The Poetical Works of William Cowper (Benham)/Olney Hymns
Appearance
OLNEY HYMNS. | ||
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XX. OLD TESTAMENT GOSPEL
[edit]- Heb. 4:2
- ISRAEL in ancient days
- Not only had a view
- Of Sinai in a blaze,
- But learned the Gospel too;
- The types and figures were a glass,
- In which they saw a Saviour's face.
- The paschal sacrifice
- And blood-besprinkled door,
- Seen with enlightened eyes,
- And once applied with power,
- Would teach the need of other blood,
- To reconcile an angry God.
- The Lamb, the Dove, set forth
- His perfect innocence,
- Whose blood of matchless worth
- Should be the soul's defence;
- For he who can for sin atone
- Must have no failings of his own.
- The scape-goat on his head
- The people's trespass bore,
- And to the desert led,
- Was to be seen no more:
- In him our Surety seemed to say,
- "Behold, I bear your sins away."
- Dipt in his fellow's blood,
- The living bird went free;
- The type, well understood,
- Expressed the sinner's plea;
- Described a guilty soul enlarged,
- And by a Saviour's death discharged.
- Jesus, I love to trace,
- Throughout the sacred page,
- The footsteps of thy grace,
- The same in every age!
- Oh grant that I may faithful be
- To clearer light vouchsafed to me!
XXI. SARDIS
[edit]- Rev. 3:1-6
- "WRITE to Sardis," saith the Lord,
- "And write what he declares,
- He whose Spirit, and whose word,
- Upholds the seven stars:--
- All thy works and ways I search,
- Find thy zeal and love decayed;
- Thou art called a living church,
- But thou art cold and dead.
- "Watch, remember, seek, and strive,
- Exert thy former pains;
- Let thy timely care revive,
- And strengthen what remains;
- Cleanse thine heart, thy works amend,
- Former times to mind recall,
- Lest my sudden stroke descend,
- And smite thee once for all.
- "Yet I number now in thee
- A few that are upright;
- These my Father's face shall see,
- And walk with me in white.
- When in judgment I appear,
- They for mine shall be confessed;
- Let my faithful servants hear,--
- And woe be to the rest!"
On Occasional Subjects
[edit]Seasons
[edit]XXII. PRAYER FOR A BLESSING ON THE YOUNG
[edit]- BESTOW, dear Lord, upon our youth,
- The gift of saving grace;
- And let the seed of sacred truth
- Fall in a fruitful place.
- Grace is a plant, where'er it grows,
- Of pure and heavenly root;
- But fairest in the youngest shows,
- And yields the sweetest fruit.
- Ye careless ones, oh hear betimes
- The voice of sovereign love!
- Your youth is stained with many crimes,
- But Mercy reigns above.
- True, you are young, but there's a stone
- Within the youngest breast;
- Or half the crimes which you have done
- Would rob you of your rest.
- For you the public prayer is made;
- Oh join the public prayer!
- For you the secret tear is shed;
- Oh shed yourselves a tear!
- We pray that you may early prove
- The Spirit's power to teach;
- You cannot be too young to love
- That Jesus whom we preach.
XXIII. PLEADING FOR AND WITH YOUTH
[edit]- SIN has undone our wretched race;
- But Jesus has restored,
- And brought the sinner face to face
- With his forgiving Lord.
- This we repeat from year to year,
- And press upon our youth;
- Lord, give them an attentive ear,
- Lord, save them by thy truth!
- Blessings upon the rising race!
- Make this a happy hour,
- According to thy richest grace,
- And thine Almighty power.
- We feel for your unhappy state,
- (May you regard it too,)
- And would awhile ourselves forget
- To pour out prayer for you.
- We see, though you perceive it not,
- The approaching awful doom;
- Oh tremble at the solemn thought,
- And flee the wrath to come!
- Dear Saviour, let this new-born year
- Spread an alarm abroad;
- And cry in every careless ear,
- "Prepare to meet thy God!"
XXIV. PRAYER FOR CHILDREN
[edit]- GRACIOUS Lord, our children see,
- By thy mercy we are free;
- But shall these, alas! remain
- Subjects still of Satan's reign?
- Israel's young ones, when of old
- Pharaoh threatened to withhold,
- Then thy messenger said, "No;
- Let the children also go!"
- When the angel of the Lord,
- Drawing forth his dreadful sword,
- Slew with an avenging hand,
- All the first-born of the land;
- Then thy people's doors he passed,
- Where the bloody sign was placed;
- Hear us, now, upon our knees
- Plead the blood of Christ for these!
