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Tune Identifier:"^miren_que_bueno_sosa$"

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MIREN QUÉ BUENO

Meter: Irregular Appears in 30 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Pablo Sosa Tune Key: D Major Incipit: 51164 25535 11642 Used With Text: O Look and Wonder (¡Miren qué bueno!) (Psalm 133)

Texts

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Psalm 133

Author: Pablo Sosa; George Lockwood Appears in 28 hymnals First Line: ¡Miren qué bueno qué bueno es! (O look and wonder, how good it is!] Used With Tune: [Miren qué bueno, qué bueno es]

Psalm 133

Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Good it is and pleasant Refrain First Line: How good it is when God's will is done Topics: Church unity and ecumenism; Eternal Life; Multi-cultrual and World-church Songs Scripture: Psalm 133 Used With Tune: MIRREN QUÉ BUENO Text Sources: Thuma Mina and Church Hymnary, Fourth Edition, 2005

Psalm 133 (A Responsorial Setting)

Author: Pablo Sosa Appears in 1 hymnal First Line: How good and how pleasant it is Refrain First Line: Miren qué bueno, qué bueno es (Oh, look and wonder how good it is) Topics: Biblical Names and Places Aaron; Biblical Names and Places Mount Hermon; Biblical Names and Places Zion; Blessing; Church Year Pentecost; God's Gifts; God's People (flock, sheep); Grace; Happiness; Jesus Christ Parables of; Love; Mercy; Occasional Services Christian Marriage; Occasional Services Ordination and/or Installation; Peacemakers; People of God / Church Family of God; People of God / Church Renewal; People of God / Church Unity of God's People; Unity and Fellowship; Unity of the Church; Year A, Ordinary Time after Pentecost, August 14-20; Year B, Easter, 2nd Sunday; Year B, Ordinary Time after Pentecost, June 19-25 (if after Trinity Sunday) Scripture: Psalm 133 Used With Tune: MIREN QUÉ BUENO Text Sources: Evangelical Lutheran Worship (Psalm text)

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Miren qué bueno

Author: Pablo Sosa Hymnal: Celebremos Su Gloria #463 (1992) First Line: Miren qué bueno, que bueno es Topics: Compañerismo Cristiano; Fellowship; Hermandad; Brotherhood; Iglesia; Church Scripture: Psalm 133 Languages: Spanish Tune Title: FLORES
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Miren qué bueno (Oh, Look and Wonder)

Author: Pablo Sosa, b. 1933 Hymnal: Psalms for All Seasons #133D (2012) First Line: Miren qué bueno es (How good it is when brothers) Refrain First Line: Miren qué bueno, qué bueno es (Oh, look and wonder how good it is) Topics: Biblical Names and Places Aaron; Biblical Names and Places Mount Hermon; Biblical Names and Places Zion; Blessing; Church Year Pentecost; God's Gifts; God's People (flock, sheep); Grace; Happiness; Jesus Christ Parables of; Love; Mercy; Occasional Services Christian Marriage; Occasional Services Ordination and/or Installation; Peacemakers; People of God / Church Family of God; People of God / Church Renewal; People of God / Church Unity of God's People; Unity and Fellowship; Unity of the Church; Year A, Ordinary Time after Pentecost, August 14-20; Year B, Easter, 2nd Sunday; Year B, Ordinary Time after Pentecost, June 19-25 (if after Trinity Sunday); Texts in Languages Other than English Spanish Scripture: Psalm 133 Languages: English; Spanish Tune Title: MIREN QUÉ BUENO

Miren qué bueno (Oh, Look and Wonder)

Author: Pablo D. Sosa, n. 1933 Hymnal: Santo, Santo, Santo #230 (2019) First Line: ¡Miren qué bueno es cuando los hermanos están juntos! (How good it is when brothers dwell in peace with one another) Topics: Año Cristiano Pentecostés; Christian Year Pentecost; Hospilaidad; Hospitality; Paz; Peace; Unidad; Unity Scripture: Psalm 133 Languages: English; Spanish Tune Title: [Miren qué bueno es cuando los hermanos están juntos]

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Pablo D. Sosa

1933 - 2020 Person Name: Pablo Sosa Author of "Miren qué bueno" in Celebremos Su Gloria Pablo Sosa (b. 1933 - d. 2020) grew up and was educated in Argentina, the U.S. (Westminster Choir College), and Germany. For years he pastored a large Methodist congregation in Buenos Aires, Argentina while composing songs, leading choirs, editing hymnals, producing religious broadcasts, and teaching liturgy and hymnology at a seminary. Meanwhile, life in Argentina pushed him to question his assumptions about what’s best for congregational singing. During Argentina’s “dirty war,” two young women from his church were disappeared, possibly for working among the poor. As Catholic and Protestant churches hesitated whether to speak out, remain silent, or support the government, many people lost faith. Economic meltdown after the war plunged many middle-class Argentinians into poverty. Sosa’s growing social awareness widened his vision for “lifting up hope with a song.” He often describes worship as “the fiesta of the faithful,” where all are welcome and all music is seen as “part of the ‘song of the earth,’ which answers the psalmist’s call ‘Sing joyfully to God, all the earth!’ (Psalm 98:4).” Whether in his home church, Iglesia Evangélica Metodista La Tercera (Third Methodist Church) in Buenos Aires, or at churches or conferences around the world, he urges people, “Put your body into worship!” And he reminds them of the biblical connection between justice and worship. CICW Website Bio (http://www.calvin.edu/worship)

Andrew Donaldson

b. 1951 Person Name: Andrew Donaldson, 1951- Translator of "Oh look and wonder" in The Book of Praise Andrew Donaldson, a composer and church musician, grew up in northern Ontario, Canada. He attended Glendon College, York University in Toronto, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1974. He went on to study classical guitar performance at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto, receiving its ARCT (Associate of Royal Conservatory Teachers) degree in 1979. Since then he has worked as a composer and performer in many contexts, in both French and English. Andrew co-edited the Book of Praise (1997), Presbyterian Church in Canada, with Donald Anderson. Their company, Binary Editions, continues to administer copyright for the PCC. In 2007 he was made a Doctor of Divinity, honoris causa, by Knox College of the University of Toronto, for his body of work in congregational song in the Presbyterian Church in Canada. In 2011 Andrew and his wife, Wendy, moved to Geneva, Switzerland where Andrew works as a worship consultant to the World Council of Churches. --Submitted by Andrew and Wendy Donaldson, 13 August 2013

George Lockwood

b. 1946 Translator of "¡Miren qué bueno¡" in Chalice Hymnal Rev. George Lockwood was born in 1946 and has been a missionary to Costa Rica. He has pastored Spanish-speaking congregations in both Arizona and California and served on the editorial committee for the Methodist hymnal supplement Celebremos II. In addition, Lockwood has traveled throughout Central and South America interviewing church musicians and gathering new hymns from both Spanish and Portuguese cultures which he then presents at conferences and workshops. The Presbyterian Hymnal Companion, 1993