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He wrote "I Know That My Redeemer Lives" in 1775 while he was a minister at a Baptist church in Liverpool. [3] It was first published in George Whitefield's Psalms and Hymns hymnal in the same year with seven verses though without attribution. [1] He later self-published it in 1800 in the London edition of his Hymns hymnal. [1]
The aria for soprano "I know that my Redeemer liveth" draws from both Job and Paul. The words are "an expression of faith in redemption" and announce the Second Coming of Christ . [ 7 ] The aria begins with an ascending fourth , a signal observed by musicologist Rudolf Steglich as a unifying motif of the oratorio, [ 5 ] on the words "I know ...
My Redeemer Lives: Reuben Morgan: By Your Side (2) 1 Extravagant Worship: The Songs of Reuben Morgan (2) 1 (CD 2) My Redeemer Lives (3) 4 Touching Heaven Changing Earth (1) 1 Shout to the Lord 2000 (3) 11 The Platinum Collection Volume 1: Shout to the Lord (2) 3 (CD 1) Ultimate Worship (2) 2 My Story (Live) Reuben Morgan and Jarrad Rogers: No ...
Ich weiß, daß mein Erlöser lebt (I know that my Redeemer lives), TWV 1:877, BWV 160, is a church cantata composed around 1725 by Georg Philipp Telemann for Easter Sunday, formerly attributed to Johann Sebastian Bach. [1]
Christian theology sometimes refers to Jesus using the title Redeemer or Saviour. This refererences the salvation he accomplished, and is based on the metaphor of redemption , or "buying back". In the New Testament , redemption can refer both to deliverance from sin and to freedom from captivity.
Job's declaration, "I know that my redeemer liveth" , is considered by some Christians to be a proto-Christian reference to Christ as the Redeemer, and is the basis of several Christian hymns, as well as the opening scene of Part III of Handel's Messiah. However, Jewish bible commentators and scholars point out that Job "insists on a divine ...
"My Redeemer": or "my Vindicator", from the active participle of the Hebrew word גָּאַל, gaʾal ("to redeem, protect, vindicate"), a well-known word in the Hebrew Bible because of its identification as the "kinsman-redeemer" (cf. Book of Ruth), who is 'the near kinsman who will pay off one’s debts, defend the family, avenge a killing ...
Thy mercy, my God, is the theme of my song (John Stocker) From Greenland’s icy mountains (Reginald Heber) O Jesus! the giver of all we enjoy (Anon.) In ancient days men fear’d the Lord; Mortals, awake! with angels join (Samuel Medley) The Lord into his garden comes (Anon.) I know that my Redeemer lives (Samuel Medley)†§