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Text Identifier:"^today_if_ye_will_hear_his_voice_now_is$"

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Today, if you will hear his voice

Author: Miller Appears in 197 hymnals Matching Instances: 195 Used With Tune: REPENTANCE

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OH TURN, SINNER

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 1 hymnal Matching Instances: 1 Used With Text: Today if you will hear his voice
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[To-day, if you will hear His voice]

Appears in 1 hymnal Matching Instances: 1 Tune Key: e minor or modal Incipit: 32166 56112 12335 Used With Text: Come To-day
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[Today if you will hear his voice]

Appears in 1 hymnal Matching Instances: 1 Composer and/or Arranger: J. B. Herbert Incipit: 13214 32543 61765 Used With Text: Love's pleading

Instances

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To-day, if you will hear his voice

Hymnal: A Selection of Hymns and Spiritual Songs #S.X (1809) Languages: English
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To-day, if you will hear his voice

Hymnal: The Cluster of Spiritual Songs, Divine Hymns and Sacred Poems #CCIV (1823)
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To-day, if ye will hear his voice

Hymnal: The Psalms and Hymns, with the Catechism, Confession of Faith, and Liturgy, of the Reformed Dutch Church in North America #A37 (1839)

People

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

J. B. Herbert

1852 - 1927 Composer of "[Today if you will hear his voice]" in Bible Songs

Wilson Marion Cooper

1850 - 1916 Person Name: W. M. Cooper Composer (alto) of "TURN, SINNER, TURN" in The Sacred Harp Produced a major revised edition of the Sacred Harp fasola tunebook, 1902.

S. J. Vail

1818 - 1883 Arranger of "FOREST" in Popular Hymns, revised In his youth Silas Jones Vail learned the hatter's trade at Danbury, Ct. While still a young man, he went to New York and took employment in the fashionable hat store of William H. Beebe. Later he established himself in business as a hatter at 118 Fulton Street, where he was for many years successful. But the conditions of trade changed, and he could not change with them. After his failure in 1869 or 1870 he devoted his entire time and attention to music. He was the writer of much popular music for use in churches and Sunday schools. Pieces of music entitled "Scatter Seeds of Kindness," "Gates Ajar," "Close to Thee," "We Shall Sleep, but not Forever," and "Nothing but Leaves" were known to all church attendants twenty years ago. Fanny Crosby, the blind authoress, wrote expressly for him many of the verses he set to music. --Vail, Henry H. (Henry Hobart). Genealogy of some of the Vail family descended from Jeremiah Vail at Salem, Mass., 1639, p. 234.