6674. Thou Art Coming, O My Savior

1. Thou art coming, O my Savior,
Thou art coming, O my King,
In Thy beauty all resplendent,
In Thy glory all transcendent;
Well may we rejoice and sing:
Coming! in the opening east
Herald brightness slowly swells;
Coming! O my glorious Priest,
Hear we not Thy golden bells?

2. Thou art coming, Thou art coming;
We shall meet Thee on Thy way,
We shall see Thee, we shall know Thee,
We shall bless Thee, we shall show Thee
All our hearts could never say:
What an anthem that will be,
Ringing out our love to Thee,
Pouring out our rapture sweet
At Thine own all glorious feet.

3. Thou art coming; at Thy table
We are witnesses for this;
While remembering hearts Thou meetest
In communion clearest, sweetest,
Earnest of our coming bliss,
Showing not Thy death alone,
And Thy love exceeding great;
But Thy coming and Thy throne,
All for which we long and wait.

4. Thou art coming, we are waiting
With a hope that cannot fail,
Asking not the day or hour,
Resting on Thy Word of power,
Anchored safe within the veil.
Time appointed may be long,
But the vision must be sure;
Certainty shall make us strong,
Joyful patience can endure.

5. O the joy to see Thee reigning,
Thee, my own belovèd Lord!
Every tongue Thy name confessing,
Worship, honor, glory, blessing
Brought to Thee with glad accord;
Thee, my Master and my Friend,
Vindicated and enthroned;
Unto earth’s remotest end
Glorified, adored, and owned!

Text Information
First Line: Thou art coming, O my Savior
Title: Thou Art Coming, O My Savior
Author: Fran­ces R. Hav­er­gal (1873)
Meter: 87.88.77.777
Language: English
Source: The Rock, 1873
Copyright: Public Domain
Notes: Com­posed at Win­ter­dyne, this is the first hymn she wrote "af­ter her King took her by the hand and led her in­to the good­ly land." Memorials of F. R. H., by Frances Havergal’s sister, says: Some time af­ter­wards, in an­swer to my quest­ion when we were talk­ing qui­et­ly to­ge­ther, Frances said, "Yes, it was on Ad­vent Sun­day, December 2, 1873, I first saw clear­ly the bless­ed­ness of true con­se­cra­tion. I saw it as a flash, and when you see it you can ne­ver unsee."
Tune Information
Name: BEVERLEY
Composer: Will­iam Henry Monk (1875)
Meter: 87.88.77.777
Key: C Major
Source: Hymns An­cient and Mo­dern, 1875
Copyright: Public Domain



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