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1932: The Bomber Will Always Get Through. a phrase used by English statesman Stanley Baldwin in a House of Commons speech, "A Fear For The Future." 1933: You Cannot Take Our Honour by Otto Wels, the only German Parliamentarian to speak against the Enabling Act , which took the power of legislation away from the Parliament and handed it to Adolf ...
Common Praise (2000) [188] – an edition of Hymns Ancient and Modern [189] New English Praise (2006) The Revised English Hymnal (2021) [190] Church of Ireland. A Church Hymn Book: for the use of congregations of the United Church of England and Ireland (1861) [10] Church Hymnal 5th Edition (2000) [191] Companion to Church Hymnal 5th Edition ...
The Hundred-word Eulogy (Chinese: 百字讃; pinyin: Bǎi Zì Zàn) is a 100-character praise of Islam and the Islamic prophet Muhammad written by the Hongwu Emperor of the Chinese Ming dynasty in 1368. [1] Copies of it are on display in several mosques in Nanjing, China. [2]
The New English Hymnal is a hymn book and liturgical source aimed towards the Church of England. First published in 1986, it is a successor to, and published in the same style as, the 1906 English Hymnal . [ 1 ]
In 1867, Julius Euting published a printed Mandaic version of the Qolasta. [11] [12] [13] The Qulasta has been translated into English by E. S. Drower in 1959 and by Mark Lidzbarski into German in 1920. [2] Lidzbarski's translation was based on two manuscripts, including Ms. Syr. F. 2 (R) held at the Bodleian Library, which he called "Roll F." [1]
Alleluia! Alleluia! Praise the Lord; Alleluia! Alleluia! Sing a New Song to the Lord; Alleluia! Sing to Jesus; Alma Redemptoris Mater; Angels We Have Heard on High; Anima Christi (Soul of my Saviour) Asperges me; As a Deer; As I Kneel Before You (also known as Maria Parkinson's Ave Maria) At That First Eucharist; At the Lamb's High Feast We ...
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Millennial Praises was the first published Shaker hymn book. [2] [8] [9] [10] Many printed Shaker hymn books followed. [11] The Millennial Praises hymnal contained only the words of the 140 hymns, without any musical notation. [7] [12] [13] The hymns were about Christ, God, love, praise, work, and the growth of the Shaker communities. [8]