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Text Identifier:"^all_hail_thou_great_first_born$"

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Presentation in the Temple

Meter: 6.6.8.6 Appears in 4 hymnals First Line: All hail, thou great first born Lyrics: 1 All hail, thou great first born, The holy head of man! What floods of grace roll on to view, In mercy's glorious plan! 2 The fulness mankind are: The temple, Lord, art thou: Thy body comprehends the whole Of Adam's tribes below. 3 In thee, presented pure Before the throne of God, All nations there are made anew, Of one life giving blood. 4 First born of Heav'n, of earth, Of ev'ry creature, hail! Born to redeem from death and hell, Thy purpose cannot fail. 5 The skies may waste in flame; All systems melt away; The sun himself turn black as night; And earth be lost to day. 6 But thou shalt still remain, Th' unchanging, Saviour God; And as eternal ages roll, Thy name shall be ador'd. Topics: Hymns, on the Life of Immanuel, the Head of every Man Scripture: Luke 2:22

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Presentation in the Temple

Hymnal: Psalms, Hymns and Spiritual Songs #CXVIII (1792) Meter: 6.6.8.6 First Line: All hail, thou great first born Lyrics: 1 All hail, thou great first born, The holy head of man! What floods of grace roll on to view, In mercy's glorious plan! 2 The fulness mankind are: The temple, Lord, art thou: Thy body comprehends the whole Of Adam's tribes below. 3 In thee, presented pure Before the throne of God, All nations there are made anew, Of one life giving blood. 4 First born of Heav'n, of earth, Of ev'ry creature, hail! Born to redeem from death and hell, Thy purpose cannot fail. 5 The skies may waste in flame; All systems melt away; The sun himself turn black as night; And earth be lost to day. 6 But thou shalt still remain, Th' unchanging, Saviour God; And as eternal ages roll, Thy name shall be ador'd. Topics: Hymns, on the Life of Immanuel, the Head of every Man Scripture: Luke 2:22 Languages: English
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All hail, thou great First Born

Author: George Richards Hymnal: Psalms, Hymns and Spiritual Songs #A28 (1808)

All hail, thou great First Born

Author: George Richards Hymnal: Hymns for the Use of the Society of United Christian Friends Professing the Faith of Universal Salvation #d9 (1817) Languages: English

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George Richards

1755 - 1814 Author of "Presentation in the Temple" Richards, George, born near Newport, Rhode Island, circa 1755. For some years he was Purser and Chaplain in the United States Navy, and also taught a school in Boston. In 1789 he became an Universalist preacher, ministered at Portsmouth, New Haven, 1793-1809, and from 1809 in Philadelphia, where, his mind having given way under trouble, he died by his own hand, March 16, 1816. With S. Lane he edited the Universalist Hymn Book, published at Boston, 1792. This was one of the earliest collections of that body. It contained 49 of Richards's hymns. In 1801 he published A Collection of Hymns, Dover, New Hampshire, which contained 6 additional hymns by himself, and in 1806, also at Dover, a second edition of the same, greatly enlarged, with another 26 hymns. Of these the following are in common use at the present time:— 1. 0 Christ, what gracious words. The Gospel Message. This hymn appeared in the Boston Collection, 1792, and is the best of the early Universalist hymns. In the Andover Sabbath Hymn Book, 1858, it is given as "Saviour, what gracious words." In this form and also in the original, it is found in several collections. 2. Long as the darkening cloud abode. Easter. This hymn in modern collections, as the Songs of the Sanctuary, 1865, No. 687, is composed thus: stanza i. and ii., 11. 1-4, are from Richards, and the rest of the hymn, 3 stanzas of 8 lines in all, is anonymous. Additional hymns by Richards, from both the Boston and the Dover collections, are in modern Universalist hymn-books. [Rev. F. M. Bird, M.A.] --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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