- Lord, we tremble, for we know
- How the fierce malicious foe,
- Wheeling round his watchful flight,
- Keeps them ever in his sight:
- Spread thy pinions, King of kings!
- Hide them safe beneath thy wings;
- Lest the ravenous bird of prey
- Stoop, and bear the brood away.
XXV. JEHOVAH JESUS
[edit]- My song shall bless the Lord of all,
- My praise shall climb to his abode;
- Thee, Saviour, by that name I call,
- The great Supreme, the Mighty God.
- Without beginning or decline,
- Object of faith and not of sense;
- Eternal ages saw him shine,
- He shines eternal ages hence.
- As much, when in the manger laid,
- Almighty ruler of the sky,
- As when the six days' work he made
- Filled all the morning stars with joy.
- Of all the crowns Jehovah bears,
- Salvation is his dearest claim;
- That gracious sound well pleased he hears,
- And owns Emmanuel for his name.
- A cheerful confidence I feel,
- My well-placed hopes with joy I see;
- My bosom glows with heavenly zeal,
- To worship him who died for me.
- As man, he pities my complaint,
- His power and truth are all divine;
- He will not fail, he cannot faint;
- Salvation's sure, and must be mine.
Ordinances
[edit]XXVI. ON OPENING A PLACE FOR SOCIAL PRAYER
[edit]- JESUS! where'er thy people meet,
- There they behold thy mercy-seat;
- Where'er they seek thee, thou art found,
- And every place is hallowed ground.
- For thou, within no walls confined,
- Inhabitest the humble mind;
- Such ever bring thee where they come,
- And going, take thee to their home.
- Dear Shepherd of thy chosen few!
- Thy former mercies here renew;
- Here to our waiting hearts proclaim
- The sweetness of thy saving name.
- Here may we prove the power of prayer,
- To strengthen faith, and sweeten care;
- To teach our fain desires to rise,
- And bring all heaven before our eyes.
- Behold, at thy commanding word
- We stretch the curtain and the cord;
- Come thou, and fill this wider space,
- And bless us with a large increase.
- Lord, we are few, but thou art near,
- Nor short thine arm, nor deaf thine ear;
- Oh rend the heavens, come quickly down,
- And make a thousand hearts thine own.
XXVII. WELCOME TO THE TABLE
[edit]- THIS is the feast of heavenly wine,
- And God invites to sup;
- The juices of the living Vine
- Were pressed to fill the cup.
- Oh! bless the Savior, ye that eat,
- With royal dainties fed;
- Not heaven affords a costlier treat,
- For Jesus is the bread.
- The vile, the lost, he calls to them;
- Ye trembling souls, appear!
- The righteous in their own esteem
- Have no acceptance here.
- Approach, ye poor, nor dare refuse
- The banquet spread for you;
- Dear Saviour, this is welcome news,
- Then I may venture too.
- If guilt and sin afford a plea,
- And may obtain a place,
- Surely the Lord will welcome me,
- And I shall see his face!
XXVIII. JESUS HASTENING TO SUFFER
[edit]- THE Saviour, what a noble flame
- Was kindled in his breast,
- When hasting to Jerusalem,
- He marched before the rest!
- Good will to men, and zeal for God,
- His every thought engross;
- He longs to be baptized with blood,
- He pants to reach the cross!
- With all his sufferings full in view,
- And woes to us unknown,
- Forth to the task his spirit flew;
- 'Twas love that urged him on.
- Lord, we return thee what we can:
- Our hearts shall sound abroad
- Salvation to the dying Man,
- And to the rising God!
- And while thy bleeding glories here
- Engage our wondering eyes,
- We learn our lighter cross to bear,
- And hasten to the skies.
XXIX. EXHORTATION TO PRAYER
[edit]- WHAT various hindrances we meet
- In coming to a mercy-seat!
- Yet who that knows the worth of prayer
- But wishes to be often there?
- Prayer makes the darkened cloud withdraw,
- Prayer climbs the ladder Jacob saw,
- Gives exercise to faith and love,
- Brings every blessing from above.
- Restraining prayer, we cease to fight;
- Prayer makes the Christian's armour bright;
- And Satan trembles when he sees
- The weakest saint upon his knees.
- While Moses stood with arms spread wide,
- Success was found on Israel's side;
- But when through weariness they failed,
- That moment Amalek prevailed.
