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Tune Identifier:"^the_day_is_fast_approaching_when_the_sav$"

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[The day is fast approaching when the Saviour shall appear]

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: J. Harker Incipit: 55565 11767 71744 Used With Text: Advent Glory

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Advent Glory

Author: Joseph Harker, 1880-1970 Appears in 3 hymnals First Line: The day is fast approaching when the Savior shall appear Refrain First Line: We'll see Him as He is Lyrics: 1. The day is fast approaching when the Savior shall appear, And every eye His glory shall behold; The tokens of His coming fill the loyal heart with cheer Though strife abounds and love is waxing cold. Refrain We’ll see Him as He is, And the brightness of His glory we shall share; We’ll see Him as He is, And the likeness of His image we shall bear. 2. In all His Father’s glory, clothed in majesty unveiled, With myriads of the shining angel band, The King descends triumphant in whose might we have prevailed, And all the ransomed rise at His command. [Refrain] 3. Oh, may we all as sons of light be watching unto prayer, For surely our redemption draweth nigh; With holy zeal and patient faith, let every soul prepare To join the advent chorus in the sky. [Refrain] Used With Tune: [The day is fast approaching when the Savior shall appear]

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Advent Glory

Author: Joseph Harker, 1880-1970 Hymnal: The Cyber Hymnal #34 First Line: The day is fast approaching when the Savior shall appear Refrain First Line: We'll see Him as He is Lyrics: 1. The day is fast approaching when the Savior shall appear, And every eye His glory shall behold; The tokens of His coming fill the loyal heart with cheer Though strife abounds and love is waxing cold. Refrain We’ll see Him as He is, And the brightness of His glory we shall share; We’ll see Him as He is, And the likeness of His image we shall bear. 2. In all His Father’s glory, clothed in majesty unveiled, With myriads of the shining angel band, The King descends triumphant in whose might we have prevailed, And all the ransomed rise at His command. [Refrain] 3. Oh, may we all as sons of light be watching unto prayer, For surely our redemption draweth nigh; With holy zeal and patient faith, let every soul prepare To join the advent chorus in the sky. [Refrain] Languages: English Tune Title: [The day is fast approaching when the Savior shall appear]
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Advent Glory

Author: J. H. Hymnal: Gospel Melodies and Evangelistic Hymns #172 (1944) First Line: The day is fast approaching when the Saviour shall appear Refrain First Line: We'll see Him as He is Topics: His Second Coming Languages: English Tune Title: [The day is fast approaching when the Saviour shall appear]
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We’ll see Him as He is

Author: Joseph Harker Hymnal: Small Church Music #6595 First Line: The day is fast approaching when the Savior shall appear Tune Title: [The day is fast approaching when the Savior shall appear]

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Joseph Harker

1880 - 1970 Person Name: J. Harker Author of "Advent Glory" Joseph Harker, Jr., was born on March 6, 1880, in Alnwick, Northumberland, England, into a musical Methodist family. They moved to the Newcastle-upon-Tyne area in 1900. He taught music for several years in his home in Simonside Street in Wallsend, commemorating this name in one of his hymn tunes (No. 543 in the 1985 Seventh-day Adventist Hymnal). He evidently inherited musical talent from his father, Joseph Harker, Sr., who at one time owned a music shop in the coastal port of Amble. Joseph, Jr., married in 1905, and soon after joined the Seventh-day Adventist church. In 1916 he was invited to work part-time in the North England Conference. Two years later he was appointed president of the Irish Mission, holding that office for the quadrennium. He was then transferred to pastoral work in the South England Conference, but in 1939 he was recalled to the British Union as leader of the Youth and the Home Missionary Departments to fill the gap left by the early demise of his predecessor. He continued there until 1946 when he retired to Reading in Berkshire. He served as elder in the church there for several more years before his death on May 15, 1970. His obituary noted, "Some of our best-loved and oft-used hymns came from his pen ... . His compositions will continue to inspire us until we, with him, can hear the angels sing!" (Excerpted with permission by La Sierra University from an article in the Spring 1991 issue of Adventist Heritage) www.iamaonline.com/