All Hail The Power of Jesus Name

All Hail The Power of Jesus Name Introduction

Introduction

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Intro

Ab
 

Verse 1

Ab Db/Ab Eb/Ab Ab
All   hail the pow'r of   Jesus' Name let   angels prostrate   fall
Ab
Bring   forth the royal diadem
Ab Eb/G Fm Bb Ebsus Eb
And   crown      Him      Lord      of       all           
Ab Db/Ab
Bring   forth the royal   diadem
Ab/C Db Ebsus Eb (Fm)
And   crown     Him     Lord       of        all

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Fm Db Ab/Eb Eb
                                                                       

Verse 2

Ab Db/Ab
Ye   chosen seed of   Israel's race
Eb/Ab Ab
Ye   ransomed from the   fall
Ab
Hail   Him Who saves you by His grace
Ab Eb/G Fm Bb Ebsus Eb
And   crown      Him      Lord      of       all           
Ab/C Db Eb
Hail   Him Who saves you   by His   grace
Ab/C Db Ebsus Eb (Fm)
And   crown     Him     Lord       of        all

Turn (2X)

Fm Db Ab/Eb Eb
                                                                       

Verse 3

Ab Db/Ab Eb/Ab Ab
Let   every kindred   every tribe on   this terrestrial   ball
Ab
To   Him all majesty ascribe
Ab Eb/G Fm Bb Ebsus Eb
And   crown      Him      Lord      of       all           
Ab/C Db Eb
To   Him all majes ty asc ribe
Ab/C Db Ebsus Eb (Fm)
And   crown     Him     Lord       of        all

Verse 4

Fm Db Ab/Eb Eb
Crown Him the Lord of   love be hold His hands and   side
Ab/C Db Bb/D Eb Eb Bb Eb
Rich   wounds yet   vis   -    ible   a bove in   beauty g lori -  fied
Ab/C Db Bb/D Eb
No   angel in the   sky can   fully bear that   sight
Ab/C Db Bbm Fm
But   downward   bends each   burning   eye
Db Eb (Fm)
At   myste ries so   bright

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Fm Db Ab/Eb Eb
                                                                       

Verse 5

Fm Db Ab/Eb Eb
Crown Him the Lord of   life Who   triumphed o'er the   grave
Ab/C Db Bb/D Eb
And   rose vic torious   to the   strife
Eb Bb Eb
For   those He   came to   save
Ab/C Db Bb/D Eb
His   glories now we   sing Who   died and rose on   high
Ab/C Db Bbm Fm
Who   died e ternal   life to   bring
Db Eb (Fm)
And   lives that   death may   die

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Fm Db Ab/Eb Eb
                                                                       

Verse 6

Fm Db Ab/Eb Eb
Crown Him with many   crowns the   Lamb upon His   throne
Ab/C Db Bb/D Eb
Hark   how the   heavenly   anthem   drowns
Eb Bb Eb
All   music   but its   own
Ab/C Db Bb/D Eb
A wake my soul and   sing of   Him who died for   thee
Ab/C Db Bbm Fm
And   hail Him   as thy   matchless   King
Db Eb Ab
Through   all   e t  erni   ty

Verse 7

Ab
O that with yonder sacred throng we at His feet may fall
Ab
We'll   join the everlasting song
Ab Eb/G Fm Bb Ebsus Eb
And   crown      Him      Lord      of       all           
Ab/C Db Eb
We'll   join the ever lasting   song
Ab/C Db Ebsus Eb
And   crown     Him     Lord        

Tag (2X)

Ab/C Db Ebsus Eb
And   crown     Him     Lord        
Ab/C Db/F Ebsus Eb (Fm)
And   crown     Him     Lord       of   all

Outro (2X)

Fm Db Ab/Eb Eb (Ab)
                                                                                            

Devotional

All Hail the Power of Jesus Name

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All Hail the Power of Jesus’ Name

After making purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high . . .

