SKU: HL.48009794
UPC: 073999175349. 8.5x11.5x0.427 inches.
Contents: As cheers the sun * And shall my sin-stain'd soul * Author of Peace * Ah! Think what ills * Alas! Erastea * Banish love from thy breast * Beneath the Vine * Bless'd the day * Capricious man * Daughter of Gods * Endless pleasure, endless love * Faithful cares in vain extended * Guardian Angels * Hide me from day's garish eye * My heart with tender pity swells * Me, when the sun begins to shine * No more shall armed bands * No, no, I'll take no less * Oft on a plat of rising ground * O killing shock of unexpected pain * O lovely youth * Sinners, lifts your eyes and tremble * Straight mine eye hath caught new pleasures * Together lovely innocents.
SKU: HL.48008868
UPC: 073999088687.
Contents: 1903: Blow, Blow Thou Winter Wind (Shakespeare) • E'en As a Lovely Flower (Kate Krocker, after Heine) • Go Not, Happy Day (Tennyson) • The Devon Maid (Keats) • Dawn and Evening (C.A., after Heine) • 1905: Adoration (Keats) • Fair Daffodils (Herrick) • So Perverse (Robert Bridges) • 1906: Come To Me in My Dreams (Matthew Arnold) • The Violets Blue (James Thomson, after Heine) • 1907: All Things That We Clasp (Emma Lazarus, after Heine) • 1913: Strew No More Red Roses (Matthew Arnold) • 1914: Where She Lies Asleep (Mary E. Coleridge) • Love Went a-Riding (Mary E. Coleridge) • 1917: Thy Hand in Mine (Mary E. Coleridge) • 1918: So Early in the Morning, O (James Stephens) • Mantle of Blue (Padraic Colum) • Blow Out, You Bugles (Rupert Brooke) • The Last Invocation (Walt Whitman) • 1919: Into Her Keeping (H.D. Lowry) • What Shall I Your True Love Tell? (Francis Thompson) • 'Tis But a Week (Gerald Gould).
SKU: CF.CM9721
ISBN 9781491161005. UPC: 680160919604. Key: C major. English. Psalm 121.
I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help. My help cometh from the Lord, which made heaven and earth. He will not suffer thy foot to be moved: he that keepeth thee will not slumber. Behold, he that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep. The Lord is thy keeper: the Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand. The sun shall not smite thee by day, nor the moon by night. The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil: he shall preserve thy soul. The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in from this time forth, and even for evermore. --Psalm 121, King James Version Psalm 121, from the canonical Book of Psalms, is one of fifteen psalms (meaning sacred song or hymn) included in the Songs of Ascents (Psalms 120-134). These powerful texts about hope and perseverance were likely chanted by Jewish pilgrims as they traversed the ascending road into Jerusalem, which sits atop a hill known as Mount Zion. Thousands of years later, the words of Psalm 121 continue to uplift and inspire those afflicted with pain, grief, or suffering; one need only look to the hills.  .“I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my help. My help cometh from the Lord, which made heaven and earth. He will not suffer thy foot to be moved: he that keepeth thee will not slumber. Behold, he that keepeth Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep. The Lord is thy keeper: the Lord is thy shade upon thy right hand. The sun shall not smite thee by day, nor the moon by night. The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil: he shall preserve thy soul. The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in from this time forth, and even for evermore.â€â€”Psalm 121, King James VersionPsalm 121, from the canonical Book of Psalms, is one of fifteen “psalms†(meaning sacred song or hymn) included in the Songs of Ascents (Psalms 120-134). These powerful texts about hope and perseverance were likely chanted by Jewish pilgrims as they traversed the ascending road into Jerusalem, which sits atop a hill known as Mount Zion.Thousands of years later, the words of Psalm 121 continue to uplift and inspire those afflicted with pain, grief, or suffering; one need only “look to the hills.â€Â .
SKU: CA.204700
ISBN 9790007006303.
SKU: SP.TS271
ISBN 9781585600335. UPC: 649571102715.
The Best of Sacred published by Santorella Publications contains the most popular selections of sacred music in print. Written in both Piano Vocal (PVG) and Organ Vocal editions, these collections are masterfully arranged, edited and performed by Craig Stevens. This Piano Vocal best seller includes lyrics and chord box diagrams for guitar. Each piece is featured, with a magnificent piano solo performance, on the optional audio compact disc. That's 30 tracks with over 80 minutes of beautiful sacred music on one CD! Whether you prefer to worship alone or in a group, this inspirational collection is a must for any assembly. Amazing Grace - Blessed Assurance - Bringing In the Sheaves - Faith of Our Fathers - He's Got the Whole World - Holy God, We Praise Thy Name - In the Sweet By and By - His Eye Is On the Sparrow - Just a Closer Walk Thee - Swing Low Sweet Chariot - Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen - The Lord's Prayer - Go, Tell It On the Mountain - Standing In the Need of Prayer - The Water Is Wide - Jesus, Lover of My Soul - Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing - Nearer My God to Thee - Praise God from Whom All Blessings Flow - The Lord Is My Shepherd - What A Friend - With God's Hand In Mine - Morning Has Broken - Simple Gifts - In the Garden - Kum Ba Ya - The Rosary - Open the Gates - The Palms - Ave Maria.
SKU: M7.DOHR-17630
ISBN 9790202036303. German.
Verleih uns Frieden gnädiglich ist eine geistliche Liedstrophe, die Martin Luther in einer Zeit, die von Aufständen und Unsicherheiten geprägt war, im Jahre 1529 in Wittenberg als eine Art Adaption der gregorianischen AntiphonDa pacem, Domine, in diebus nostris nachgedichtet hat. Sowohl bei dieser Antiphon als auch bei der fünfzeiligen Liedstrophe handelt es sich um ein Gebet um den politisch-sozialen, den irdischen und inneren Frieden. Das in diebus nostris (zu unsern Zeiten) ist Aufruf, Ermunterung und Auftrag zugleich nicht nachzulassen in dem Bemühen, diesen Frieden zu erflehen und ihn auch tatkräftig herbeizuführen. Denn dass dieser Friede das Ergebnis eines Kampfes ist, den allerdings nur Gott - mit seinen Waffen - führen kann, auch davon spricht dieser Text. Auch die Melodie des Liedes wird dem Reformator Luther zugeschrieben. Sie ist tongeschlechtlich mit der Antiphon verwandt, geht selbst aber wohl auf den ebenfalls lateinischen Hymnus Veni, redemptor gentium (Komm, Erlöser der Heiden), einem Adventhymnus des Ambrosius von Mailand zurück. (Kurt Grahl).