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Text Identifier:"^god_marked_a_line_and_told_the_sea$"

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God Marked a Line and Told the Sea

Author: Thomas H. Troeger Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 4 hymnals

Tunes

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KEDRON

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 49 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Elkanah Kelsay Dare Tune Sources: Pilsbury's United States Harmony, 1799, as in Tune Key: c minor Incipit: 32115 54323 21112 Used With Text: God Marked a Line and Told the Sea
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DEO GRACIAS

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 107 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Carl Schalk Tune Sources: English, 15th c. Tune Key: c minor Incipit: 11717 76511 75454 Used With Text: God Marked a Line and Told the Sea

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

God Marked a Line and Told the Sea

Author: Thomas H. Troeger Hymnal: Lift Up Your Hearts #28 (2013) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Topics: Fall and the Human Condition; God Ways Of; Elements of Worship Confession Scripture: Genesis 2:4-9 Languages: English Tune Title: DEO GRACIAS

God marked a line and told the sea

Author: Thomas H. Troeger, 1945- Hymnal: The Book of Praise #212 (1997) Topics: Church Year Lent; Freedom / Liberation; Law Scripture: Genesis 2:15-17 Languages: English Tune Title: KEDRON

God Marked a Line and Told the Sea

Author: Thomas H. Troeger Hymnal: The Presbyterian Hymnal #283 (1990) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Topics: Law Scripture: Genesis 2:15-17 Languages: English Tune Title: KEDRON

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Thomas H. Troeger

1945 - 2022 Author of "God Marked a Line and Told the Sea" in Lift Up Your Hearts Thomas Troeger (1945-2022), professor of Christian communication at Yale Divinity school, was a well known preacher, poet, and musician. He was a fellow of Silliman College, held a B.A. from Yale University; B.D. Colgate Rochester Divinity School; S.T. D. Dickinson College, and was awarded an honorary D.D. from Virginia Theological Seminary. He was ordained in the Presbyterian Church in 1970 and the Episcopal Church in 1999, and remained dually aligned with both traditions. Troerger led conferences and lectures in worship and preaching throughout North America, as well as in Denmark, Holland, Australia, Japan, and Africa. He served as national chaplain to the American Guild of Organists, and for at least three years he hosted the Season of Worship broadcast for Cokesbury. He was president of the Academy of Homiletics as well as Societas Homiletica. He had, as of 2009, written 22 books in the areas of preaching, poetry, hymnody, and worship. Many of his hymn texts are found in New Hymns for the Lectionary (Oxford, 1992), and God, You Made All Things for Singing (Oxford, 2009). Laura de Jong

Carl Schalk

1929 - 2021 Harmonizer of "DEO GRACIAS" in Lift Up Your Hearts Carl F. Schalk (b. Des Plaines, IL, 1929; d. 2021) is professor of music emeritus at Concordia University, River Forest, Illinois, where he taught church music since 1965. He completed gradu­ate work at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, and at Concordia Seminary, St. Louis, Missouri. From 1952 to 1956 he taught and directed music at Zion Lutheran Church in Wausau, Wisconsin, and from 1958 to 1965 served as director of music for the International Lutheran Hour. Honored as a Fellow of the Hymn Society in the United States and Canada in 1992, Schalk was editor of the Church Music journal (1966-1980), a member of the committee that prepared the Lutheran Book of Worship (1978), and a widely published composer of church music. Included in his publications are The Roots of Hymnody in The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (1965), Key Words in Church Music (1978), and Luther on Music: Paradigms of Praise (1988). His numerous hymn tunes and carols are collected in the Carl Schalk Hymnary (1989) and its 1991 Supplement. Bert Polman

Elkanah Kelsay Dare

1782 - 1826 Composer of "KEDRON" in The Presbyterian Hymnal Elkanah Kelsey Dare (1782-1826) was born in New Jersey but moved to Lancaster County, Pennsylvania sometime before 1818. He was a Methodist [sic Presbyterian] minister and very possibly the music editor for John Wyeth’s Repository of Sacred Music, Part Second (1813), a shaped-note collection that includes more than a dozen of his tunes. Emily Brink
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