These are the facts as we have received them
- Matthew 24:31
- Luke 1:1-4
- Luke 24:44-46
- John 19:35-36
- Romans 5:12-21
- Romans 5:5
- Romans 6:4-10
- Romans 8:9-11
- 1 Corinthians 15:1-4
- 1 Corinthians 15:20-23
- 1 Corinthians 15:51-57
- Galatians 2:20
- Ephesians 3:16-17
- 1 Thessalonians 4:16
- 2 Timothy 1:10
- 2 Timothy 2:11-12
- 2 Timothy 2:8
- 1 John 3:24
- 1 John 4:13
- 629
These are the facts as we have received them,
these are the truths that the Christian believes,
this is the basis of all of our preaching:
Christ died for sinners and rose from the tomb.
2. These are the facts as we have received them:
Christ has fulfilled what the Scriptures foretold,
Adam’s whole family in death had been sleeping,
Christ through his rising restores us to life.
3. These are the facts as we have received them;
we, with our Saviour, have died on the cross;
now, having risen, our Jesus lives in us,
gives us his Spirit and makes us his home.
4. These are the facts as we have received them:
we shall be changed in the blink of an eye,
trumpets shall sound as we face life immortal,
this is the victory through Jesus our Lord.
5. These are the facts as we have received them,
these are the truths that the Christian believes,
this is the basis of all of our preaching;
Christ died for sinners and rose from the tomb.
© Author / Jubilate Hymns
This text has been altered by Praise!
An unaltered JUBILATE text can be found at www.jubilate.co.uk
Michael Saward
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Tune
-
Yvonne Metre: - 10 10 11 10 dactylic
Composer: - Warren, Norman Leonard
The story behind the hymn
In 1971 Michael Saward, then living at Beckenham and working as the Church of England’s Radio and TV Officer, was a member of the team working towards Psalm Praise. On 6 June, Trinity Sunday, he wrote this extended paraphrase of verses in 1 Corinthians 15, Galatians 2 and Romans 8 as ‘An Easter Psalm’, as part of his quota of work. It is intended to correspond to the ‘Easter Anthems’ in The Book of Common Prayer (cf 469 and notes), and is also described by the author as a ‘credal canticle’. Both before and after that he had written several Psalm versions, most (like this) without rhyme; it appeared with them in PsP in 1973, with two more new Easter texts by other writers. It found a place in many subsequent books including the 1980 Songs of Worship, HTC, and N American collections such as Hymns for the Living Church, 1974, which lopped off the final (repeated) stz, and The Worshiping Church, 1990, which restored it. Later, as a canon of St Paul’s Cathedral, he published a volume of his cathedral sermons entitled These are the facts. The NT writers are one in asserting that the Christian gospel rests on firm evidence and historical events. The hymn was a favourite of the author and Christian apologist Sir Norman Anderson.
Norman Warren’s tune YVONNE, named after the composer’s wife, was written for the words and published with them in PsP. He too was on the team preparing the book, and composed the music at Leamington Spa, Warwicks, where he was vicar of another St Paul’s. The dactylic rhythm also allows tunes such as EPIPHANY HYMN (274) to be used, but the original music gives the composition much of its distinctive flavour.
A look at the author
Saward, Michael John
b Blackheath, SE London 1932; d Switzerland 2015. Eltham Coll; Bristol Univ and Tyndale Hall Bristol (BA); ordained 1956. He ministered in Croydon, Edgware and Liverpool before becoming the C of E’s Radio and TV Officer 1967–72. From 1972 to 1991 he served W London incumbencies in Fulham and Ealing; during the latter he barely survived a vicious attack on himself and his family at the vicarage, by intruders high on drugs. He then became Canon Treasurer of St Paul’s Cathedral from 1991, providing one of the two evangelical voices heard throughout the decade from the cathedral pulpit; some sermons were published in 1997 as These are the Facts (a title from hymn 629). He retired to Wapping, E London, in 2000. He was a Church Commissioner and General Synod member; a prolific writer, speaker and broadcaster on the local and national church, doctrine, mission, liturgy, sexual ethics, baptism and hymnody. His book Signed, Sealed, Delivered: finding the key to the Bible (2004) explores the concept of ‘covenant’ as that key.
From early 1962 onwards he wrote over 100 hymn texts, his first ones including ‘Christ triumphant’ were published in Youth Praise (1966, 1969), followed by several in Psalm Praise (1973) and Hymns for Today’s Church (1982) of which he was words editor. He was a founding Director and later Chairman of Jubilate Hymns, with a leading role in other Jubilate collections including Sing Glory (1999) which features 23 of his hymns. 75 of them were published in 2006, with an introduction and brief notes, in Christ Triumphant and other hymns. In 2009 he initiated and edited Come Celebrate, a unique collection of 291 lesser-known hymn-texts by 20 living authors, 14 of whom are represented in Praise! He said of himself, ‘My style is deliberately punchy and I love to use strong, graphic illustration’. Nos.119D, 162, 166, 249, 291, 446, 525, 592, 629, 635, 656, 849, 865*.