"The Lord's My Shepherd, I'll Not Want" first appeared in print in the Scottish Psalter of 1650. This Psalter was assembled by the Westminster Assembly, which also gave us the Westminster Confession and the Book of Common Prayer. In it, portions from various sources were combined to create the beautiful hymn we know today. Though it was well-loved in Scotland, "The Lord's My Shepherd" did not enjoy popularity outside the Church of Scotland for nearly 300 years. It finally appeared in the Methodist Hymnal of 1876 and later the Congregational Hymnal of 1916. But it wasn't included in an Anglican hymnbook until 1965. The hymn version of Psalm 23 remains faithful to David's psalm. Its popularity in England grew in part because of its use during the 1947 marriage ceremony between Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phillip. Since that time, it's become a well-known hymn, often requested for weddings and funerals today.
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GO WEST BROM
GO WEST BROM
Maybe not 5 or 10 years down the line, but definitely within a few decades. If you look at the birth rates of us Asian Muslims and then the black people in Britain, it is simply huge. I know a black muslim brother who has 9 kids. Then if you look at the fact that the white population gets small
er every year due to low birth rates and then look at the fact that just one in five immigrants to britain are now white, you have it.
Conrad : )