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Text Identifier:"^rejoice_in_gods_saints_today_and_all_day$"

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Rejoice in God's Saints

Author: Fred Pratt Green Meter: 10.10.11.11 Appears in 19 hymnals First Line: Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days

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HANOVER

Meter: 10.10.11.11 Appears in 330 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: William Croft Tune Key: A Flat Major Incipit: 51123 51271 23217 Used With Text: Rejoice in God's Saints
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OLD 104TH

Meter: 10.10.11.11 Appears in 41 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Alfred V. Fedak Tune Sources: Ravenscroft's Whole Book of Psalmes, 1621 Tune Key: F Major Incipit: 13215 34654 4576 Used With Text: Rejoice in God's Saints
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LAUDATE DOMINUM

Meter: 10.10.11.11 Appears in 83 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Charles Hubert Hastings Parry (1848-1918) Tune Key: B Flat Major Incipit: 53125 16543 53251 Used With Text: Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days!

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Rejoice in God's Saints

Author: Fred Pratt Green, b. 1930 Hymnal: With One Voice #689 (1995) Meter: 10.10.11.11 First Line: Rejoice in God's saints today and all days Lyrics: 1 Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days; A world without saints forgets how to praise. Their faith in acquiring the habit of prayer, their depth of adoring, Lord, help us to share. 2 Some march with events to turn them God's way; some need to withdraw, the better to pray; some carry the gospel through fire and through flood: our world is their parish: their purpose is God. 3 Rejoice in those saints, unpraised and unknown, who bear someone's cross, or shoulder their own: they shame our complaining, our comforts, our cares: what patience in caring, what courage is theirs! 4 Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days; a world without saints forgets how to praise. in loving, in living, they prove it is true: The way of self-giving, Lord, leads us to you. Topics: All Saints Day; Saints' Days; Lesser Festivals Scripture: Matthew 5:1-12 Languages: English Tune Title: LAUDATE DOMINUM
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Rejoice in God's Saints

Author: Fred Pratt Green Hymnal: The United Methodist Hymnal #708 (1989) Meter: 10.10.11.11 First Line: Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days Lyrics: 1 Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days; a world without saints forgets how to praise. Their faith in acquiring the habit of prayer, their depth of adoring, Lord, help us to share. 2 Some march with events to turn them God's way; some need to withdraw, the better to pray. Some carry the gospel through fire and through flood; our world is their parish; their purpose is God. 3 Rejoice in those saints, unpraised and unknown, who bear someone's cross or shoulder their own. They shame our complaining, our comforts, our cares; what patience in caring, what courage, is theirs! 4 Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days; a world without saints forgets how to praise. In loving, in living, they prove it is true: the way of self-giving, Lord, leads us to you. Topics: New Heaven and a New Earth Communion of the Saints; New Heaven and a New Earth Communion of the Saints; Christian Year All Saints Day; Closing Hymns; Discipleship and Service; Social Concerns Languages: English Tune Title: HANOVER
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Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days!

Author: Fred Pratt Green (1903-2000) Hymnal: Ancient and Modern #308 (2013) Meter: 10.10.11.11 Lyrics: 1 Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days! A world without saints forgets how to praise. Their faith in acquiring the habit of prayer, their depth of adoring, Lord, help us to share. 2 Some march with events to turn them God's way; some need to withdraw, the better to pray; some carry the gospel through fire and through flood: our world is their parish: their purpose is God. 3 Rejoice in those saints, unpraised and unknown, who bear someone's cross, or shoulder their own: they shame our complaining, our comforts, our cares: what patience in caring, what courage, is theirs! 4 Rejoice in God's saints, today and all days! A world without saints forgets how to praise. In loving, in living, they prove it is true: the way of self-giving, Lord, leads us to you. Topics: All Saints' (Sun)day Year A; Church Ministry; Communion of Saints; Discipleship; Other Saints and Festivals Philip and James, Apostles; Saints Scripture: Hebrews 11 Languages: English Tune Title: HANNOVER

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Fred Pratt Green

1903 - 2000 Author of "Rejoice in God's Saints" in The United Methodist Hymnal The name of the Rev. F. Pratt Green is one of the best-known of the contemporary school of hymnwriters in the British Isles. His name and writings appear in practically every new hymnal and "hymn supplement" wherever English is spoken and sung. And now they are appearing in American hymnals, poetry magazines, and anthologies. Mr. Green was born in Liverpool, England, in 1903. Ordained in the British Methodist ministry, he has been pastor and district superintendent in Brighton and York, and now served in Norwich. There he continued to write new hymns "that fill the gap between the hymns of the first part of this century and the 'far-out' compositions that have crowded into some churches in the last decade or more." --Seven New Hymns of Hope , 1971. Used by permission.

Alan Gray

1855 - 1935 Person Name: Alan Gray (1855-1935) Composer (descant) of "HANNOVER" in Ancient and Modern Born: December 23, 1855, York, England. Died: September 27, 1935, Cambridge, England. Buried: Trinity College, Cambridge, England. Alan Gray (23 December 1855, York – 27 September 1935, Cambridge) was a British organist and composer. Born in York, he attended St Peter's School in York and Trinity College, Cambridge. From 1883 until 1893 he was Director of Music at Wellington College. In 1893 he returned to Cambridge to be organist at Trinity College, and remained organist there until 1930. Among his compositions are liturgical music for Morning and Evening Prayer and the Office of Holy Communion for use in the Church of England according to the Book of Common Prayer, including an Evening Service in f minor, a setting of Holy Communion in G, several anthems, including 'What are these that glow from afar?', and a collection of descants to various hymn tunes, several of which are still in use today (Common Praise (2000) includes four). He also composed a number of items for organ, for violin solo, and for voice and orchestra to religious and secular texts. --en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

Sydney H. Nicholson

1875 - 1947 Person Name: S. H. Nicholson, 1875-1947 Composer of "PADERBORN" in Common Praise Sydney H. Nicholson, (b. St. Marylebone, London, England, 1875; d. Ashford, Kent, England, 1947) was an organist and church music educator who greatly influenced English hymnody. Educated at Oxford's New College, the Royal College of Music in London, and in Frankfurt, Germany, he became organist at several famous cathedrals, including Westminster Abbey (1919-1928). Nicholson founded and administered the School of English Church Music at Chislehurst in 1927; this important institution, with branches throughout the English-speaking world, was renamed the Royal School of Church Music in 1945. Located in Canterbury after World War II, its headquarters were moved to Addington Palace, Croydon, in 1954. Nicholson was music adviser for the 1916 Supplement of Hymns Ancient and Modern and prepared the way for its 1950 edition. He wrote Church Music: a Practical Handbook (1920) and Quires and Places Where They Sing (1932) and composed operettas, anthems, and hymn tunes. In 1938 he was knighted for his contributions to church music. Bert Polman