- Have you no words? Ah! think again,
- Words flow apace when you complain,
- And fill your fellow-creature's ear
- With the sad tale of all your care.
- Were half the breath thus vainly spent
- To Heaven in supplication sent,
- Your cheerful song would oftener be,
- "Hear what the Lord has done for me."
XXX. THE LIGHT AND GLORY OF THE WORD
[edit]- THE Spirit breathes upon the Word,
- And brings the truth to sight;
- Precepts and promises afford
- A sanctifying light.
- A glory gilds the sacred page,
- Majestic like the sun;
- It gives a light to every age,
- It gives, but borrows none.
- The hand that gave it still supplies
- The gracious light and heat;
- His truths upon the nations rise,
- They rise, but never set.
- Let everlasting thanks be thine,
- For such a bright display,
- As makes a world of darkness shine
- With beams of heavenly day.
- My soul rejoices to pursue
- The steps of him I love,
- Till glory break upon my view
- In brighter worlds above.
Providences
[edit]XXXI. ON THE DEATH OF A MINISTER
[edit]- HIS master taken from his head,
- Elisha saw him go;
- And in desponding accents said,
- "Ah, what must Israel do?"
- But he forgot the Lord, who lifts
- The beggar to the throne;
- Nor knew that all Elijah's gifts
- Would soon be made his own.
- What! when a Paul has run his course,
- Or when Apollos dies,
- Is Israel left without resource?
- And have we no supplies?
- Yes, while the dear Redeemer lives,
- We have a boundless store,
- And shall be fed with what he gives,
- Who lives for evermore.
On the Rise, Progress, Changes and Comforts of the Spiritual Life
[edit]Seeking, pleading and hoping
[edit]XXXII. THE SHINING LIGHT
[edit]- MY former hopes are fled,
- My terror now begins;
- I feel, alas! that I am dead
- In trespasses and sins.
- Ah, whither shall I fly?
- I hear the thunder roar;
- The law proclaims destruction nigh,
- And vengeance at the door.
- When I review my ways,
- I dread impending doom:
- But sure a friendly whisper says,
- "Flee from the wrath to come."
- I see, or think I see,
- A glimmering from afar;
- A beam of day, that shines for me,
- To save me from despair.
- Forerunner of the sun,
- It marks the pilgrim's way;
- I'll gaze upon it while I run,
- And watch the rising day.
XXXIII. THE WAITING SOUL
[edit]- BREATHE from the gentle south, O Lord,
- And cheer me from the north;
- Blow on the treasures of thy word,
- And call the spices forth!
- I wish, thou know'st, to be resigned,
- And wait with patient hope;
- But hope delayed fatigues the mind,
- And drinks the spirit up.
- Help me to reach the distant goal;
- Confirm my feeble knee;
- Pity the sickness of a soul
- That faints for love of thee!
- Cold as I feel this heart of mine,
- Yet, since I feel it so,
- It yields some hope of life divine
- Within, however low:
- I seem forsaken and alone,
- I hear the lion roar;
- And every door is shut but one,
- And that is Mercy's door.
- There, till the dear Deliverer come,
- I'll wait with humble prayer;
- And when he calls his exile home,
- The Lord shall find him there.
XXXIV. SEEKING THE BELOVED
[edit]- TO those who know the Lord I speak;
- Is my Beloved near?
- The Bridegroom of my soul I seek,
- Oh! when will he appear?
- Though once a man of grief and shame,
- Yet now he fills a throne,
- And bears the greatest, sweetest name
- That earth or heaven has known.
- Grace flies before, and love attends
- His steps where'er he goes;
- Though none can see him but his friends,
- And they were once his foes.
- He speaks;--obedient to his call
- Our warm affections move:
- Did he but shine alike on all,
- Then all alike would love.
- Then love in every heart would reign,
- And war would cease to roar;
- And cruel and bloodthirsty men
- Would thirst for blood no more.
- Such Jesus is, and such his grace;
- Oh, may he shine on you!
- And tell him, when you see his face,
- I long to see him too.
Conflict
[edit]XXXV. LIGHT SHINING OUT OF DARKNESS
[edit]- GOD moves in a mysterious way
- His wonders to perform;
- He plants his footsteps in the sea,
- And rides upon the storm.
- Deep in unfathomable mines
- Of never-failing skill,
- He treasures up his bright designs,
- And works his sovereign will.
