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Tune Identifier:"^implicit_trust_wathall$"

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IMPLICIT TRUST

Appears in 2 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Alfred G. Wathall Incipit: 33333 33555 66533 Used With Text: Slowly, slowly darkening

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Slowly, slowly darkening

Author: Samuel Greg Appears in 4 hymnals Used With Tune: IMPLICIT TRUST

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Slowly, Slowly Darkening

Author: Samuel Greg Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #6153 Meter: 7.6.7.6 Lyrics: 1. Slowly, slowly darkening The evening hours roll on; And soon behind the cloud-land Will sink my setting sun. 2. Around my path life’s mysteries Their deepening shadows throw; And as I gaze and ponder, They dark and darker grow. 3. But there’s a voice above me Which says, Wait, trust and pray; The night will soon be over, And light will come with day. 4. Father! the light and darkness Are both alike to Thee; Then to Thy waiting servant, Alike they both shall be. 5. The great unending future, I cannot pierce its shroud; Yet nothing doubt, nor tremble, God’s bow is on the cloud. 6. To Him I yield my spirit, On Him I lay my load; Fear ends with death; beyond it I nothing see but God. 7. Thus moving towards the darkness I calmly wait His call, Now seeing, fearing—nothing; But hoping, trusting—all! Languages: English Tune Title: IMPLICIT TRUST
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Slowly, slowly darkening

Author: Samuel Greg Hymnal: The Methodist Hymnal #464a (1905) Languages: English Tune Title: IMPLICIT TRUST

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Samuel Greg

1804 - 1876 Author of "Slowly, Slowly Darkening" in The Cyber Hymnal Greg, Samuel, was born in Manchester, Sept. 6, 1804, and educated by Dr. Lant Carpenter, at Bristol, and at the Edinburgh University. He subsequently became a millowner at Bollington, near Macclesfield. He died, May 14, 1877. The addresses given by him at services which he conducted for his workmen at Bollington were published posthumously as A Layman's Legacy, 1877, with a prefatory note by Dean Stanley. He was also author of Scenes from the Life of Jesus, 1854, 2nd ed. 1869. Some of his short poems were appended to his Layman's Legacy. He is known to hymnody as the author of:— 1. My soul in death was sleeping. New Life in Christ. Appeared in his Scenes from the Life of Jesus, 1854, and included in the Baptist Hymnal, 1879, No. 400. 2. Slowly, slowly darkening. Old Age. Written in the midst of affliction, Sept. 1868, and published in his Layman's Legacy, 1877, in 11 st. of 4 lines, and entitled "Mystery of Life." In 1884 it was given in W. G. Horder's Congregational Hymns, No. 837. In Martineau's Hymns, 1873, it reads, "Now, slowly, slowly, darkening." It is a hymn of great merit, and is well suited for Private Devotion. 3. Stay, Master, stay upon this heavenly hill. [Transfiguration.] 1st published in his Scenes from the Life of Jesus, 1854, at the close of a chapter on the Transfiguration. It was reprinted in Macmillan's Magazine, 1870. pp. 543-6, together with Dean Stanley's hymn, "Master, it is good to be," on the same subject. It was included in W. G. Horder's Congregational Hymns, 1884, No. "4. [Rev. W. Garrett Horder] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology

Alfred G. Wathall

1880 - 1938 Person Name: Alfred George Wathall Composer of "IMPLICIT TRUST" in The Cyber Hymnal
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