470

View the Present Through the Promise

Scripture References

Further Reflections on Scripture References

This hymn grapples with the “already, but not yet” of Advent, urging us to respond in gratitude to Christ as a “present” and a “promise” given. Based on the repeated conviction that “Christ will come again,” it calls us to action, to a transformation of life that we might be signs: a small but real portion of the coming kingdom that points toward the complete reality.

 

Sing! A New Creation

Confessions and Statements of Faith References

Further Reflections on Confessions and Statements of Faith References

Heidelberg Catechism, Lord’s Day 19, Question and Answer 52 professes that “in all distress and persecution, with uplifted head, I confidently await the very judge who has already offered himself to the judgment of God in my place and removed the whole curse from me. Christ will cast all his enemies and mine into everlasting condemnation, but will take me and all his chosen ones to himself into the joy and glory of heaven.”

 

Our World Belongs to God, paragraph 57 describes what believers can expect to experience: “…We will see our Savior face to face…he will set all things right…we face that day without fear for the Judge is our Savior whose shed blood declares us righteous. We live confidently, anticipating his coming...”

470

View the Present Through the Promise

Tune Information

Name
FRANKLIN PARK
Key
G Major
Meter
8.5.8.5.8.8.8.5

Recordings

Musical Suggestion

Play this sturdy tune at a steady andante tempo. The consistent invitation to sing “Christ will come again” in harmony reinforces the source of our Advent hope. Make the most of the alteration between the unison singing and the harmony. Use a brass ensemble and/or choir on the harmony parts, or have a choir or a soloist sing most of the text and have the congregation join in on “Christ will come again.”
 
Consider using this song:
  • During the Advent season.
  • As an anchor for a liturgy on the first Sunday of Advent: use the first stanza in the Approach to God, the second stanza at the Proclamation, and the third in the Response to God.
  • As a response to a portion of an Advent prayer that follows the contours of the stanzas.
(from Reformed Worship, Issue 61)
— Emily Brink

Play this sturdy tune at a steady andante tempo. The consistent invitation to sing “Christ will come again” in harmony reinforces the source of our Advent hope. Make the most of the alternation between the unison singing and the harmony. Use a brass ensemble and/or choir on the harmony parts, or have a choir or a soloist sing most of the text and have the congregation join in on “Christ will come again.” 
470

View the Present Through the Promise

Hymn Story/Background

Many advent texts focus on the first coming of Christ into the world; Thomas Troeger wrote this text based on Matthew 24:42-44 to focus more specifically on the promise that “Christ will come again.” He wrote the text in 1985 and it was first published in New Hymns for the Life of the Church (Oxford, 1992). 
— Emily Brink

Roy Hopp writes that he wrote this tune “while traveling to Franklin Park in Bostom, MA and later re-fashioned it into a choral anthem at the request of John Witvliet for his Calvin College Campus Choir. 
— Emily Brink

Author Information

Thomas H. Troeger (b. 1945) has written twenty books in the fields of preaching, poetry, hymnody and worship. He is a professor of preaching at Yale Divinity School and also teaches at the Yale Institute of Sacred Music. His hymns are published in several collections published by Oxford, and are found in many hymnals across the English speaking world; he also travels widely to lecture on imaginative preaching and worship. His latest book on preaching is Wonder Reborn: Preaching on Hymns, Music and Poetry. He is also an accomplished flute player and often performs during presentations as part of his approach to stimulate imaginative preaching and hymnody for the 21st century. He is ordained in both the Presbyterian Church (USA) and in the Episcopal Church. Before coming to Yale, he taught from 1991-2005 at the Iliff School of Theology in Denver, CO. 
— Emily Brink

Composer Information

Roy Hopp (b. 1951) is the Director of Music at Woodlawn Christian Reformed Church in Grand Rapids, MI and Adjunct Professor of Choral Music at Calvin Theological Seminary, where he directs the Calvin Theological Seminary Choir.
 
Hopp graduated from Calvin College with a Bachelor's Degree in Music Education and from Michigan State University with a Master's Degree in Choral Conducting. He did further studies in church music and composition with Richard Hillert at Concordia University in River Forest, IL. He has served as a Director of Music in churches in West Michigan and Colorado for over twenty years.
 
His choral compositions have appeared in the catalogues of AugsburgFortress, earthsongs, GIA, Kjos, MorningStar, and Selah and over eighty of his hymn tunes have been published in hymnals and collections in the United States, Canada, England, Wales and Scotland.

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