There's a Man in the glory

B294 CB505 Cs27* D505 E505 F89 G505 K383 LSM136 P243 R218 S218 T505
1
There's a Man in the glory
  Whose Life is for me.
He's pure and He's holy,
  Triumphant and free.
He's wise and He's loving
  How tender is He!
His Life in the glory,
  My life must be;
His Life in the glory,
  My life must be.
2
There's a Man in the glory
  Whose Life is for me.
He overcame Satan;
  From bondage He's free.
In Life He is reigning;
  How kingly is He!
His Life in the glory,
  My life must be;
His Life in the glory,
  My life must be.
3
There's a Man in the glory
  Whose Life is for me.
In Him is no sickness;
  No weakness has He.
He's strong and in vigor,
  How buoyant is He!
His Life in the glory
  My life may be;
His Life in the glory
  My life may be.
4
There's a Man in the glory
  Whose Life is for me.
His peace is abiding;
  How patient is He!
He's joyful and radiant,
  Expecting to see
His Life in the glory
  Lived out in me;
His Life in the glory
  Lived out in me.
60
Hs

United States

Praise the Man in the glory! His life is for me! We can be so buoyant, triumphant and joyful even in the presence of Hurricane Florence. Lord is our life!


Greg Paysnoe

Moore, OK, United States

Our life must be!


Sue

Canada

赞美祂的荣耀生命!


Ana Lara

Tolland, Connecticut, United States

Mary E. McDonough lived to be 100 years old. She wrote “God’s Plan of Salvation” which is a Christian classic and a must read. In the preface she explains why she wrote it : To counterattack “the pernicious teaching of evolution” that was being taught in the schools. She develops a new method of presenting the truths in God’s written word.

Mary in her introduction says ”Experience has demonstrated the wisdom of teaching fundamentals from a biological standpoint thereby counteracting in a logical standpoint convincing manner the destructive work of infidel teachers and saving the young from their subtle snares.”

The book comtains a section on “figures” where she presents man as illustrated by a circle having a spirit, soul and body.

This hymn was originally a poem found in the back of one of Mary’s books in which a tune was added thus becoming a favorite of many.


Tim Ou

Austin, Texas, United States

Whose life is for me.


Toraji Manchester

Gainesville, Florida, United States

This song changed my life forever🔥💯👌


Grace Vazquez

Bloomington, California, United States

It's lit fam👌👌


Glory Jung

Anaheim, CA, United States

A man on the throne ....wow wow wow wow


Joe R

Houston, Texas, United States

Praise the Lord! God became man for this, so that man could live with Him in glory.


Isaac

Harare, Zimbabwe

Just enjoyed this hymn with the Saints at Lord's Table meeting. Praise the Lord for He has overcome already... We just need to enjoy!!

Revised version:

1. There is One in the glory

Who's God, yet man is He;

He's wise, righteous, holy;

Bright, loving is He;

By Him, life forsaking,

Salvation was done;

His nature partaking,

Like Him I become.

2. There is One in the glory—

Victorious King is He;

He conquered the foe, destroyed

His authority.

Broke Hades, ascended,

Far above all rule,

Now I'm with Him ascended,

Victorious too.

3. There is One in the glory—

My very life is He;

Within me, each moment,

He rules, guiding me.

His nature, so holy,

He's forming in me;

His life full of glory,

Expressing through me.

4. There is One in the glory—

My very hope is He;

He'll soon be returning

And rapturing me.

With His glorious power,

He'll transfigure me;

Then, from that glorious hour,

E'er like Him I'll be.

We should not do things in the same way all the time so that our meetings become full of traditions. For instance, in a meeting we should not always begin by singing and then continue with pray-singing. We need to be living. In a meeting, after singing a hymn, such as Hymns, #505, someone may stand up and say, "Brothers and sisters, in this hymn there is a line that says, 'How buoyant is He!' I would like to testify of how buoyant Christ is in me." Then such a one may give a testimony of how he experienced Christ as the buoyant One in his daily life. Then after his brief speaking, he may take the lead to sing stanza 3 of this hymn. This will be a living exhibition of Christ. There is no need for us to keep any forms in the meetings. Before we sing a hymn, a brother or a sister can stand up and say, "Brothers and sisters, let me testify something before we sing this hymn." Then he or she can proceed to speak a short word of experience about a line or a point in the hymn. We should not be formal but should be living....

