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Episcopal Church CalendarPosted on January 10, 2010. The big Ecrivains of Hymn Separate 3JOHN HENRY NEWMAN Newman had been born to London February 21st, 1801, the oldest child of six children. His father, John Newman, was banker. His mother, Jamima, was member of the family of Fourdonier. In 1808 it was registered to a private school in Ealing. As a boy it was a reader vorace, especially Bible. In 1816 it had a conversion experience. The religious bottom to this was of a character a not very evangelical one. This was also the year of the collapse of the bank matters of its fathers. It is only as the result of an erudition that it could enter the University of Trinity, Oxford, in 1817. In 1822 it was elected a Friend of University of Oriel, Oxford. Edward Bouverie Pusey, with that it was to be associated closely in the later years, was elected the same year. In 1825 Newman was ordered as a priest of the Church of England and 1828 it became Priest of St. Mary the Virgin, Oxford. It kept this post until 1843. During the preceding years of his time to the St. Mary Newman began questioning its evangelical former views. In 1833 it preached his sermon celebrates on 'Apostatizes it National', that could be considered as the beginning of the Movement of Oxford in the Church of England. The two others important figures were Keble and Froude, with Pusey a not very later one. Newman published the first one 'the Etendue for the Times' in the same year. A considerable number of ranges was written by these men, all priests of the Church of England more of a number of years. This had for result the Movement of Oxford also is known as "Tractarianism". They tried to resume the Catholic heritage of the Church of England. In 1845, at last having come to the view that the Church of England could not be a true house to its Catholic convictions, Newman was received in the Roman Church. In 1847 it was ordered to the Roman priesthood and was created to Rome a cardinal one by the Pope Leo XIII in 1878. It published his account of his trip of faith in the authorized book 'Praise Professionel Vita Sweated' in1864. Founded Newman the English Eloquence in 1848. It preached his last sermon in 1888 and is dead in Birmingham August 11st, 1890. The famous and frequently used hymns in the books of Anglican canticles that were written by Newman are, Firmly I and truly believe; First, kindly to light and Praise to the more saint in the hight. It also is known for his translation of Came, the Holy Ghost, that never the one. JOHN MASON NEALE J. Mr. Neale (1818 ae" 1866) was an ecclesiastical English, a writer of learned and hymn. It had been born to London, his father is an Anglican priest, the Rev'd Does. Cornelius Neale. It was instructed to Cambridge of University of Trinity where it was influenced by the Movement of Oxford. It was ordered in 1841, but because of poor health was only able to take an appointment in 1846 when it became the director of University of Sackville. This was a hospice in Grinstead of the East. It held this post until his comparatively first death. In 1854 Neale co-fonded the Corporation of St. Margaret, a Church of England womens to care for the religious order. A lot of Anglican to this period although distrusted does not import what suggestive of Catholicism. The Tractarians had tried to reestablish the Catholic heritage of the Church of England, and just nine years before this one of the movement leaders, John Henry Newman had been received in the Roman Church. All this suggested to a lot that the people as Neale with their Catholic sympathies were in the agents of reality to try it Vatican to corrupt inside Anglicanism. This violent reaction became sometimes violent, the Protestants encouraging crowds to invade services and something else as that. Neale was threatened with the violence on several occasions. It was attacked in fact once while directing the funeral service for one of the Sisters. It met the opposition also of the authorities of Church for the same reason, including a fourteen inhibitions of years by his bishop. It did not receive preferment or the honor in England, and his phd was granted by an American university, a University of Trinity, Connecticut. Nevertheless, his basic goodness won finally confidence by far that bitterly had opposed for him beforehand. The Brotherhood of St. Margaret survived and prospered. Neale translated the liturgies of the Church of the east in the English and wrote a mystical commentary and of devotion on the Psaumes. Nevertheless, it more better is recalled as a hymn writer, and especially as a translator by far old and medieval hymns of their Latin and Greek original. More than the other only person it enriched the adoration of English-speaking congregations while the conscious fact of the heritage of centuries of Latin, Greek, Russian and the Syrian hymns on which these they could draw. Its translations include: All Glory, Rent and Honor, Sings My Language, the Glorious Fight, HAS YOU BEFORE the End of Day, and O Came, O Came, Emmanuel! It is commemorated in the Anglican Calendars of Church August 04 and in some Lutheran Calendars July 01. THE BAKER of Williams of Henry of mister, Bart. Continue the collection on the Ecrivains of Hymn of the Church: The Baker of W. OF O'CLOCK. of mister is a name that we see frequently in our hymn books. Just like to be a writer prolifique of hymn it was also an eminent priest of the Church of England. It had been born to London in 1821, the son of Vice Baker of Loraine of Henry of Mister of Admiral. It was instructed to the University of Trinity, Cambridge where it has measuring university diploma in 1844. it took holy orders in 1844, and became the priest of Monkland, Herefordshire in 1851, which profit it held to the death. It succeeded in the baronetcy also in 1851. It more better is known as the editor in the boss of Old and Modern Hymns, to which it contributed a number of its hymns. This canticle book sold 60.000.000 copy and its successors Hymns Old and Modern Revised and Hymns Norms Old and Modern New (that we use currently) always appreciates the considerable popularity through the Anglican Communion, with the exception of the Church Episcopale of the United States of American and the Church of Ireland. A critic of work of Baker says, 'Of its hymns four are only more high tension of jubilation, another four are brilliant and cheerful, and the remainder is very to stretch but extremely plaintive, sometimes even to sadness'. The language of its hymns is smooth and simple, the thought is correct and sometimes very admirably expressed. The more better known of its hymns, a number that of which are sung frequently here in S. Margaret, is O God of love, the King of O of peace, The magnet King my Shepherd is, the Praise, the praise of O, our God and the King, the Lord, your word abideth, My Father, for another night, and O rents you the Lord. The baker was also the translator of the version of O the sacred head surrounded as we use in the Holy Week. It wrote also two famous airs of hymn, the St. Timothy and Stephanos. The baker is dead February 12, 1877. Its last audible words were a quotation of the third one towards the interpretation to him exquisite of the twenty-three Psaume, The magnet King my Shepherd is. Perverse and foolish, oft I wandered But nevertheless in love it looked for me, And on His shoulder put gently, And gladdening brought me to the house. Dr Simon Harding and Rev'd Do Foams it Denis of Canon www.biblon.com www.anglicanbudapest.com CommentsThere are no comments.Leave a Comment | Recent Articles Other Sites |