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Text Identifier:"^beyond_the_glittering_starry_sky_which$"

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals

Beyond the glittering, starry sky

Hymnal: Psalms, Hymns and Spiritual Songs, 4th ed. #d21 (1834)
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Beyond the glittering, starry sky

Author: Fanch; Turner Hymnal: The Psalmist #250 (1849)
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Beyond the glittering, starry skies

Hymnal: The Book of Worship #144 (1867) Meter: 8.6.8.6 Lyrics: 1 Beyond the glittering, starry skies, Far as th' eternal hills, There, in the boundless worlds of light, Our dear Redeemer dwells. 2 Legions of angels round His throne In countless armies shine, And swell His praise with golden harps, Attuned to songs divine. 3 "Hail, glorious Prince of peace!" they cry, "Whose unexampled love Moved Thee to quit these glorious realms, And royalties above." 4 Through all His travels here below They did His steps attend, Oft wondering how, or where, at last, The mystic scene would end. 5 They saw His heart transfixed with wounds, And viewed the crimson gore; They saw Him break the bars of death, Which none e'er broke before. 6 They brought His chariot from above, To bear Him to His throne; Clapped their triumphant wings, and cried, "The glorious work is done!" Topics: Angelic Ministry Languages: English

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Authors, composers, editors, etc.

Daniel Turner

1710 - 1798 Person Name: Turner Author of "Beyond the glittering, starry sky" in The Psalmist Turner, Daniel, M.A., was born at Blackwater Park, near St. Albans, March 1, 1710. Having received a good classical education, he for some years kept a boarding-school at Hemel Hempstead, but in 1741 he became pastor of the Baptist church, Reading. Thence he removed, in 1748, to Abingdon, and continued pastor of the Baptist church there until his death on Sept. 5, 1798. He was much respected throughout his denomination, and was the friend and correspondent of Robert Robinson, Dr. Rippon, and other eminent men of that day. He probably received the honorary degree of M.A. from the Baptist College, Providence, Rhode Island. Turner was the author of works on Open Communion and Social Religion; also of Short Meditations on Select Portions of Scripture. His Divine Songs, Hymns and other Poems were published in 1747, and his work, Poems Devotional and Moral, was printed for private circulation in 1794. Four of his hymns are in the Bristol Baptist Collection of Ash & Evans (1769), and eight (including the four already named) in Rippon's Baptist Selection 1787). Only the following are now in common use:— 1. Faith adds new charms to earthly bliss (1769). Excellence of Faith. 2. Jesus, full of all compassion (1769). Sinner's appeal to Christ. 3. Lord of hosts, how lovely fair (1787). Divine Worship. Altered in Baptist Psalms and Hymns, 1858, to “Lord of hosts, how bright, how fair!" The well-known hymn "Beyond the glittering starry skies," in its enlarged form of 28 stanzas, was the joint production of Turner and his brother-in-law, the Rev. J. Fanch. [Rev. W. R. Stevenson, M.A.] -- John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)

James Fanch

1704 - 1767 Person Name: Fanch Author of "Beyond the glittering, starry sky" in The Psalmist Fanch, James, known as the joint author with Daniel Turner of the hymn "Beyond the glittering, starry skies " (q.v.), was born in 1704, and died Dec. 12, 1767. He was for many years a Baptist Minister at Romsey, and Lockerly, Hants. In addition to Sermons, &c, he published a Paraphrase on a Select Number of the Psalms of David, done from the Latin of Buchanan, to which are added some Occasional Pieces, 1764. --John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)
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