#047 ~ Johann Sebastian Bach


Johann Sebastian Bach

Welcome to Telegrams From Heaven

Johann Sebastian Bach compliments a fellow musician for writing a beautiful hymn that shares a heavenly message for the world. We’ve transcribed his telegram into an easier to read experience. We hope you enjoy it. Thanks for dropping by.

Dear Friend,

Philip Doddridge wrote the hymn "O Happy Day" in the 1700s. 

The lyrics are eternal. The hymn shares the joyous message that it is a happy day since Jesus washed our sins away. And how Jesus taught us how to watch and pray and live rejoicing every day.
 
His message is so strong and wonderful and hopeful.
 
It is my prayer that you listen to the hymn and focus on the lyrics. It is a message everyone should cherish every day.
 
Johann Sebastian Bach 
Johann Sebastian Bach

Send This Telegram As a Gift

Please consider sending this telegram as a surprise gift to a family member, friend, co-worker, acquaintance, or to someone you admire or want to encourage. Gift telegrams may be ordered one-at-a-time, or you may subscribe for a series of 3, 4, 12 or 52 telegrams to be mailed to the recipient, one-per-week, over the following weeks.  CLICK HERE TO LEARN MORE OR PLACE AN ORDER.

A Few More Items

Through brief, focused and topical messages, Telegrams From Heaven intends to encourage, entertain and inspire our neighbors around the world. We want to provide hope and inspiration. 

The “authors” of each Telegram From Heaven are men and women of accomplishment who lived in the ancient or recent past. Each were known for their faith, or at least the potential for faith during their lifetimes. They are from around the globe, from every walk of life, and their life stories are inspiring and encouraging. We believe these stories offer powerful messages that might help change lives in some small or meaningful way, even if just to improve your walk with God, or to realize someone cares enough to send you a Telegram From Heaven.

The word “heaven” inspires limitless definitions among the religious and non-religious. A few examples include “the home of God,” “a setting of ultimate perfection in the clouds,” or “a place where the resurrection bodies and departed souls of believers spend eternity.” Most often the word conjures up images of ornate, opulent buildings and streets paved with gold. Of beauty, of paradise, of a heavenly kingdom. 

Most Christians believe it is a real place, separate from Earth. Others are convinced it is close enough for its inhabitants to reveal themselves miraculously to the living. 

Thanks for dropping by. 

FINE PRINT:  
WARNING: Telegrams may irritate the eyes, cause soreness in various muscles or induce a groan, a grin, a smile or a laugh. If the reader has no sense of humor, block out anything that has been read and click to other sites without humor, serious religious conviction, credibility or journalistic standards. We recommend the New York Times or Wall Street Journal. The writer involved in the creation of these telegrams was left unsupervised. We apologize. Contact your doctor, priest, rabbi or pastor if horns appear at the top of your head. Reading a telegram has not been “proven” to cause earthquakes, headaches, diarrhea, nausea, or hair to catch fire … yet. 
  
CAUTION: Not intended to be read if drunk, constipated or ignorant. Do not operate heavy machinery or drive a car while reading telegrams. Do not read while sleeping. 
  
THE GOOD NEWS: Telegrams are fat free, caffeine free and non-toxic. No animals have been harmed during the writing or production of content included on this website. Reading these telegrams have not been found to cause cancer in lab mice. Heaven is a real place. 

Recent Posts