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He Looked Beyond My Fault And Saw My Need (Andraé Crouch, Jerry Lee Lewis, The Oak Ridge Boys) He Loved Me To Death; He Must Die; He Never Once Stopped Believing In Me; He Never Sends Me Where He's Never Been; He Plants Me Like A Seed; He Restoreth My Soul (In the Valley) He Sees Me Through The Blood; He Waits For The Sound Of My Voice
Nothing But The Blood of Jesus is a traditional American hymn about the blood atonement and propitiation for sin by the death of Jesus as explained in Hebrews 9. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The song was composed by Robert Lowry , a hymn writer who was a Baptist minister and professor at Bucknell University .
Gloria Gaither (born March 4, 1942) is a Christian singer-songwriter, author, speaker, editor, and academic.She is married to Bill Gaither and together they have written more than 700 songs.
"Alas! and Did My Saviour Bleed" is a hymn by Isaac Watts, first published in 1707. The words describe the crucifixion of Jesus and reflect on an appropriate personal response to this event. The hymn is commonly sung with a refrain added in 1885 by Ralph E. Hudson ; when this refrain is used, the hymn is sometimes known as " At the Cross ".
Andrae Crouch contributed a tune specifically for the project, "He Washed My Sins Away." [ 18 ] The album received critical praise and widespread airplay, laying the foundation for their move to Ralph Carmichael's Light Records .
Bill Gaither was born in Alexandria, Indiana, in 1936 to George and Lela Gaither.He formed his first group the Bill Gaither Trio (consisting of Bill, his sister Mary Ann (1945–2018), [1] and brother Danny Gaither (1938–2001) in 1956 while a college student at Anderson College, to which he had transferred after one year at Taylor University.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -National Guard Master Sergeant DeRicko Gaither sent up a warning on the evening of Jan. 14, 2021, about Pete Hegseth, who on Tuesday became President-elect Donald Trump's ...
Johann Sebastian Bach composed the church cantata Mein Herze schwimmt im Blut (My heart swims in blood) [1] BWV 199 in Weimar between 1712 and 1713, and performed it on the eleventh Sunday after Trinity, 12 August 1714. It is a solo cantata for soprano.