerite Movement. One son, Fred, became an Advent Christian minister. Francis, with a talent recognized at an early age, consecrated his own life to Christian service as a musician. He was immersed in baptism at the Adventist campmeeting in Springfield, Massachusetts, by Elder Miles Grant. His early years were spend in central Massachusetts, his schooling at Wilbraham Academy. He was largely self-taught in harmony and musical composition. He wrote the words and music to his first gospel song, "Out on the fathomless sea," at the age of sixteen. Altogether he wrote over 300 gospel songs about the Second Coming, witnessing and working for the Lord, and praises to God's Holy Name. A few of these have circulated widely outside his own denomination. His final text, "I shall see him, And be like him," came when he was so weak that his friend, Clarence M. Seamans, had to supply the music. He used the pseudonym, A. Francis, with some of his early songs. Blackmer's first anthology was The Gospel Awakening, (1888). Subsequent gospel songbooks with which he was associated were: Singing by the Way (1895), Carols of Hope (1906), The Golden Sheaf, No. 2 (1916), and Songs of Coming Glory (1926). Most of his adult life was spent in Somerville, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, where he had a prosperous piano business. In the 1890s, his "Francis A. Blackmer Pianos" were made for him by the Washington Hall Piano Company of Boston. Later, his "Good as Gold Pianos" were manufactured by the Christman Piano Company of New York City and shipped directly to his customers throughout New England. In Somerville, Blackmer served as choirmaster and song-leader in the Advent Christian Church for many years. He was also an elder of the church until his death. From 1914 until his death, he was songleader at the mid-summer Alton Bay Campmeeting on Lake Winnepesaukee, New Hapshire. There his High Rock Hill was both a salesroom and a summer cottage over the years. He was a member of the board of directors of the campmeeting association for several years. Very popular were his singing sessions on the campground square between suppertim and evening services, and a final sing into the small hours of the night following the final service of the campmeeting. --Leonard Ellinwood, DNAH Archives