- Ye fearful saints, fresh courage take,
- The clouds ye so much dread
- Are big with mercy, and shall break
- In blessings on your head.
- Judge not the Lord by feeble sense,
- But trust him for his grace;
- Behind a frowning providence
- He hides a smiling face.
- His purposes will ripen fast,
- Unfolding every hour;
- The bud may have a bitter taste,
- But sweet will be the flower.
- Blind unbelief is sure to err,
- And scan his work in vain:
- God is his own interpreter,
- And He will make it plain.
XXXVI. WELCOME CROSS
[edit]- 'TIS my happiness below
- Not to live without the cross,
- But the Saviour's power to know,
- Sanctifying every loss:
- Trials must and will befall;
- But with humble faith to see
- Love inscribed upon them all,
- This is happiness to me.
- God in Israel sows the seeds
- Of affliction, pain, and toil;
- These spring up and choke the weeds
- Which would else o'erspread the soil:
- Trials make the promise sweet,
- Trials give new life to prayer;
- Trials bring me to his feet,
- Lay me low, and keep me there.
- Did I meet no trials here,
- No chastisement by the way,
- Might I not with reason fear
- I should prove a castaway?
- Bastards may escape the rod,
- Sunk in earthly vain delight:
- But the true-born child of God
- Must not,--would not, if he might.
XXXVII. AFFLICTIONS SANCTIFIED BY THE WORD
[edit]- OH, how I love thy holy word,
- Thy gracious covenant, O Lord!
- It guides me in the peaceful way;
- I think upon it all the day.
- What are the mines of shining wealth,
- The strength of youth, the bloom of health!
- What are all joys compared with those
- Thine everlasting Word bestows!
- Long unafflicted, undismayed,
- In pleasure's path secure I strayed;
- Thou madest me feel thy chastening rod,
- And straight I turned unto my God.
- What though it pierced my fainting heart,
- I blessed thine hand that caused the smart;
- It taught my tears awhile to flow,
- But saved me from eternal woe.
- Oh! hadst thou left me unchastised,
- Thy precepts I had still despised;
- And still the snare in secret laid
- Had my unwary feet betrayed.
- I love thee, therefore, O my God,
- And breathe towards thy dear abode;
- Where, in thy presence fully blest,
- Thy chosen saints for ever rest.
XXXVIII. TEMPTATION
[edit]- THE billows swell, the winds are high,
- Clouds overcast my wintry sky;
- Out of the depths to thee I call,--
- My fears are great, my strength is small.
- O Lord, the pilot's part perform,
- And guard and guide me through the storm;
- Defend me from each threatening ill,
- Control the waves,--say, "Peace! be still."
- Amidst the roaring of the sea
- My soul still hangs her hope on thee;
- Thy constant love, thy faithful care,
- Is all that saves me from despair.
- Dangers of every shape and name
- Attend the followers of the Lamb,
- Who leave the world's deceitful shore,
- And leave it to return no more.
- Though tempest-tost and half a wreck,
- My Saviour through the floods I seek;
- Let neither winds nor stormy main
- Force back my shattered bark again.
XXXIX. LOOKING UPWARDS IN A STORM
[edit]- GOD of my life, to thee I call,
- Afflicted at thy feet I fall;
- When the great water-floods prevail,
- Leave not my trembling heart to fail!
- Friend of the friendless and the faint,
- Where should I lodge my deep complaint?
- Where but with thee, whose open door
- Invites the helpless and the poor!
- Did ever mourner plead with thee,
- And thou refuse that mourner's plea?
- Does not the word still fixed remain,
- That none shall seek thy face in vain?
- That were a grief I could not bear,
- Didst thou not hear and answer prayer;
- But a prayer-hearing, answering God
- Supports me under every load.
- Fair is the lot that's cast for me;
- I have an Advocate with thee;
- They whom the world caresses most
- Have no such privilege to boast.
- Poor though I am, despised, forgot,
- Yet God, my God, forgets me not:
- And he is safe, and must succeed,
- For whom the Lord vouchsafes to plead.
XL. THE VALLEY OF THE SHADOW OF DEATH
[edit]- MY soul is sad, and much dismayed;
- See, Lord, what legions of my foes
- With fierce Apollyon at their head,
- My heavenly pilgrimage oppose!
- See, from the ever-burning lake,
- How like a smoky cloud they rise!
- With horrid blasts my soul they shake,
- With storms of blasphemies and lies.
