
1 Awake, awake, O Zion,
Put on thy strength divine,
Thy garments bright in beauty,
The bridal dress be thine:
Jerusalem the holy,
To purity restored;
Meek Bride all fair and lowly,
Go forth to meet thy Lord.
2 From henceforth pure and spotless,
All glorious within,
Prepared to meet the Bridegroom,
And cleansed from every sin;
With love and wonder smitten,
And bowed in guileless shame,
Upon thy heart be written
The new mysterious name.
3 The Lamb who bore our sorrows,
Comes down to earth again;
No sufferer now, but victor,
For evermore to reign:
To reign in every nation,
To rule in every zone,
Oh, world-wide coronation,
In every heart a throne.
3 Awake, awake, O Zion,
Thy bridal day draws nigh,
The day of signs and wonders,
And marvels from on high.
The sun uprises slowly,
But keep thy watch and ward:
Fair Bride, all pure and lowly,
Go forth to meet thy Lord.
Source: Laudes Domini: a selection of spiritual songs, ancient and modern for use in the prayer-meeting #186
First Line: | Awake, awake, O Zion, Put on thy strength divine |
Title: | The Coming Millennium |
Author: | Benjamin Gough (1865) |
Meter: | 7.6.7.6 D |
Language: | English |
Copyright: | Public Domain |
Awake, awake, O Zion. B. Gough. [Second Advent.] Appeared in his Lyra Sabbatica, &c, 1865, p. 151, in 6 stanzas of 8 lines, and entitled, "The coming Millennium," with the quotation of Isa. lii. 1. From that work it passed into the People's Hymnal, 1867; Alton's Supplemental Hymns, 1868, in 5 stanzas, and in other collections both in Great Britain and America. It is also included as the opening hymn of Gough's Hymns of Prayer and Praise, 1875.
-- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)