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Text Identifier:"^ven_santo_espiritu_creador_eterna$"

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Ven, Santo Espíritu creador

Author: Angel Arroyo Rivera Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 2 hymnals Lyrics: 1 Ven, Santo Espíritu creador, eterna luz de inspiración. 2 Divina unción espiritual, tu septiforme don nos das. 3 Nos das con tu sagrada unción, consuelo, vida, paz y amor. 4 Tu eterna luz a lumbrará del corazón la ceguedad. 5 A nuestras vidas unge Tú de gracia y celestial virtud. 6 Al enemigo alejarás; por tu poder tendremos paz. 7 Al Padre, al Hijo, muéstranos, y a ti que vienes de los dos. 8 Que por los siglos, sin cesar, sea este el himno triunfal: 9 Gloria al Dios que confesamos, Padre, Hijo, Espíritu, Santo. Topics: Pentecostés; Ordenación; Ordination; Pentecostés; Pentecost Scripture: 1 Corinthians 12:4-11 Used With Tune: COME HOLY GHOST Text Sources: Himno latino del siglo IX

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COME HOLY GHOST

Meter: 8.8.8.8 Appears in 12 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: John Henry Hopkins, Jr.; David Hurd; David Hurd Tune Key: C Major Incipit: 55555 64556 67716 Used With Text: Ven, Santo Espíritu creador

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Ven, Santo Espíritu creador

Author: Angel Arroyo Rivera Hymnal: El Himnario #184 (1998) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Lyrics: 1 Ven, Santo Espíritu creador, eterna luz de inspiración. 2 Divina unción espiritual, tu septiforme don nos das. 3 Nos das con tu sagrada unción, consuelo, vida, paz y amor. 4 Tu eterna luz a lumbrará del corazón la ceguedad. 5 A nuestras vidas unge Tú de gracia y celestial virtud. 6 Al enemigo alejarás; por tu poder tendremos paz. 7 Al Padre, al Hijo, muéstranos, y a ti que vienes de los dos. 8 Que por los siglos, sin cesar, sea este el himno triunfal: 9 Gloria al Dios que confesamos, Padre, Hijo, Espíritu, Santo. Topics: Pentecostés; Ordenación; Ordination; Pentecostés; Pentecost Scripture: 1 Corinthians 12:4-11 Languages: Spanish Tune Title: COME HOLY GHOST
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Ven, Santo Espíritu creador

Author: Angel Arroyo Rivera Hymnal: El Himnario Presbiteriano #184 (1999) Meter: 8.8.8.8 Lyrics: 1 Ven, Santo Espíritu creador, eterna luz de inspiración. 2 Divina unción espiritual, tu septiforme don nos das. 3 Nos das con tu sagrada unción, consuelo, vida, paz y amor. 4 Tu eterna luz alumbrará del corazón la ceguedad. 5 A nuestras vidas unge Tú de gracia y celestial virtud. 6 Al enemigo alejarás; por tu poder tendremos paz. 7 Al Padre, al Hijo, muéstranos, y a ti que vienes de los dos. 8 Que por los siglos, sin cesar, sea este el himno triunfal: 9 Gloria al Dios que confesamos, Padre, Hijo, Espíritu Santo. Topics: Pentecostés; Ordenación; Pentecostés Scripture: 1 Corinthians 12:4-11 Languages: Spanish Tune Title: COME HOLY GHOST

