Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^fides_scholefield$"

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

Tunes

tune icon
Tune authorities
Page scansAudio

FIDES

Meter: 8.7.8.7.8.8.7 Appears in 7 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: C. C. Scholefield Tune Key: G Major Incipit: 17123 65433 35432 Used With Text: Sound aloud Jehovah's praises

Texts

text icon
Text authorities
TextAudio

Weep No More This Holy Morning

Author: Herbert Kynaston Meter: 8.7.87.8.8.7 Appears in 1 hymnal Lyrics: 1 Weep no more this holy morning, Mary, put away thy fears; In this feast there is no scorning, No repentance for thy tears: Joy, O joy, a thousand pleasures, All thy soul’s recovered treasures— Alleluia!—Christ appears. 2 Smile again, thou watcher weary, Wreath thy lucid brow with bloom, Death has fled, thou art not dreary, Angels shine athwart the gloom; Christ has freed the world from paining, Lo, He comes, His life regaining— Alleluia!—from the tomb. 3 Joy to thee, He soars ascending, He who all thy sins forgave; All thy sorrows now are ending, Magdalene, He comes to save; Whom thou soughtest lost and dying, Welcome now with angels crying Alleluia!—o’er His grave. 4 Mary, lift those brows declining, Turn to see who stands behind, See His face with glory shining, See the pearly wounds enshrined, Porches five, for all thy healing, Life eternal each unsealing— Alleluia!—to mankind. 5 Life in all His life’s resuming, Mary, all thy light restore, All thy heart with joy illuming, Death is driven from the door: Night has had his night of sorrow, Joy returneth with the morrow— Alleluia!—evermore. Used With Tune: FIDES Text Sources: Author unknown, probably from the Middle Ages; Occasional Hymns (London: R. Clay, Son & Taylor, 1862)
Page scans

Sound aloud Jehovah's praises

Appears in 22 hymnals Used With Tune: FIDES

Instances

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

Sound aloud Jehovah's praises

Hymnal: The Scottish Hymnal #2 (1892) Languages: English Tune Title: FIDES
Page scan

Sound aloud Jehovah's praises

Hymnal: The Church Hymnary #8 (1902) Languages: English Tune Title: FIDES
TextPage scan

Sound aloud Jehovah's praises

Author: H. A. Martin Hymnal: The Church Hymnal #142 (1898) Meter: 8.7.8.7.8.8.7 Lyrics: 1 Sound aloud Jehovah's praises, Tell abroad the awful Name; Heaven the ceaseless anthem raises, Let the earth her God proclaim: God, the hope of every nation, God, the source of consolation, Holy, blessèd Trinity! Holy, blessèd Trinity! 2 This the Name from ancient ages Hidden in its dazzling light; This the Name that kings and sages, Prayed and strove to know aright, Through God's wondrous Incarnation, Now revealed the world's salvation, Ever blessèd Trinity! Ever blessèd Trinity! 3 Into this great Name and holy, We all tribes and tongues baptize; Thus the Highest owns the lowly, Homeward, heavenward, bids them rise; Gathers them from every nation, Bids them join in adoration Of the blessèd Trinity! Of the blessèd Trinity! 4 In this Name the heart rejoices, Pouring forth its secret prayer: In this Name we lift our voices, And our common faith declare; Offering humble supplication, Thanks, and praise, and veneration To the blessèd Trinity! To the blessèd Trinity! 5 Glory be to God the Father, Glory be to God the Son, Glory be to God the Spirit, Great Jehovah, Three in One. Praise from all in earth and heaven Unto Thee be ever given, Holy, blessèd Trinity! Holy, blessèd Trinity! Amen. Topics: Adoration; Processionals Trinity Sunday; Trinity Sunday Languages: English Tune Title: FIDES

People

person icon
Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Clement Cotterill Scholefield

1839 - 1904 Person Name: C. C. Scholefield Composer of "FIDES" in The Church Hymnal Rev. Clement C. Scholefield (b. Edgbaston, near Birmingham, Warwickshire, England, 1839; d. Goldalming, Surrey, England, 1904) Educated at St. John's College, Cambridge, he was ordained in the Church of England in 1867. He served at Hove, Brighton, St. Peter's in Kensington (1869-1879), and briefly at St. Luke's in Chelsea. From 1880 to 1890 he was chaplain at Eton College and from 1890 to 1895 vicar of Holy Trinity in Knightsbridge. Mainly self-taught as a musician, Scholefield became an accomplished pianist and composed some songs and hymn tunes. Bert Polman

Henry A. Martin

1831 - 1911 Person Name: H. A. Martin Author of "Sound aloud Jehovah's praises" in The Church Hymnal Martin, Henry Arthur, M.A., son of George Martin, Chancellor and Canon of Exeter, born at Exeter July 30, 1831, and educated at Eton, and Christ Church, Oxford, graduating B.A. 1855, and M.A. 1857. On taking Holy Orders he became Curate of Hallow, near Worcester, 1856, and Vicar of Laxton with Moorhouse, Nottinghamshire, 1858. In 1871 he contributed the following hymns to Church Hymns:— 1. Lord of the frost-bound winter. Harvest. Written in 1859. 2. O Rock of Ages, One Foundation. St. Peter. Written in 1871. 3. Sound aloud Jehovah's praises. Holy Trinity. Written in 1870, in 8 stanzas, four of which only are given in Church Hymns. 4. The heavenly King must come. St. John Baptist. Written in 1871. -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ======================= Martin, H. A., p. 715. ii. In the 1904 ed. of Hymns Ancient & Modern a new hymn by Mr. Martin is included for Passiontide, "Alone Thou trodd'st the wine press, and alone." It was written in Holy Week, 1878. All Mr. Martin's hymns given on p. 715, ii., are still in common use. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

Herbert Kynaston

1809 - 1878 Translator of "Weep No More This Holy Morning" in The Cyber Hymnal Kynaston, Herbert, D.D., was born Nov. 23, 1809, and educated at Westminster School, and Christ Church, Oxford (of which he was sometime Student), where he graduated in 1831 (1st class Lit. Hum.). Taking Holy Orders in 1834, he became Head Master of St. Paul's School, London, in 1838; Select Preacher of the University of Oxford, 1842-43; Rector of St. Nicholas-Cole-Abbey, with St. Nicholas Olave, 1850-66; and Prebendary of Holborn in St. Paul's Cathedral, 1853. He died Oct. 1878. His Miscellaneous Poems were published in 1840, and his hymns as follows:— (1) Occasional Hymns (original and translated), 1862. (2) Occasional Hymns, 2nd series, pt. i., 1864. (3) Occasional Hymns, 2nd series, pt. ii., chiefly on the Miracles, 1866. These hymns and translations, which are of more than usual merit, have been either strangely overlooked or are unknown to most modern editors. A few were included in the Hymnary, 1872. Dr. Kynaston also contributed to the Guardian from time to time several renderings into Latin of his own hymns, and of hymns by others, but these have not been republished. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)