Please give today to support Hymnary.org during one of only two fund drives we run each year. Each month, Hymnary serves more than 1 million users from around the globe, thanks to the generous support of people like you, and we are so grateful. 

Tax-deductible donations can be made securely online using this link.

Alternatively, you may write a check to CCEL and mail it to:
Christian Classics Ethereal Library, 3201 Burton SE, Grand Rapids, MI 49546

Search Results

Text Identifier:"^welcome_welcome_is_the_greeting$"

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.

Texts

text icon
Text authorities

Welcome! Welcome!

Author: Lewis G. Pray Appears in 13 hymnals First Line: Welcome, welcome is the greeting Refrain First Line: Hands of cheer and hearts sincere

Tunes

tune icon
Tune authorities
Page scans

[Welcome, welcome is the greeting]

Appears in 5 hymnals Tune Sources: German Air Incipit: 32151 65365 42671 Used With Text: Welcome! Welcome!
Page scans

[Welcome, welcome is the greeting]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Richard Knight Incipit: 56655 73215 13531 Used With Text: Welcome

Instances

instance icon
Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
TextPage scan

Welcome! welcome!

Hymnal: The Morning Stars Sang Together #76 (1897) First Line: Welcome, welcome is the greeting Refrain First Line: Hands of cheer and heart sincere Lyrics: 1 Welcome, welcome is the greeting, Which this day we give our friends, Happy, happy be the meeting Providence so kindly lends. Chorus: Hands of cheer and heart sincere, Find we in our comrades here; Angels lead us day by day, In the righteous way. 2 Love of souls the richest treasure, Casting out each earth-born fear, Let the smile of social pleasure Gleam o'er all the objects here. [Chorus] 3 Like the sun, your feelings glowing, Clothe these hours so blest in light. So like him, when thou art going, Leave behind a radiance bright;-- [Chorus] 4 Rays of brilliant thoughts to quicken, Beams to warm the souls with love, That when clouds of sorrow thicken, They may lure to worlds above. [Chorus] Tune Title: [Welcome, welcome is the greeting]
Page scan

Welcome! Welcome!

Hymnal: A Book of Song and Service #1 (1905) First Line: Welcome, welcome is the greeting Refrain First Line: Hands of cheer and hears sincere Topics: Opening Languages: English Tune Title: [Welcome, welcome is the greeting]
Page scan

Welcome

Author: J. Vila Blake Hymnal: Heart and Voice #2a (1910) First Line: Welcome, welcome is the greeting Refrain First Line: Hands of cheer and hearts sincere Languages: English Tune Title: [Welcome, welcome is the greeting]

People

person icon
Authors, composers, editors, etc.

James Vila Blake

1842 - 1925 Person Name: J. Vila Blake Author of "Welcome" in Heart and Voice Blake, James Vila. (Brooklyn, New York, January 21, 1842--April 28, 1925, Chicago, Illinois). He graduated from Harvard College in 1862 and from Harvard Divinity School in 1866, and served Unitarian churches in Massachusetts and Illinois, his last and longest pastorate being at Evanston, Illinois, 1892-1916. Author of a number of books. He shared with W.G. Gannett and F.L. Hosmer in the compilation of the first edition of Unity Hymns and Chorals, (1880), which included his hymn, "Father, Thou art calling, calling to us plainly," included also in The New Hymn and Tune Book, 1914, and in Hymns of the Spirit, 1937. the latter book also includes his hymn of the church universal, "O sing with loud and joyful song." --Henry Wilder Foote, DNAH Archives

Lewis G. Pray

1793 - 1882 Author of "Welcome! Welcome!" Pray, Lewis Glover, was born at Quincy, Massachusetts, Aug. 15, 1793. Removing to Boston in 1808, he entered into business there in 1815, and retired therefrom in 1838. He was for some time a member of the City Government of Boston, of the Board of Education, and of the State Legislature. From an early date lie was associated with Sunday schools, and was for 34 years superintendent of the Sunday School of the Twelfth Congregational Society, Boston. In 1833 he published a Sunday School Hymn Book, the first with music ever compiled for American Unitarian Sunday schools. This was enlarged in 1844 as the Sunday School Hymn and Service Book. He also published a History of Sunday Schools, 1847; a Christian Catechism, 1849; and other works. His hymns and poems were collected and published in 1862, as The Sylphides' School, and a second volume of a like kind appeared in 1873, as Autumn Leaves. Most of his hymns appeared in his collections of 1833 and 1844. Putnam (to whom we are indebted for these details) gives in his Singers and Song, &c, 1874, p. 81, four pieces from his volume of 1862, and two from that of 1873. One of these, "When God upheaved the pillared earth" (Silent Work) was repeated in the American Hymns of the Ages, 3rd series, 1864. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Richard Knight

Composer of "[Welcome, welcome is the greeting]" in Heart and Voice