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  1. Martin Rinkart, or Rinckart (23 April 1586, Eilenburg – 8 December 1649) was a German Lutheran clergyman and hymnist. He is best known for the text to "Nun danket alle Gott" ("Now thank we all our God") which was written c. 1636. It was set to music by Johann Crüger about 1647, and translated into English in the 19th century by ...

  2. 18 de nov. de 2020 · The world seems to be descending into chaos. Between Covid and the election here and a range of problems overseas, these are troubled and troubling times. Even though Thanksgiving is coming, for many of us, I suspect, it’s hard to be thankful. And that is why we need the story of Martin Rinkart.

  3. 25 de nov. de 2020 · Rinkarts answer: a hymn of thanks. Some time during the war, he wrote the immortal words of “Now Thank We All Our God.” Originally intended as a prayer before meals, this hymn has become known in English through the vigorous translation by the inimitable Catherine Winkworth.

  4. Martin Rinkart. Full Name: Rinckart, Martin, 1586-1649. Birth Year: 1586. Death Year: 1649. Rinkart, Martin, son of Georg Rinkart or Rinckart, cooper at Eilenburg on the Mulde, Saxony, was born at Eilenburg, April 23, 1586.*. After passing through the Latin school at Eilenburg, he became, in Nov., 1601, a foundation scholar and chorister of the St.

    • 1586
    • Rinckart, Martin, 1586-1649
    • 1649
    • Martin Rinkart
  5. 30 de may. de 2018 · When the remaining two pastors died from plague, it was up to Martin to bury them and continue to provide pastoral care to the entire town and the refugees it held. In that first year, more than 8000 people died and Martin Rinkart often buried as many as fifty people a day, including his own wife.

  6. Hymnology Archive. Martin Rinkart. 23/24 April 1586–8 December 1649. MARTIN RINKART was one of those provincial clergymen to whom Germany had so much reason to be grateful.

  7. Published. 1647. " Now thank we all our God " is a popular Christian hymn. Catherine Winkworth translated it from the German " Nun danket alle Gott ", written c. 1636 by the Lutheran pastor Martin Rinkart. Its hymn tune, Zahn No. 5142, was published by Johann Crüger in the 1647 edition of his Praxis pietatis melica.