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Text Identifier:"^lift_up_thy_head_o_toiling_saint$"

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God Will Supply Thy Need

Author: Rev. Frederic W. Farrar Appears in 2 hymnals First Line: Lift up thy head O toiling saint Refrain First Line: He will supply thy need Lyrics: 1 Lift up thy head O toiling saint, Thy Father’s promise heed; He giveth might unto the faint, God will supply thy need. Refrain: He will supply thy need, He will supply thy need, Yes, all the way from earth to heaven, God will supply thy need. 2 Does He not see the sparrows fall, The raven’s nestling feed, Shall He not listen to thy call? God will supply thy need. [Chorus] 3 According to His boundless wealth In Christ the Lord, indeed, For sickness He will give thee health, God will supply thy need. [Chorus] 4 His love inspires the fleeting breath, His wounds, His sorrows plead; Oh, cling to Him in life and death, God will supply thy need. [Chorus] Used With Tune: [Lift up thy head O toiling saint]

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[Lift up thy head O toiling saint]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: Alfred B. Smith; John W. Peterson Used With Text: God Will Supply Thy Need
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[Lift up thy head thou toiling saints]

Appears in 1 hymnal Composer and/or Arranger: E. Grace Updegraff Incipit: 55553 32156 62165 Used With Text: God Shall Supply Thy Need

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God Will Supply Thy Need

Author: Rev. Frederic W. Farrar Hymnal: Favorites Number 5 #32 (1961) First Line: Lift up thy head O toiling saint Refrain First Line: He will supply thy need Lyrics: 1 Lift up thy head O toiling saint, Thy Father’s promise heed; He giveth might unto the faint, God will supply thy need. Refrain: He will supply thy need, He will supply thy need, Yes, all the way from earth to heaven, God will supply thy need. 2 Does He not see the sparrows fall, The raven’s nestling feed, Shall He not listen to thy call? God will supply thy need. [Chorus] 3 According to His boundless wealth In Christ the Lord, indeed, For sickness He will give thee health, God will supply thy need. [Chorus] 4 His love inspires the fleeting breath, His wounds, His sorrows plead; Oh, cling to Him in life and death, God will supply thy need. [Chorus] Languages: English Tune Title: [Lift up thy head O toiling saint]
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God Shall Supply Thy Need

Author: Rev. Frederick W. Farr Hymnal: Hymns of the Christian Life #319 (1891) First Line: Lift up thy head thou toiling saints Refrain First Line: He will supply thy need Languages: English Tune Title: [Lift up thy head thou toiling saints]

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Alfred B. Smith

1916 - 2001 Composer of "[Lift up thy head O toiling saint]" in Favorites Number 5 Used pseudonym B. C. Laurelton ---------- In 1930, he began playing on radio broadcasts in Jersey City, New Jersey, on "The Old Fashioned Gospel Hour." After meeting Wendell P. Loveless, Alfred enrolled at the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago and became a member of the WMBI staff. During service as Minister of Music at The Church of the Open Door in Philadelphia, he taught at The Philadelphia School of the Bible in the fall of 1938. During that year, he wrote "For God So Loved the World" after visiting the ninety-four year-old hymn writer George C. Stebbins. Smith met Billy Graham when they were both students at Wheaton College. During their long collaboration, they founded Singspiration in 1941. After graduating from Wheaton, Smith, Graham, and George Beverly Shea started "Youth for Christ" in Chicago. --Daniel Mahraun (from livinghymns.org)

John W. Peterson

1921 - 2006 Composer of "[Lift up thy head O toiling saint]" in Favorites Number 5

Frederick W. Farrar

1831 - 1903 Person Name: Rev. Frederic W. Farrar Author of "God Will Supply Thy Need" in Favorites Number 5 Farrar, Frederic William, D.D., son of the Rev. Charles Penhorn Farrar, sometime a missionary in India, and late Rector of Sidcup, Kent. He was born at Bombay, Aug. 7th, 1831; and educated at King William's College, Isle of Man, and at King's College, London. In 1850 he obtained a classical exhibition, and in 1852 a scholarship at the University of London, whence, after taking the degree of B.A., he passed to Trinity College, Cambridge. There, in 1852, he took (with other prizes) the Chancellor's Prize in English verse, and graduated in first-class classical honours in 1854. In the same year he entered Holy Orders, and was subsequently for some time an assistant master at Harrow School. In 1871 he was appointed to the head mastership of Marlborough College, which he held until 1876, when he was nominated a Canon of Westminster Abbey and Rector of St. Margaret's, Westminster. He had previously been chosen Select Preacher before the University of Cambridge in 1868, and again in 1874, 1875, and Hulsean Lecturer in 1870. He was also appointed in 1869 a Chaplain to the Queen, and in 1883, Archdeacon of Westminster. Archdeacon Farrar has achieved a high reputation both as a writer and a preacher. He is the author of some volumes of fiction for the young which soon attained great popularity, as well as of several important works in the departments of philology and theology. Of the latter, his Life of Christ and Life and Work of St. Paul are the best known. As a preacher, Archdeacon Farrar stands in the first rank as a master of graceful eloquence. His contributions to hymnody include, "Father, before Thy throne of light," "God and Father, great and holy," and a beautiful carol, "In the fields with their flocks abiding." [George Arthur Crawford, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907) ================== Farrar, F. W. , p. 365, ii. Dr. Farrar became Dean of Canterbury in 1895, and died at Canterbury, March 22, 1903. His Life, &c, by his son, was published in 1904. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)
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