Have You Heard the News?

One bright and blessed morn, the Son of God was born

Author: C. B. Widmeyer
Tune: [One bright and blessed morn, the Son of God was born]
Published in 1 hymnal

Representative Text

Chorus:
Have you heard the news? No! What?
God sent His Son to bring Redemption;
How Christ our lot did choose. Pray! tell?
Of His great purpose and salvation.

1 One bright and blessed morn, the Son of God was born,
Coming to rescue us from danger:
Some did His stars behold, and brought their gifts of gold,
To this poor babe in Bethl'm's manger. [Chorus]

2 Our Lord was crucified out on the mountain side,
Thus to obtain our full salvation;
Behold the open grave, which proves His pow'r to save,
Whoever comes from tribe and nation. [Chorus]

3 'Twas on Mount Olivet, one bright and blessed day,
Jesus ascended up to glory;
He said He'd come again, and on the earth would reign,
O help me tell the blessed story. [Chorus]

4 Behold the "upper room" on Pentecostal morn,
There where the Holy Ghost descended;
Their hearts were set aflame, they preached in Jesus name,
And lo! three thousand were converted. [Chorus]

Source: New Sacred Quartettes for Male, Female and Mixed Voices #39

Author: C. B. Widmeyer

Widmeyer, Charles B. (Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, 1884--California, December 14, 1974). Studied vocal music from age 12 under J.M. Cowgill; at age 15 began teaching classes of his own. First song was written at age 15. The first one published, "Upon the Cross," was written at age 20. Bachelor of Music degree from Bethany-Peniel, Bethany, Oklahoma. Wrote more than 350 songs; edited or contributed to many songbooks. "Come and Dine" was written following the reading of John 21:12 and his meditation on the similarity between the tired, hungry disciples and people of his day both spiritually and physically hungry; translated into Spanish, Japanese, Chinese, Arabic, and Serbian. --E. Roger Taylor, DNAH Archives Go to person page >

Text Information

First Line: One bright and blessed morn, the Son of God was born
Title: Have You Heard the News?
Author: C. B. Widmeyer
Language: English
Refrain First Line: Have you heard the news? No! What?
Publication Date: 1914
Copyright: Public Domain

Instances

Instances (1 - 1 of 1)
TextPage Scan

New Sacred Quartettes for Male, Female and Mixed Voices #39

Suggestions or corrections? Contact us