To God Be The Glory

Album: The Hymns Of Fanny Crosby (1875)
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Songfacts®:

  • Fanny Crosby was one of the most prolific hymn writers, composing over 8,000 hymns during her long life. One of the most famous is "To God Be the Glory," set to music by her longtime collaborator William Howard Doane. It first saw the light of day in 1875, tucked into a hymn collection called Brightest and Best. And it really was.
  • "To God Be the Glory" only gained worldwide recognition when it became a key hymn during Billy Graham's 1954 London crusade, launching it into the spiritual stratosphere.
  • The words are straightforward but profound, a kind of everyman's theology wrapped in a tune you can hum long after the service ends. The first stanza is all about God's love and Christ's sacrifice. The second dives into redemption and forgiveness. And the third gets to the heart of longing and anticipation, the promise of seeing Jesus face-to-face. And then there's the refrain, a full-throated call to praise, like a banner flying high.
  • Fanny Crosby wrote this hymn, like all her others, in her head - no pen, no paper, no fuss. Blind since she was six weeks old, Crosby composed entire hymns in her mind and dictated them later. Six or seven hymns a day sometimes.
  • Fanny Crosby's work wasn't lofty or ornate; it was simple, heartfelt, and aimed straight at the "average folks" in the pews. She wanted to pull them closer to God, to give them words for their gratitude, their sorrow, their hope. And she did. Her hymns shaped evangelical music in America, earning her titles like the "Queen of Gospel Song Writers" and the "Mother of Modern Congregational Singing."
  • Even now, "To God Be the Glory" is sung in churches around the world, echoing through sanctuaries and hearts. It's a hymn that doesn't just endure - it soars.

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