- Their fiery arrows reach the mark,
- My throbbing heart with anguish tear;
- Each lights upon a kindred spark,
- And finds abundant fuel there.
- I hate the thought that wrongs the Lord;
- Oh! I would drive it from my breast,
- With thy own sharp two-edged sword,
- Far as the east is from the west.
- Come, then, and chase the cruel host,
- Heal the deep wounds I have received!
- Nor let the powers of darkness boast
- That I am foiled, and thou art grieved!
XLI. PEACE AFTER A STORM
[edit]- WHEN darkness long has veiled my mind,
- And smiling day once more appears,
- Then, my Redeemer, then I find
- The folly of my doubts and fears.
- Straight I upbraid my wandering heart,
- And blush that I should ever be
- Thus prone to act so base a part,
- Or harbour one hard thought of thee.
- Oh! let me then at length be taught
- What I am still so slow to learn;
- That God is Love, and changes not,
- Nor knows the shadow of a turn.
- Sweet truth, and easy to repeat!
- But when my faith is sharply tried,
- I find myself a learner yet,
- Unskilful, weak, and apt to slide.
- But, O my Lord, one look from thee
- Subdues the disobedient will,
- Drives doubt and discontent away,
- And thy rebellious worm is still.
- Thou art as ready to forgive
- As I am ready to repine;
- Thou, therefore, all the praise receive;
- Be shame and self-abhorrence mine.
XLII. MOURNING AND LONGING
[edit]- THE Saviour hides his face!
- My spirit thirsts to prove
- Renewed supplies of pardoning grace,
- And never-fading love.
- The favoured souls who know
- What glories shine in him,
- Pant for his presence as the roe
- Pants for the living stream.
- What trifles tease me now!
- They swarm like summer flies;
- They cleave to everything I do,
- And swim before my eyes.
- How dull the Sabbath day
- Without the Sabbath's Lord!
- How toilsome then to sing and pray,
- And wait upon the word!
- Of all the truths I hear,
- How few delight my taste!
- I glean a berry here and there,
- But mourn the vintage past.
- Yet let me (as I ought)
- Still hope to be supplied;
- No pleasure else is worth a thought,
- Nor shall I be denied.
- Though I am but a worm,
- Unworthy of his care,
- The Lord will my desire perform,
- And grant me all my prayer.
XLIII. SELF-ACQUAINTANCE
[edit]- DEAR Lord! accept a sinful heart,
- Which of itself complains,
- And mourns, with much and frequent smart,
- The evil it contains.
- There fiery seeds of anger lurk,
- Which often hurt my frame;
- And wait but for the tempter's work
- To fan them to a flame.
- Legality holds out a bribe
- To purchase life from thee;
- And Discontent would fain prescribe
- How thou shalt deal with me.
- While Unbelief withstands thy grace,
- And puts the mercy by;
- Presumption, with a brow of brass,
- Says, "Give me, or I die!"
- How eager are my thoughts to roam
- In quest of what they love!
- But ah! when Duty calls them home,
- How heavily they move!
- Oh, cleanse me in a Saviour's blood,
- Transform me by thy power,
- And make me thy beloved abode,
- And let me roam no more.
XLIV. PRAYER FOR PATIENCE
[edit]- LORD, who hast suffered all for me,
- My peace and pardon to procure,
- The lighter cross I bear for thee
- Help me with patience to endure.
- The storm of loud repining hush;
- I would in humble silence mourn;
- Why should the unburnt, though burning bush,
- Be angry as the crackling thorn?
- Man should not faint at thy rebuke,
- Like Joshua falling on his face,
- When the cursed thing that Achan took
- Brought Israel into just disgrace.
- Perhaps some golden wedge suppressed,
- Some secret sin offends my God;
- Perhaps that Babylonish vest,
- Self-righteousness, provokes the rod.
- Ah! were I buffeted all day,
- Mocked, crowned with thorns, and spit upon,
- I yet should have no right to say,
- My great distress is mine alone.
- Let me not angrily declare
- No pain was ever sharp like mine,
- Nor murmur at the cross I bear,
- But rather weep, remembering thine.
XLV. SUBMISSION
[edit]- O LORD, my best desire fulfil,
- And help me to resign
- Life, health, and comfort to thy will,
- And make thy pleasure mine.
- Why should I shrink at thy command,
- Whose love forbids my fears?
- Or tremble at the gracious hand
- That wipes away my tears?