(Hebrews 1:3)

 

Imagine that moment when Jesus first sat down on heaven’s throne. 

 

Having taken on our full flesh and blood, and lived among us, and died sacrificially for us, and having risen in triumph, defeating sin and death, and ascended to heaven, and pioneered our way, as human, into the very presence of God his Father, Jesus stepped forward toward the throne, all heaven captive with history’s great coronation, a ceremony so glorious that even the most extravagant of earthly coronations barely reflect it.

 

Crown Him Lord of All

 

The first chapter of Hebrews gives us a glimpse into this coronation of Christ, this moment when the God-man is formally crowned Lord of all. Verse 3 sets the scene: “After making purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high.” 

 

Verse 5 then quotes from Psalm 2, which was a psalm of coronation for the ancient people of God: “You are my Son,” God says, “today I have begotten you.” It was on the day of his ascension to the throne that the new king of God’s people formally became his “son” in the sense of serving as his official representative to his people. The coronation was the day, so to speak, that God begat the human king as lord over his people.

 

To Him All Majesty Ascribe

Next, verse 6 mentions “when [God] brings the firstborn into the world.” What world? Is this a reference to the incarnation? It is not. Hebrews 2:5 clarifies by referencing “the world to come, of which we are speaking.” In other words, “the world” in the context of Hebrews 1 is not our earthly, temporal age. Rather, the world into which God brings his firstborn here is the heavenly realm, what is to us “the world to come.”

 

The setting is indeed the great enthronement of the King of kings. And as Jesus, the victorious God-man, enters heaven itself, and ascends to its ruling seat, God announces, “Let all God’s angels worship him” (verse 6). Him: God and man in one spectacular person. 

 

Originally God had made man “a little lower than the heavenly beings” (Psalm 8:5). But now the angels, the hosts of heaven, worship him, “the man Christ Jesus” (1 Timothy 2:5). So great is he, as a genuine member of our race, that he not only eclipses and bypasses the race of angels, but in doing so, he brings us with him. No redeemer has arisen for fallen angels. “Surely it is not angels that he helps, but he helps the offspring of Abraham” (Hebrews 2:16). Angels no longer look down on humanity but up. We now experience firsthand “things into which angels long to look” (1 Peter 1:12).

 

This new king of the universe is indeed fully man, and fully God, and addressed as such in verse 8 (quoting Psalm 45): “Your throne, O God, is forever and ever.” Verse 10 (echoing Psalm 102) restates the glory — “Your years will have no end” — which is the climactic expression of (and even better than) saying, “Long live the king!” (1 Samuel 10:24; 2 Samuel 16:16; 1 Kings 1:25, 34; 2 Kings 11:12; 2 Chronicles 23:11).

 

Bring Forth the Royal Diadem

 

Finally, the grand finale, in verse 13, sounds the great oracle of Psalm 110. Again the Father speaks: “Sit at my right hand until I make your enemies a footstool for your feet.” For generations and centuries, the people of God had waited for the day in which great David’s greater son, his lord, would ascend to the throne and hear these sacred words from God himself. Then, at long last, captured for us in the sketch of Hebrews 1, the great enigmatic vision of Psalm 110 was finally fulfilled. 

 

Having finished the work his Father gave him to accomplish, God’s own Son (not merely David’s) has ascended to the throne — not a throne on earth but the throne of heaven. The Father himself has crowned him King of all the universe. He has called forth the royal diadem and crowned him king of every kindred, every tribe.

 

Join the Everlasting Song

 

We who call him King and Lord will not only gather one day with “yonder sacred throng” to fall at his feet, but even now, he gives us the dignity of participating in heaven’s ongoing coronation ceremony. We crown him with our praises, especially as we gather weekly with our new kindred and tribe in worship. 

 

The glorious enthronement of Christ has not ended but continues. We see it now and experience it by faith, and participate with our praises, and one day soon, with all his redeemed, we at last will join in the everlasting song that has not ended, and will grow only richer and sweeter for all eternity.