Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Awesome God" is a contemporary worship song written by Rich Mullins and first recorded on his 1988 album, Winds of Heaven, Stuff of Earth. It was the first single from the album and rose to the number one spot on Christian AC radio and subsequently became a popular congregational song. [ 1 ]
Neither album sold very well, [29] but the Christian radio hit "Awesome God" on his third album, Winds of Heaven, Stuff of Earth, brought his music to a wider audience. The song "Awesome God" was written either at Rock Lake Christian Assembly camp in Michigan, or on the way to a youth conference in Bolivar, Missouri in July 1987.
Eventually, the German version reached Russia where a Russian version entitled "Velikiy Bog" (Великий Бог - 'Great God') [37] was produced in 1912 by Ivan S. Prokhanov (1869–1935), [38] the "Martin Luther of Russia", [9] and "the most prolific Protestant hymn writer and translator in all of Russia" at that time [7] in a Russian ...
(Hymn for World Missions) 2003 Stuart Townend: New Irish Hymns 4 In Christ Alone Lyrics, Story: All My Life: 2002 Kristyn Getty: Tapestry — Beneath the Cross (Hymn for Cross and Community) 2005 Kristyn Getty: New Irish Hymns 4 In Christ Alone Lyrics, Story: Better Is One Day with Jesus Based on Luke 10:38-42: 2005 Kristyn Getty: Songs That ...
It had, however, been in use as a hymn tune long before the 20th century under the title "The Master Hath Come" by Sarah Doudney (1871), updated since in a retelling of the nativity story by Robert Cullinan entitled "On This Night Most Holy" (1996). Another hymn set to the tune of "The Ash Grove" is "Sent Forth by God's Blessing." [4]
Alternatively, John M. Merriman writes that the hymn "began as a martial song to inspire soldiers against the Ottoman forces" during the Ottoman wars in Europe. [4] The earliest extant hymnal in which it appears is that of Andrew Rauscher (1531). It is believed to have been included in Joseph Klug's Wittenberg hymnal of 1529, of which no copy ...
“It took a lot of balls.” Mix Master Mike (né Michael Schwartz) recalls the courage it took to call up the Beastie Boys, who by the late ’90s were bona fide rap superstars, and leave ...
Worship God is the seventh studio album by Rebecca St. James, released on 26 February 2002. [1] It is her highest charting album to date, peaking at No. 94 on the Billboard 200 . The album produced the hit singles " Song of Love " and "Breathe".