Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Savior, Like a Shepherd Lead us" is a Christian hymn written by Dorothy Ann Thrupp from London. The hymn first appeared unsigned in her collection Hymns for the Young, in 1836. The hymn first appeared unsigned in her collection Hymns for the Young, in 1836.
"'Like a Prayer' is a very important song to me. I felt the impact that it was going to make. That song means a lot more to me than 'Like a Virgin'. I wrote it and it's from my heart. It's a very spiritual song. I think I was much more spiritually in touch with the power of words and music by the time I started recording the song and the album."
Eastman Johnson's 1863 painting The Lord Is My Shepherd, depicting a devout man reading a Bible. For Christians, the image of God as a shepherd evokes connections not only with David but with Jesus, described as the "Good Shepherd" in the Gospel of John. The phrase "the valley of the shadow of death" is often taken as an allusion to the eternal ...
However, despite the original psalm being a song, it lacks the rhyme and form of Sidney's translation and the Church stuck to the original as closely as possible. The psalms are still sung as song, but there is disagreement with Sidney's decision to elaborate on the song and make it rhyme and sound more song-like, as they do not want to change ...
Praise to the Lord, the Almighty - Passion, Watermark (4:56) Be Thou My Vision - Fernando Ortega (3:52) Grace That Is Greater - Building 429 (4:09) Savior Like a Shepherd Lead Us - Todd Agnew (4:06) All Hail the Power of Jesus' Name - Point of Grace (2:34) Great Is Thy Faithfulness - Israel Houghton (5:25) Rock of Ages - Chris Rice (3:14)
"The Lord's My Shepherd" is a Christian hymn. It is a metrical psalm commonly attributed to the English Puritan Francis Rous and based on the text of Psalm 23 in the Bible. The hymn first appeared in the Scots Metrical Psalter in 1650 traced to a parish in Aberdeenshire. [1]
A list of all songs with lyrics about Jesus Christ, where he is specifically the central subject.This category contains both songs referring to specific moments of Jesus's life (birth, preaching, crucifixion) and songs of blessing, rejoicing or mourning where he is portrayed as a religious deity or examined as a cultural figure.
The day thou gavest, Lord, is ended ... O Worship the King; Once in Royal David's City; ... Like a Shepherd Lead us; Shall We Gather at the River?