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Text Identifier:"^lord_why_have_you_forsaken_me$"

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LORD, Why Have You Forsaken Me

Author: Christopher L. Webber Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 6 hymnals Topics: Abandonment; Assurance; Cross; Danger; Death; Despair; Doubt; Face of the Lord; Forsaken; Good Friday; Holy Week; Lamb of God; Lenten; Loneliness; Mocking; Pain; Persecution; Prayer; Questioning; Sorrow; Suffering; Trouble Scripture: Psalm 22 Used With Tune: DISTRESS

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CONDITOR ALME SIDERUM

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 99 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Charles Winfred Douglas Tune Key: E Flat Major Incipit: 31355 64556 45432 Used With Text: Lord, Why Have You Forsaken Me
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DISTRESS

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 33 hymnals Tune Sources: Walker’s Southern Harmony, 1835 Tune Key: d minor Incipit: 13454 31714 57117 Used With Text: Lord, Why Have You Forsaken Me (Psalm 22)
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HARVEY'S CHANT

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 53 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: William B. Bradbury; Martin Tel Tune Key: F Major Incipit: 11111 71222 22233 Used With Text: Lord, Why Have You Forsaken Me

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Lord, Why Have You Forsaken Me

Author: Christopher L. Webber Hymnal: Psalms for All Seasons #22B (2012) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Topics: Assurance; Biblical Names and Places Israel; Biblical Names and Places Jacob; Church Year Good Friday; Church Year Passion/Palm Sunday; Cry to God; Despair; Doubt; Elements of Worship Lord's Supper; God Trust in; God's Nearness; God's Presence; Jesus Christ Cross and Crucifiction; Lament General; Lament Individual; Life Stages Death; Loneliness; Longing for God; Mission; Mocking; Pain; People of God / Church Suffering; Prayer Answer to; Prayer; Questioning; Sorrow; Suffering; Victory; Vows; Year A, B, C, Holy Week, Good Friday; Year B, Easter, 5th Sunday; Year B, Lent, 2nd Sunday; Year B, Ordinary Time after Pentecost, October 9-15; Year C, Ordinary Time after Pentecost, June 19-25 (if after Trinity Sunday) Scripture: Psalm 22 Tune Title: HARVEY'S CHANT

LORD, Why Have You Forsaken Me

Author: Christopher L. Webber Hymnal: Christian Worship #22D (2021) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Topics: Abandonment; Assurance; Cross; Danger; Death; Despair; Doubt; Face of the Lord; Forsaken; Good Friday; Holy Week; Lamb of God; Lenten; Loneliness; Mocking; Pain; Persecution; Prayer; Questioning; Sorrow; Suffering; Trouble Scripture: Psalm 22 Languages: English Tune Title: DISTRESS

Lord, Why Have You Forsaken Me

Author: Christopher L. Webber Hymnal: The Presbyterian Hymnal #168 (1990) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Topics: Supplication Scripture: Psalm 22 Languages: English Tune Title: CONDITOR ALME SIDERUM

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Martin Tel

Adapter of "HARVEY'S CHANT" in Psalms for All Seasons Martin Tel is the C. F. Seabrook Director of Music at Princeton Theological Seminary in Princeton, New Jersey. He conducts the seminary choirs, teaches courses in church music, and administers the music for the daily seminary worship services. He served as senior editor of Psalms for All Seasons: A Complete Psalter for Worship (2012). His love for music began in a dairy barn in rural Washington State, where he heard his father belt out psalms and hymns while milking the cows. Martin earned degrees in church music and theology from Dordt College, the University of Notre Dame, Calvin Theological Seminary, and the University of Kansas. He has served as minister of music in Christian Reformed, Reformed Church in America, and Presbyterian congregations. With his wife, Sharilyn, he is raising three children in Princeton, New Jersey. Lift Up Your Hearts

Winfred Douglas

1867 - 1944 Person Name: Charles Winfred Douglas Harmonizer of "CONDITOR ALME SIDERUM" in The Presbyterian Hymnal Charles Winfred Douglas (b. Oswego, NY, 1867; d. Santa Rosa, CA, 1944), an influential leader in Episcopalian liturgical and musical life. Educated at Syracuse University and St. Andrews Divinity School, Syracuse, New York, he moved to Colorado for his health. There he studied at St. Matthew's Hall, Denver, and founded the Mission of the Transfiguration in Evergreen (1897). Ordained a priest in the Episcopal Church in 1899, he also studied in France, Germany and England, where he spent time with the Benedictines of Solesmes on the Island of Wight from 1903 to 1906. For much of his life, Douglas served as director of music at the Community of St. Mary in Peekskill, New York, and had associations with cathedrals in Denver, Colorado, and Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. He promoted chanting and plainsong in the Episcopal Church through workshops and publications such as The American Psalter (1929), the Plainsong Psalter (1932), and the Monastic Diurnal (1932). His writings include program notes for the Denver Symphony Orchestra, various hymn preludes; organ, as well as the book, Church Music in History and Practice (1937). He was editor of both the Hymnal 1916 and its significant successor, Hymnal 1940, of the Episcopal Church. Douglas's other achievements include a thorough knowledge of the life and culture of Hopi and Navajo natives, among whom he lived for a number of years. Bert Polman

Christopher Webber

b. 1932 Person Name: Christopher L. Webber Author of "Lord, Why Have You Forsaken Me" in The Presbyterian Hymnal