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Text Identifier:"^what_a_work_to_do_for_jesus$"

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Work for Jesus

Author: Rev. A. Parke Burgess, D.D. Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: What a work to do for Jesus! Used With Tune: [What a work to do for Jesus!]

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GUNSTON

Meter: 8.7.8.7 D Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: W. L. Remsberg Tune Key: F Major Incipit: 33335 33222 52343 Used With Text: Work for Jesus

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Work for Jesus

Author: A. Parke Burgess Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #7619 Meter: 8.7.8.7 D First Line: What a work to do for Jesus Lyrics: 1. What a work to do for Jesus! Work for you and work for me, Work for all who trust His merit, All who would His glory see; Though we fill a lowly station, And our talent be but small, Though we are but young disciples, We must heed the Savior’s call. 2. What a work to do for Jesus And the perishing around, Souls that by His blood are ransomed, Telling them the joyful sound! Oh, the lost and dying millions, Wandering from God astray, You and I may help to lead them, In the straight and narrow way. 3. What a work to do for Jesus, Work for heart and hand and brain! Sowing aye, beside all waters, Precious seeds of golden grain; Going forth in life’s glad morning, Happy with the Master’s love, And at eve returning, laden For the Welcome Home above. 4. Oh, the sacred inspiration, Blest each heart by grace made free, From the cross and from the garden, This I freely do for Thee! Can our lips be dumb in silence, All unmoved by Love’s bequest? Can we close our eyes in slumber? Can we fold our hands to rest? Languages: English Tune Title: GUNSTON
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Work for Jesus

Author: Rev. A. Parke Burgess, D.D. Hymnal: Y.P.S.C.E. Hymns of Christian Endeavor #30 (1888) First Line: What a work to do for Jesus! Languages: English Tune Title: [What a work to do for Jesus!]

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W. L. Remsberg

Composer of "GUNSTON" in The Cyber Hymnal

A. Parke Burgess

1835 - 1901 Person Name: Burgess A. Parke Author of "Work For Jesus" Born: Circa 1835, Litchfield, New York. Died: August 30, 1901, at his son’s home in Newark, New York. He and his wife Jenette were killed in a train wreck on the Northern Central Railroad between Fairville and Zurich, New York. They had been returning home from a week’s outing at their summer cottage at Lake Bluff, Sodus Point, on Lake Ontario. Buried: Newark Cemetery, Newark, New York. Son of abolitionist Seth Burgess, Parke attended Hamilton College, and taught mathematics there for a while. He served at the East Mexico Presbyterian Church (Old Pratham), Oswego County, New York; in East Dennis, Massachusetts; Duxbury, Massachusetts. He also edited The Temperance Press out of Boston, Massachusetts, lived for a year in Syracuse, New York, working for the New York State Temperance Society, and was editor-in-chief of the Watchword, a weekly family newspaper. In 1874, he moved to Newark, New York, where he served as pastor of the Park Presbyterian Church for 26 years. He later took a position as Superintendent of the Syracuse District of the Anti-Saloon League. In 1884 Monroe College awarded him a Doctor of Divinity degree. His works include: Songs in the Night (Gazette Press, 1902) Sources: Findagrave, accessed 17 Nov 2016 © The Cyber Hymnal™. Used by permission. (www.hymntime.com)
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