Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^hail_to_the_savior_harkness$"

Planning worship? Check out our sister site, ZeteoSearch.org, for 20+ additional resources related to your search.

Tunes

tune icon
Tune authorities
Page scansAudio

[Hail to the Savior! whose Passion is waiting]

Appears in 6 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Robert Harkness Incipit: 11117 65635 47777 Used With Text: Hail! All Hail!

Texts

text icon
Text authorities
Page scans

Hail! All Hail!

Author: Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman Appears in 8 hymnals First Line: Hail to the Saviour! whose Passion is waiting Used With Tune: [Hail to the Saviour! whose Passion is waiting]

Instances

instance icon
Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
TextAudio

Hail! All Hail!

Author: J. Wilbur Chapman Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #14861 First Line: Hail to the Savior! whose Passion is waiting Refrain First Line: Hail! all hail! Sing hallelujahs to Jesus! Lyrics: 1 Hail to the Savior! whose Passion is waiting; Who by His death our salvation will bring; Sin will be conquered, life’s day will be dawning: Hail to the Savior, our tributes we bring! Refrain: Hail! all hail! Sing hallelujahs to Jesus! Hail! all hail! He is our coming king! 2 Hail to our Jesus! all Heaven is singing; Loud with His praise all creation will ring; After the cross and the tomb He is living: Hail to our Jesus, who soon may be king! [Refrain] 3 Hail to Messiah! whose triumph is coming; Coming the day when we crown Him as king; Soon we may see Him in glory returning: Hail to Messiah: His victory we sing! [Refrain] 4 Hail to the day when the tombs shall be opening— Glorious day when our Lord shall appear! Bringing our loved ones for whom we are longing: Hail to the day when we meet in the air! [Refrain] Languages: English Tune Title: [Hail to the Savior! whose Passion is waiting]
Page scan

Hail! All Hail!

Author: John W. Chapman Hymnal: Alexander's Hymns No. 4 #40 (1921) First Line: Hail to the Saviour! whose Passion is waiting Refrain First Line: Hail! all hail Topics: Adoration and Praise; Second Coming Languages: English Tune Title: [Hail to the Savior! whose Passion is waiting]
TextPage scanAudio

Hail! All Hail!

Author: Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman Hymnal: Victorious Life Hymns #32 (1919) First Line: Hail to the Saviour! whose Passion is waiting Lyrics: 1 Hail to the Saviour! whose Passion is waiting; Who by His death, our salvation will bring; Sin will be conquered, life’s day will be dawning: Hail to the Saviour, our tributes we bring! Refrain: Hail! all hail! Sing hallelujahs to Jesus! Hail! all hail! He is our coming King. 2 Hail to our Jesus! all heaven is singing; Loud with His praise all creation will ring; After the cross and the tomb He is living: Hail to our Jesus, who soon may be King! [Refrain] 3 Hail to Messiah! whose triumph is coming, Coming the day when we crown Him as King; Soon we may see Him in glory returning: Hail to Messiah; His victory we sing; [Refrain] 4 Hail to the day when the tombs shall be opening— Glorious day when my Lord shall appear! Bringing my loved ones for whom I am longing: Hail to the day when we meet in the air! [Refrain] Topics: Christ; Praise and Worship; Our Lord's Return Tune Title: [Hail to the Saviour! whose Passion is waiting]

People

person icon
Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Robert Harkness

1880 - 1961 Composer of "[Hail to the Savior! whose Passion is waiting]" in The Cyber Hymnal After attending a revival meeting by Reuben Torrey and Charles M. Alexander, Harkness became Alexander’s pianist. He came to Christ shortly thereafter (on a bicycle, he said), and made several round the world tours with Torrey and Alexander. Harkness was especially well known for his program The Music of the Cross, and as the author of correspondence courses in hymn playing. He wrote over 2,000 hymns and Gospel songs in his lifetime. (hymntime.com/tch)

J. Wilbur Chapman

1859 - 1918 Author of "Hail! All Hail!" in The Cyber Hymnal Rv John Wilbur Chapman DD LLD USA 1859-1918. Born in Richmond, IN, he attended Quaker Day School and Methodist Sunday school. At age 17 he made a public declaration of his Christian faith and joined the Richmond Presbyterian Church. He received his seminary degree from Lane Theoloical Seminary, Cincinnati, OH. He was later awarded a Doctorate in Divinity from the College of Wooster, and an LL.D. from Heidelberg University. In 1882 he married Irene Steddon. They had a daughter. His wife died in 1886. In 1888 he married Agnes Pruyn Strain, and they had four children. His second wife died in 1907. In 1910 he married Mabel Cornelia Moulton. He held six pastorates in OH, IN, NY, PA, NY, NY before becoming an evangelist, generally traveling with gospel singer, Charles Alexander. In 1893 he preached with D. L. Moody. Billy Sunday was one of his disciples on the circuit. In 1895 he was appointed Corresponding Secretary of the Presbyterian General Assembly's Committeee on Evangelism, overseeing activities of 51 evangelists in 470 cities. He developed campaign tactics to maximize evangelical successes, trying them first in Pittsburgh, then Syracuse. With funding from philanthropist, John H. Converse, a wealthy Presbyterian, Chapman joined with Alexander to launch evangelical campaigns in 1907. He assembled 21 evangelistic teams after that to cover 42 sections of Philadelphia, preaching for several weeks. 8000 conversions resulted. They repeated this in NC. In 1909 they started a worldwide campaign in Vancouver, BC, and took in cities in Australia, the Phillipines, China, Korea, and Japan. Chapman also held religious summer conferences at Winona Lake, IN, Montreat, NC, and Long Island, NY. Mass evangelism was losing favor in 1910, so he was back holding large revivals with Alexander in 1912. He was also elected moderator of the Presbyterian Church General Assembly, and under so much stress, he developed gall stones. The surgery was too much, and he died two days later. He was also a prolific writer of religious works and hymn lyrics. 19 works. John Perry
It looks like you are using an ad-blocker. Ad revenue helps keep us running. Please consider white-listing Hymnary.org or getting Hymnary Pro to eliminate ads entirely and help support Hymnary.org.