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Text Identifier:"^hoerst_du_nicht_den_herren_rufen_wer_wi$"

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Hörst du nicht den Herren rufen

Appears in 10 hymnals Used With Tune: [Hörst du nicht den Herren rufen]

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[Hörst du nicht den Herren rufen]

Appears in 46 hymnals Incipit: 11113 23512 35231 Used With Text: Hier bin ich, send' mich!

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Hörst du nicht den Herren rufen

Hymnal: Die Glaubensharfe (With Melodies) #619 (1886) Languages: German Tune Title: [Hörst du nicht den Herren rufen]
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Hier bin ich, send' mich!

Hymnal: Frohe Botschaft in Liedern #39 (1906) First Line: Hörst du nicht den Herren rufen Languages: German Tune Title: [Hörst du nicht den Herren rufen]
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Hörst du nicht den Herren rufen

Hymnal: Gesangbuch für deutsche Gemeinden #269 (1901) Languages: German

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Daniel March

1816 - 1909 Author of "Hier bin ich send mich" in German Sunday School Songs ... for the Beachy Amish of Lancaster County, PA. March, Daniel, D.D., an American Congregational minister, b. July 21, 1816, has published Night Scenes in the Bible, and other works. His hymn "Hark, the voice of Jesus crying [calling]. Who will go," &c. (Missions), is given in the American Methodist Episcopal Hymnal, 1878, in 2 stanzas; in Sankey's Sacred Songs & Solos, 1878, in 6 stanzas; and in the Scottish Hymnal 1884, in 5 stanzas; in each case of 8 lines. It was written in 1863. (See Nutter's Hymn Studies, 1884, p. 236.) --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907) =============== March, D., p. 1578, ii. The following details concerning Dr. March's hymn, "Hark ! the voice of Jesus crying," have been furnished us by himself:— "It was written at the impulse of the moment to follow a sermon I was to preach in Clinton St. Church to the Philadelphia Christian Association on the text Is. vi. 8. That was some time in 1868." The original text in full is in The Hymnal, (Presb.), Phila., 1895, No. 361. Dr. March declines to accept the interpolations which have been made in this hymn. We must note also that the incident given in Brownlie's Hymns and Hymnwriters of the Church Hymnary (Scottish), p. 303, relative to this hymn and President Lincoln, is incorrect. It relates to Mrs. E. Gates's " If you cannot on the ocean," p. 1565, i. 5. [Rev. L. F. Benson, D.D.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Ernst Gebhardt

1832 - 1899 Translator of "Hier bin ich, send' mich!"