The Hymn Society and the Methodist Church searched for new hymns to "express the needs and aspirations of people in the churches and communities of rural America" for the Quadrennial National Methodist Town and Country Conference at Indiana University, July 22-25, 1955. Fourteen of the nearly three hundred submissions were printed…...
“For all thy saints”
Originally, “For all thy saints” was written for All Saints’ Day and published in Horatio Nelson’s Hymns for Saints Days and Other Hymns (1864). The heading was “A Cloud of Witnesses,” a reference to Hebrews 12:1: “Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside…...
“A Mighty Fortress”
No hymn is identified with the Protestant Reformation more than Martin Luther’s “A Mighty Fortress.” Luther (1483-1546) left a body of congregational songs that both defined the Lutheran confessional tradition and became truly ecumenical in influence. His thirty-seven hymns stand alongside his theological writings and his translation of the Bible…...
“Christ is Made the Sure Foundation”
Our opening hymn, “Christ is Made the Sure Foundation”, is a translation of an ancient text. When it comes to translating hymns written originally in Latin or Greek, John Mason Neale (1818-1866), sometimes called the “prince of translators,” has no peer. The son of an Anglican clergyman, Neale intended to…...
“All Are Welcome”
“All Are Welcome” by Marty Haugen was “an attempt to write a text that reflects the welcome to table fellowship that Jesus offered unconditionally to everyone.” The five stanzas of the hymn as it now appears were “redacted down” from thirteen stanzas Haugen originally created with the intention that they…...