When we pray-read the Word, our emphasis is not on interpretation or on understanding but on eating and receiving the Lord's word into us and on digesting the Lord's word. Pray-reading is not for receiving teaching but for obtaining nourishment. This is vastly different from studying and searching through the Bible. This does not mean that we do not care for the Bible; rather, it means that we do not want a dead Bible, a Bible only in letter. We want to receive a living Bible, a Bible in spirit. We do not want to read the Bible mechanically or read it for research. Rather, we want to read the Bible livingly and to pray-read the Bible. The more we pray-read, the more living and satisfied we are inwardly. The more we pray-read, the more fresh and free we are inwardly. The more we pray-read, the more it seems as if a fire is burning within us. The more we pray-read, the more we soar like eagles stretching out their wings. There is a hymn that contains these few lines: "There's a Man in the glory / Whose Life is for me. /.. .He's strong and in vigor, / How buoyant is He!" (Hymns, #505). The Lord's life does not sink or fall; it is always buoyant and soaring. The more we pray-read and enjoy the Lord, the higher we will soar.

At this point we may ask how we can enjoy Christ and have Him constituted into us when He is in heaven and we are on earth. The answer lies in the fact that there is a transmission taking place from Christ in heaven to us on earth by means of the all-inclusive Spirit. By means of this transmission, the electricity from the heavenly power plant flows into us, just as electricity flows from the power plant into our homes and into the meeting hall. Hallelujah for the transmission from the third heaven into us! "There's a Man in the glory Whose Life is for me" (Hymns, #505). Christ is the Man in the glory, but His life is for us. We all need a vision of the heavenly transmission from the glorified Christ into us. Furthermore, we need to stay open to this transmission so that it will not be cut off. Even a small amount of insulation will cause this transmission to cease. Between Christ as the fullness of God and the one new man, there is our experience of the heavenly transmission. May there be no insulation to hinder this divine transmission.

If today we had only a Redeemer who died for us on the cross and only a Savior who stretches out His hand to pull us out of the "water" of our troubles, this would not be sufficient. The Savior we need today is the One who can enter into us. We need the life-giving Spirit who dwells in our spirit and who is one spirit with us (1 Cor. 6:17). When we fall into the "water," He falls in with us. He is buoyant. If we did not have the life-giving Spirit in our spirit, we would sink in the "water" because we are not buoyant. But, praise the Lord, we do have a buoyant One within us. The third stanza of Hymns, #505 expresses this thought: "There's a Man in the glory / Whose Life is for me. / ...He's strong and in vigor, / How buoyant is He!" Where is Christ buoyant? He is buoyant in our spirit. He has been buoyant within me for sixty-five years. Because of this buoyant One, I can boast that I have been kept from falling. The life-giving Spirit as the seed of Abraham and as the consummation of the processed Triune God is the top blessing. As such a One, He can be in us with both His divinity and His humanity. How wonderful this is! The totality of what He is, is called the Spirit. The good land given to Abraham was a type of this Spirit. The Spirit is the blessing God promised Abraham.

Yet you are concerned about losing your temper. You keep regretting that you have not kept your marriage vow to love your wife or to submit to your husband. How you need your concepts changed! For you to live is Christ, not spirituality. For you to live is Christ, not love for your wife or submission to your husband. Stop trying to be even-tempered. God does not care about your being delivered from your temper. A statue never loses its temper, however much it is insulted. Do you think God wants you to be like that? God wants you to be full of Christ! Even if you are a very hot-tempered person, you can still live Christ. What we need is what God wants—Christ. God wants Christ to be lived out of us.

Piano Hymns