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Text Identifier:"^lift_up_your_heads_in_joyful_hope$"

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Lift up your heads in joyful hope

Appears in 30 hymnals Text Sources: Madan's Collection

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BETHLEHEM

Appears in 248 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Gottfried W. Fink Tune Key: B Flat Major Incipit: 51176 56556 21715 Used With Text: Lift Up Your Heads In Joyful Hope
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BETHLEHEM

Appears in 4 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Dr. Madan Incipit: 55555 65243 55356 Used With Text: Lift up your heads in joyful hope

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Lift Up Your Heads In Joyful Hope

Author: Martin Madan; Richard W. Adams Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #11231 Lyrics: 1 Lift up your heads in joyful hope, Salute the happy morn; Hear heav’nly power proclaim the hour: Lo, Jesus Christ is born. All glory be to God on high, To Him all praise is due; The promise sealed, the Lord revealed, He proves the record true. 2 Let joy around like rivers flow, Flow on, and still increase, Spread o’er the earth at Jesus’ birth, With Heav’n and men at peace. Rejoice, come see, salvation free For Adam’s helpless race: From Heaven’s throne to save His own, Messiah comes with grace. 3 Then let us join the skies above, Where shining seraphs sing; Join angel powers, their Lord is ours, Our prophet, priest, and king. The tidings of great joy be spread To earth’s remotest bound; With heav’nly host, to every coast We raise the joyful sound. Languages: English Tune Title: BETHLEHEM
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Lift up your heads in joyful hope

Hymnal: The Lord's Songs #CCXXXVII (1805)
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Lift up your heads in joyful hope

Hymnal: Christian Psalmody, in Four Parts; containing Dr. Watt's Psalms Abridged; Dr. Watt's Hymns Abridged; Select Hymns from Other Authors; and Select Harmony #SH11 (1817) Languages: English

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Gottfried W. Fink

1783 - 1846 Composer of "BETHLEHEM" in The Cyber Hymnal Rv Gottfried Wilhelm Fink PhD Germany 1783-1846. Born at Sulza, Thuringa, Germany, he was a German composer, music theorist, poet, and a protestant clergyman. From 1804-1808 he studied at the University of Leipzig, where he joined the Corps Lusatia, where he made his first attempts at composition and poetry. In 1811 he was appointed Vicar in Leipzig for some years, where he also founded an educational institution, leading it until 1829. Around 1800 he worked for the “Allgemeine musikalische Zeitschrift” (General musical mazazine). In 1827 he became the magazine's editor-in-chief for 15 years. From 1838 he was a lecturer at the University of Leipzig. In 1841 he became a Privatdozent of musicology at the university. That year he became a member of the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin, and a year later was appointed university Music Director. He was highly esteemed throughout his life as a music theorist and composer, receiving numberous honors and awards, both at home and abroad. The Faculty of Philosophy at Leipzig University awarded him an honorary doctorate. He wrote mostly Songs and ballads and collected songs as well. He authored important words on music theory and history, but was best known as editor of the “Musikalischer Hausschatz der Germans”, a collection of about 1000 songs and chants, as well as the “Deutsche Liedertafel” (German song board), a collection of polyphonic songs sung by men. He died at Leipzig, Saxony. John Perry

Martin Madan

1726 - 1790 Author of "Lift Up Your Heads In Joyful Hope" in The Cyber Hymnal Madan, Martin, son of Colonel Martin Madan, and brother of Dr. Spencer Madan, sometime Bishop of Peterborough, was born in 1726. He was to have qualified for the Bar, but through a sermon by J. Wesley on the words "Prepare to meet thy God," the whole current of his life was changed. After some difficulty he received Holy Orders, and subsequently founded and became chaplain of the Lock Hospital, Hyde Park Corner. He was popular as a preacher, and had no inconsiderable reputation as a musical composer. He ceased preaching on the publication of his work Thelyphthora, in which he advocated the practice of polygamy. He died in 1790. He published A Commentary on the Articles of the Church of England; A Treatise on the Christian Faith, &c, and:- A Collection of Psalms and Hymns Extracted from Various Authors, and published by the Reverend Mr. Madan. London, 1760. This Collection contained 170 hymns thrown together without order or system of any kind. In 1763 he added an Appendix of 24 hymns. This Collection, referred to as Madam’s Psalms & Hymns, had for many years a most powerful influence on the hymnody of the Church of England. Nearly the whole of its contents, together with its extensively altered texts, were reprinted in numerous hymnbooks for nearly one hundred years. At the present time many of the great hymns of the last century are in use as altered by him in 1760 and 1763. Although several hymns have been attributed to him, we have no evidence that he ever wrote one. His hymnological labours were employed in altering, piecing, and expanding the work of others. And in this he was most successful. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ============================

Richard W. Adams

b. 1952 Adapter of "Lift Up Your Heads In Joyful Hope" in The Cyber Hymnal Born: 1952, Mis­souri. Adams grad­u­at­ed from the Un­i­ver­si­ty of Mis­sou­ri, Co­lum­bia (BA 1974, cum laude, Phi Be­ta Kap­pa).