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Text Identifier:"^mita_wakantanka_nikiyena$"

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Mita Wakantanka

Appears in 3 hymnals Used With Tune: BETHANY

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BETHANY

Appears in 975 hymnals Tune Key: G Major Incipit: 32116 65132 32116 Used With Text: Nearer, my God, to Thee

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Mita Wakantanka, Nikiyena (More love to Thee, O Christ)

Author: Elizabeth Prentiss; Samuel D. Hinman Hymnal: Wakan Cekiye Odowan #93 (1946) Meter: 6.4.6.4.6.6.4 Topics: Visitation Languages: Dakota

Nearer, my God, to Thee

Hymnal: Okodakiciye Wakan Odowan Qa Okna Ahiyayapi Kta Ho Kin/Hymnal with Tunes and Chants According to the Use of the Episcopal Church in the Missions among the Dakotas #93 (1951) First Line: Mita Wakaŋtaŋka, Nikiyena Topics: Offices of the Church Visitation of the Sick Scripture: Psalm 148:13 Languages: Dakota Tune Title: BETHANY

Mita Wakantanka

Hymnal: Dakota Odowan #150 (1911) Languages: Dakota Tune Title: BETHANY

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E. Prentiss

1818 - 1878 Person Name: Elizabeth Prentiss Author of "Mita Wakantanka, Nikiyena (More love to Thee, O Christ)" in Wakan Cekiye Odowan Elizabeth Payson Prentiss USA 1818-1878. Born at Portland, ME, 5th child of Congregationalist minister, Edward Payson. He died of tuberculosis in 1827, and the family moved to New York City in 1831. That year she professed faith in Christ and joined the Bleeker Street Presbyterian Church. She possessed keen abilities, including sympathy and perceptiveness. She began writing stories and poems, and contributed her works to “The youth’s companion”, a New England religious periodical. In 1838 she opened a small girls’ school in her home and took up a Sabbath-school class as well. Two years later, she moved to Richmond, VA, to be a department head at a girls’ boarding school. In 1845 she married George Lewis Prentiss, a brother of her close friend, Anna Prentiss Stearns. The Prentisses settled in New Bedford, MA, where George became pastor of South Trinitarian Church. In 1851 George became pastor of Mercer St Presbyterian Church in New York City. After a happy period in life, by 1852 she had lost two of her three children, one as a newborn, one at age four. However, she went on to have three more healthy children, despite her poor health. She wrote her first book of stories, published in 1853. In 1856 she penned her famous hymn lyrics (noted below) after she nearly lost her daughter, Minnie, to an illness. After George resigned from his church due to failing health, the family went abroad for a couple of years. In 1860 they returned to NY, where George resumed his pastorate and held a chair at Union Theological Seminary. She published her most popular book, “Stepping heavenward” in 1869, furnishing it in installments to ‘Chicago Advance’. The family evenually settled in Dorset, VT, where she died. After her death, her husband published “The life and letters of Elizabeth Prentiss” in 1882. The family children were: Annie, Eddy, Bessie, Minnie, George, and Henry. John Perry ================ Prentiss, Elizabeth, née Payson, youngest daughter of Dr. Edward Payson, was born at Portland, Maine, Oct. 26, 1818; married to George Lewis Prentiss, D.D., then at Bedford, Massachusetts, April, 1845; and died at Dorset, Vermont, Aug. 13, 1878. Her Life and Letters by her husband appeared some time after. Dr. Prentiss removed from Bedford to New York in 1851, and was appointed Professor of Pastoral Theology at Union Seminary, New York, 1873. Mrs. Prentiss's works include The Flower of the Family; Stepping Heavenward, 1869; and Religious Poems, 1873. Of her hymns the two following are most widely known:— 1. As on a vast eternal shore Thanksgiving. Contributed to Schaff's Christ in Song, 1869. 2. More love to Thee, 0 Christ. More Love to Christ desired. Written in 1869, and first printed on a fly-sheet; then in Hatfield's Church Hymn Book, N. Y., 1872. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

Samuel D. Hinman

Author or Translator of "Mita Wakantanka Nikiyena"