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O Holy Spirit, Root of Life

Representative text cannot be shown for this hymn due to copyright.

Adapter: Jean Janzen

Jean Janzen was born on December 5, 1933, the seventh of Henry Peter Wiebe and Anna Schultz Wiebe's eventual eight children (Three Mennonite Poets 5). For the first five years of her life, Janzen lived in Dalmeny, Saskatchewan (A Cappella 25). In 1938, she moved to Mountain Lake, Minnesota when her schoolteacher father began his second ministry as a pastor (“Coming into Voice”). A year later, the family moved to Kansas (“Coming into Voice”). Janzen says she cannot remember when she wrote her first poem, but the first evidence of her work is a handwritten book of five poems that she made in third or fourth grade, which was saved by her mother through the family’s many moves (E-mail Interview). She had very little exposure to po… Go to person page >

Author: St. Hildegard

Hildegard, St., Virgin and Abbess, was born at Bockelheim, or Bockenheim, Frankfurt, 1098. Her father, Hildebert, was one of the Knights of Meginhard, Count of Spanheim. When eight years old she was committed to tho care of a sister of the Count, Jutta, the Abbess of St. Disibod, a position in which she was succeeded by Hildegard in 1136. Under the rule of Hildegard the convent became so crowded that a new one was built at Rupertsberg, near Bingen, into which, in 1147, Hildegard removed with eighteen Sisters. Hildegard gained great notoriety in very early life on account of visions to which, it is said, she was subject from her 6th to her 15th year. In later life she filled a considerable place in the history of her times, not only as a wri… Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: O Holy Spirit, root of life
Title: O Holy Spirit, Root of Life
Adapter: Jean Janzen
Author: St. Hildegard
Meter: 8.8.8.8
Language: English
Copyright: Text © 1991 Jean Janzen
Article: Article - O Holy Spirit, Root of Life by Robin Knowles Wallace (from "The Hymn")

Notes

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Tune

PUER NOBIS NASCITUR

PUER NOBIS is a melody from a fifteenth-century manuscript from Trier. However, the tune probably dates from an earlier time and may even have folk roots. PUER NOBIS was altered in Spangenberg's Christliches GesangbUchlein (1568), in Petri's famous Piae Cantiones (1582), and again in Praetorius's (P…

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HEALER (Enns)


HILDEGARD (Thiessen)


Timeline

Instances

Instances (1 - 10 of 10)

Chalice Hymnal #251

Evangelical Lutheran Worship #399

Hymnal #123

Sing the Faith #2121

The Book of Praise #391

The Faith We Sing #2121

The New Century Hymnal #57

Voices Together #376

Voices United #379

With One Voice #688

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