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John H. Hopkins

1820 - 1891 Person Name: John Henry Hopkins, Jr. Composer of "COME HOLY GHOST" in El Himnario John Henry Hopkins, Jr MA USA 1820-1891. Born in Pittsburgh, PA, having 12 siblings, the son of pioneer parents (his father from Dublin, his mother from Hamburg) he became an ecclesiologist. His father had been an ironmaster, school teacher, lawyer, priest and second Episcopal Bishop of Vermont, (becoming presiding bishop in 1865). When his father founded the Vermont Episcopal Institute, he needed an assistant to help run it, so he picked his son to become a tutor and disciplinarian. The younger Hopkins played the flute and bugle in the school orchestra and also taught Sunday school. John Henry reflected the artistic talents of both parents in music, poetry, and art. After graduating from the University of Vermont in 1839, he returned to help his father with the school, but a financial crisis hit that year and the school had to close. He worked as a reported in New York City while studying law. He developed a throat ailment and went south to be in a warmer climate. From 1842-1844 he tutored the children of Episcopal Bishop Elliott of Savannah, GA, returning to take his M.A. from Vermont in 1845. He graduated from General Theological Seminary in 1850 and was ordained a deacon, serving as first instructor in church music at the Seminary. He founded and edited the “Church Journal” from 1853 to 1868. Interested in New York’s Ecclesiological Society, his artistic talents were apparent in designing stained-glass windows, episcopal seals, and a variety of other church ornaments. At the same time, his musical talents led to the writing and composing of a number of fine hymns and tunes, as well as anthems and services. He was ordained a priest in 1872, and was Rector of Trinity Church, Plattsburg, NY, from 1872-1876, then of Christ Episcopal Church in Williamsport, PA, from 1876-1887. He helped get the building debt paid off by 1879 with(in 10 years of its construction). During his time there a Sunday school building was also erected, having steam heat and a tiled floor. He designed some of the church furniture and bishop periphernalia as well as wrought iron tombs in Wildwood Cemetery. He also helped design two other church buildings in the area. A man of many talents, he was much beloved as a scholar, writer, preacher, controvertialist, musician, poet, and artist, excelling in all that he did. Totally devoted to his parish people, he especially loved children and was kind to anyone in need. He was considered very down-to-earth. He delivered the eulogy at the funeral of President Usysses S Grant in 1885. He was considered a great developer of hymnody in the Episcopal Church in the mid-19th century. His “Carols, hymns, and songs,”, published in 1863, had a 4th edition in 1883. In 1887 he edited “Great hymns of the church”. He wrote a biography of his father (the life of John Henry Hopkins, S.T.D.) He never married. He died at Hudson, NY. John Perry ======================= Hopkins, John Henry, D.D., Jun., son of J. H. Hopkins, sometime Bishop of Vermont, was born at Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 28, 1820, educated at the University of Vermont, ordained in 1850, Rector of Christ's Church, Williamsport, Pa., 1876, and died at Troy, New York, Aug. 13, 1891. He published Poems by the Wayside written during more than Forty Years, N.Y., James Pott, 1883; and Carols, Hymns, and Songs, 1862; 3rd ed. 1882. Of his hymns the following are in common use: 1. Blow on, thou [ye] mighty Wind. Missions. 2. Come with us, O blessed Jesus. Holy Communion. 3. Glory to God the Father be. (Dated 1867.) Holy Trinity. 4. God hath made the moon whose beam. (Dated 1840.) Duty. 5. Lord, now round Thy Church behold. (Dated 1867.) For the Reunion of Christendom. These hymns are in his Poems by the Wayside, 1883. In the same volume there are translations of the O Antiphons. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, Appendix, Part II (1907) ============== Hopkins, J. H., p. 1571, ii. The following additional hymns by him are in the American Hymnal, revised and enlarged .... Protestant Episcopal Church. . . U.S.A., 1892:— 1. God of our fathers, bless this our land. National Hymn. 2. When from the east the wise men came. Epiphany. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)

David Hurd

b. 1950 Adapter of "COME HOLY GHOST" in El Himnario David Hurd (b. Brooklyn, New York, 1950) was a boy soprano at St. Gabriel's Church in Hollis, Long Island, New York. Educated at Oberlin College and the University of North Carolina, he has been professor of church music and organist at General Theological Seminary in New York since 1976. In 1985 he also became director of music for All Saints Episcopal Church, New York. Hurd is an outstanding recitalist and improvisor and a composer of organ, choral, and instrumental music. In 1987 David Hurd was awarded the degree of Doctor of Music, honoris causa, by the Berkeley Divinity School at Yale. The following year he received honorary doctorates from the Church Divinity School of the Pacific, Berkeley, California, and from Seabury-Western Theological Seminary, Evanston, Illinois. His I Sing As I Arise Today, the collected hymn tunes of David Hurd, was published in 2010. Bert Polman and Emily Brink

Angel Arroyo Rivera

1890 - 1976 Translator of "Ven, Santo Espíritu creador" in El Himnario