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Text Identifier:"^o_wherefore_dost_thou_stand$"

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[O wherefore dost thou stand]

Appears in 25 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: C. Warwick Jordan Incipit: 55317 65342 34 Used With Text: The Cry of the Oppressed

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The Cry of the Oppressed

Hymnal: Bible Songs #15 (1901) First Line: O wherefore dost thou stand Topics: Afflictions From the Wicked; Character Vicious; Christians Persecuted and Sorrowing; Covetousness; God Denied; Heart Evil, Hard, and Stubborn; Pride; Retribution Belongs to God; The Righteous Forsaken by God; Vanity Of Sinners; The Wicked Condemned; The Wicked Warned Scripture: Psalm 10:1-11 Languages: English Tune Title: [O wherefore dost thou stand]

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C. Warwick Jordan

1840 - 1909 Composer of "[O wherefore dost thou stand]" in Bible Songs Born: January 27, 1841, Bristol, Gloucester, England. Died: August 30, 1909, Hayward’s Heath, Sussex, England. Cremated: Golders Green, London, England. Jordan began his musical career as a chorister, first at Bristol Cathedral and later at St. Paul’s Cathedral. He was educated at Oxford (BMus 1869), and received the Lambeth degree of Doctor of Music in 1886. A champion of plainsong, he was an honorary organist of the London Gregorian Association, where he took a prominent part in the annual festivals at St. Paul’s Cathedral. He was a professor of organ and harmony at the Guildhall School of Music, and an honorary fellow, examiner and treasurer of the Royal College of Organists. Jordan held organist positions at St. Paul’s, Bunhill Row (1857); St. Luke’s Holloway (1860); and from 1866 until his death at St. Stephen’s Church, Lewisham (where he was also choir master). His works include: One Hundred and Fifty Harmonies (London: Novello, Ewer & Company, 1880) --www.hymntime.com/tch
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