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Text Identifier:"^great_god_your_love_has_called_us_here$"

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Lord God, Your Love Has Called Us Here

Author: Brian A. Wren Meter: 8.8.8.8.8.8 Appears in 32 hymnals Hymnal Title: Calvin Hymnary Project

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STELLA

Meter: 8.8.8.8.8.8 Appears in 123 hymnals Hymnal Title: CPWI Hymnal Tune Sources: Easy Hymns for Catholc Schools, 1851 Tune Key: E Flat Major Incipit: 55355 11765 55432 Used With Text: Great God, your love has called us here
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RYBURN

Meter: 8.8.8.8.8.8 Appears in 22 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Norman Cocker, 1889-1953 Hymnal Title: Evangelical Lutheran Worship Tune Key: D Major Incipit: 13455 65144 32132 Used With Text: Great God, Your Love Has Called Us
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MELITA

Meter: 8.8.8.8.8.8 Appears in 461 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: J. B. Dykes (1823-1876) Hymnal Title: Hymns for Today's Church (2nd ed.) Tune Key: C Major Incipit: 13355 66551 27554 Used With Text: Lord God, your love has called us here

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Great God, your love has called us here

Author: Brian Wren (b. 1936) Hymnal: Ancient and Modern #169 (2013) Meter: 8.8.8.8.8.8 Hymnal Title: Ancient and Modern Lyrics: 1 Great God, your love has called us here, as we, by love, for love were made. Your living likeness still we bear, though marred, dishonoured, disobeyed. We come, with all our heart and mind your call to hear, your love to find. 2 We come with self-inflicted pains of broken trust and chosen wrong, half-free, half-bound by inner chains, by social forces swept along, by powers and systems close confined, yet seeking hope for humankind. 3 Great God, in Christ you call our name and then receive us as your own, not through some merit, right or claim, but by your gracious love alone. We strain to glimpse your mercy seat and find you kneeling at our feet. 4 Then take the towel, and break the bread, and humble us, and call us friends. Suffer and serve till all are fed, and show how grandly love intends to work till all creation sings, to fill all worlds, to crown all things. 5 Great God, in Christ you set us free your life to live, your joy to share. Give us your Spirit's liberty to turn from guilt and dull despair and offer all that faith can do while love is making all things new. Topics: Church Year Maundy Thursday; Deliverance; Devotion; God in grace and mercy; God Love of; Hope; Maundy Thursday; Renewal; Sin; Gathering; Holy Communion Scripture: Deuteronomy 9:5-6 Languages: English Tune Title: RYBURN

Great God, your love has called us here

Author: Brian A. Wren Hymnal: Anglican Hymns Old and New (Rev. and Enl.) #270 (2008) Hymnal Title: Anglican Hymns Old and New (Rev. and Enl.) Languages: English Tune Title: ABINGDON

Great God, your love has called us here

Hymnal: Church Hymnal, Fifth Edition #416 (2000) Hymnal Title: Church Hymnal, Fifth Edition

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John Bacchus Dykes

1823 - 1876 Person Name: John Bacchus Dykes (1823-1876) Hymnal Title: Church Hymnary (4th ed.) Composer of "MELITA" in Church Hymnary (4th ed.) As a young child John Bacchus Dykes (b. Kingston-upon-Hull' England, 1823; d. Ticehurst, Sussex, England, 1876) took violin and piano lessons. At the age of ten he became the organist of St. John's in Hull, where his grandfather was vicar. After receiving a classics degree from St. Catherine College, Cambridge, England, he was ordained in the Church of England in 1847. In 1849 he became the precentor and choir director at Durham Cathedral, where he introduced reforms in the choir by insisting on consistent attendance, increasing rehearsals, and initiating music festivals. He served the parish of St. Oswald in Durham from 1862 until the year of his death. To the chagrin of his bishop, Dykes favored the high church practices associated with the Oxford Movement (choir robes, incense, and the like). A number of his three hundred hymn tunes are still respected as durable examples of Victorian hymnody. Most of his tunes were first published in Chope's Congregational Hymn and Tune Book (1857) and in early editions of the famous British hymnal, Hymns Ancient and Modern. Bert Polman

Dmitri Stepanovich Bortnianski

1751 - 1825 Person Name: Dimitri Bortniansky (1751-1825) Hymnal Title: Common Praise (1998) Composer of "ST. PETERSBURG" in Common Praise (1998) Dimitri Stepanovitch Bortniansky (1751-1825) Ukraine 1751-1825 Born in Glukhov, Ukraine, he joined the imperial choir at age 8 and studied with Galuppi, who later took the lad with him to Italy, where he studied for 10 years, becoming a composer, harpsichordist, and conductor. While in Italy he composed several operas and other instrumental music, composing more operas and music later in Russia. In 1779 he returned to Russia, where he was appointed Director to the Imperial Chapel Choir, the first as a native citizen. In 1796 he was appointed music director. With such a great instrument at his disposal, he produced many compositions, 100+ religious works, sacred concertos, cantatas, and hymns. He influenced Rachmaninoff and Tchaikovshy, the latter editing Bortniansky's sacred work, amassing 10 volumnes. He died in St. Petersburg. He was so popular in Russia that a bronze statue was erected in his honor in the Novgorod Kremlin. He composed in different musical styles, including choral works in French, Italian, Latin, German, and Church Slavonic. John Perry

Alfred V. Fedak

b. 1953 Person Name: Al Fedak Hymnal Title: Lift Up Your Hearts Arranger of "RYBURN" in Lift Up Your Hearts Alfred Fedak (b. 1953), is a well-known organist, composer, and Minister of Music at Westminster Presbyterian Church on Capitol Hill in Albany, New York. He graduated from Hope College in 1975 with degrees in organ performance and music history. He obtained a Master’s degree in organ performance from Montclair State University, and has also studied at Westminster Choir College, Eastman School of Music, the Institute for European Studies in Vienna, and at the first Cambridge Choral Studies Seminar at Clare College, Cambridge. As a composer, he has over 200 choral and organ works in print, and has three published anthologies of his work (Selah Publishing). In 1995, he was named a Visiting Fellow in Church Music at Episcopal Seminary of the Soutwest in Austin, Texas. He is also a Fellow of the American Guild of Organists, and was awarded the AGO’s prestigious S. Lewis Elmer Award. Fedak is a Life Member of the Hymn Society, and writes for The American Organist, The Hymn, Reformed Worship, and Music and Worship. He was a member of the Presbyterian Committee on Congregational Song that prepared Glory to God, the 2013 hymnal of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) Laura de Jong