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  2. Eugene Monroe Bartlett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eugene_Monroe_Bartlett

    A prolific songwriter, he wrote many Christian gospel songs such as Everybody Will Be Happy Over There, Just a Little While, He Will Remember Me, You Can’t Keep a Good Man Down, and Victory in Jesus. He also wrote the country music song Take an Old Cold Tater (and Wait), recorded by Little Jimmy Dickens. [1] [3]

  3. Victory in Jesus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victory_in_Jesus

    Victory in Jesus can refer to: A shape note gospel song written by Eugene Monroe Bartlett and published in 1939; A ministry founded by NASCAR driver Morgan Shepherd; A daily radio and television broadcast by Billy Joe Daugherty

  4. Albert E. Brumley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_E._Brumley

    Albert Brumley was a member of the Church of Christ and is buried at Fox Church of Christ Cemetery near Powell, Missouri.He died November 15, 1977. [3] Brumley's son Tom, who would die in 2009, later became a respected steel guitarist in country music and songleader in the Church of Christ in Powell.

  5. Charles H. Gabriel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_H._Gabriel

    Charles Hutchinson Gabriel (August 18, 1856 – September 14, 1932) was an American composer and lyricist of gospel songs and gospel tunes.He is said to have written and/or composed between 7,000 and 8,000 songs, [1] many of which are available in 21st century hymnals.

  6. Stamps-Baxter Music Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stamps-Baxter_Music_Company

    The first song would be on the inside front cover, numbered 00 with the first song inside the book being numbered 1-A, and the rest of the songs were numbered 1 through 138. Each book included four or five older public domain songs such as John Newton 's " Amazing Grace ", Mackay's "Revive Us Again", Stennett's "I Am Bound for the Promised Land ...

  7. Palms of Victory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palms_of_Victory

    "Palms of Victory" has been published in several "standard" hymnals, between 1900 and 1966: the Methodist Cokesbury Worship Hymnal of 1923 (hymn no. 142, as "Deliverance Will Come"), [8] the Mennonite Church and Sunday-school Hymnal of 1902 (hymn no. 132), [9] the Nazarene Glorious Gospel Hymns of 1931 (hymn no. 132, as "The Bloodwashed Pilgrim"), [10] the African Methodist Episcopal hymnal of ...

  8. Jaya Ho - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaya_Ho

    "Jaya Ho" originated from folk music in northern India. Taiwanese ethnomusicologist I-to Loh, whom Perkins School of Theology professor C. Michael Hawn called the "foremost scholar on Asian hymnody", said the first phrase of the song, "Jaya ho", is the "most common phrase for praising God in the Indian subcontinent, with only slight variations". [1]

  9. The Strife is O'er, the Battle Done - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Strife_is_O'er,_the...

    Victory or Vulpius "The Strife is O'er, the Battle Done" is a Christian hymn that is traditionally sung at Easter to celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus . It was originally a 17th-century Latin hymn, "Finita iam sunt proelia" ; the popular English-language version is an 1861 translation by the English hymnwriter Francis Pott .