- No, rather let me freely yield
- What most I prize to thee;
- Who never hast a good withheld,
- Or wilt withhold, from me.
- Thy favor, all my journey through,
- Thou art engaged to grant;
- What else I want, or think I do,
- 'Tis better still to want.
- Wisdom and mercy guide my way,
- Shall I resist them both?
- A poor blind creature of a day,
- And crushed before the moth!
- But ah! my inward spirit cries,
- Still bind me to thy sway;
- Else the next cloud that veils the skies
- Drives all these thoughts away.
Comfort
[edit]XLVI. THE HAPPY CHANGE
[edit]- HOW blessed thy creature is, O God,
- When, with a single eye,
- He views the lustre of thy word,
- The dayspring from on high!
- Through all the storms that veil the skies
- And frown on earthly things,
- The Sun of Righteousness he eyes,
- With healing on his wings.
- Struck by that light, the human heart,
- A barren soil no more,
- Sends the sweet smell of grace abroad,
- Where serpents lurked before.
- The soul, a dreary province once
- Of Satan's dark domain,
- Feels a new empire formed within,
- And owns a heavenly reign.
- The glorious orb whose golden beams
- The fruitful year control,
- Since first, obedient to thy word,
- He started from the goal,
- Has cheered the nations with the joys
- His orient rays impart;
- But, Jesus, 'tis thy light alone
- Can shine upon the heart.
XLVII. RETIREMENT
[edit]- FAR from the world, O Lord, I flee,
- From strife and tumult far;
- From scenes where Satan wages still
- His most successful war.
- The calm retreat, the silent shade,
- With prayer and praise agree;
- And seem by thy sweet bounty made
- For those who follow thee.
- There, if thy Spirit touch the soul,
- And grace her mean abode,
- Oh! with what peace, and joy, and love,
- She communes with her God!
- There like the nightingale she pours
- Her solitary lays;
- Nor asks a witness of her song,
- Nor thirsts for human praise.
- Author and guardian of my life,
- Sweet source of light divine,
- And-all harmonious names in one--
- My Saviour! thou art mine!
- What thanks I owe thee, and what love,
- A boundless, endless store,
- Shall echo through the realms above,
- When time shall be no more.
XLVIII. THE HIDDEN LIFE
[edit]- TO tell the Saviour all my wants,
- How pleasing is the task!
- Nor less to praise him when he grants
- Beyond what I can ask.
- My labouring spirit vainly seeks
- To tell but half the joy;
- With how much tenderness he speaks,
- And helps me to reply.
- Nor were it wise, nor should I choose,
- Such secrets to declare;
- Like precious wines their taste they lose,
- Exposed to open air.
- But this with boldness I proclaim,
- Nor care if thousands hear,
- Sweet is the ointment of his name,
- Not life is half so dear.
- And can you frown, my former friends,
- Who knew what once I was;
- And blame the song that thus commends
- The Man who bore the cross?
- Trust me, I draw the likeness true,
- And not as fancy paints;
- Such honour may he give to you,
- For such have all his saints.
XLIX. JOY AND PEACE IN BELIEVING
[edit]- SOMETIMES a light surprises
- The Christian while he sings;
- It is the Lord who rises
- With healing in his wings:
- When comforts are declining,
- He grants the soul again
- A season of clear shining,
- To cheer it after rain.
- In holy contemplation,
- We sweetly then pursue
- The theme of God's salvation,
- And find it ever new:
- Set free from present sorrow,
- We cheerfully can say,
- E'en let the unknown to-morrow
- Bring with it what it may!
- It can bring with it nothing
- But he will bear us through;
- Who gives the lilies clothing
- Will clothe his people too;
- Beneath the spreading heavens
- No creature but is fed;
- And he who feeds the ravens
- Will give his children bread.
- Though vine nor fig-tree neither
- Their wonted fruit shall bear,
- Though all the field should wither,
- Nor flocks nor herds be there:
- Yet God the same abiding,
- His praise shall tune my voice;
- For, while in him confiding,
- I cannot but rejoice.
L. TRUE PLEASURES
[edit]- LORD, my soul with pleasure springs
- When Jesus' name I hear;
- And when God the Spirit brings
- The word of promise near:
- Beauties too, in holiness,
- Still delighted I perceive;
- Nor have words that can express
- The joys thy precepts give.
- Clothed in sanctity and grace,
- How sweet it is to see
- Those who love thee as they pass,
- Or when they wait on thee!
- Pleasant too, to sit and tell
- What we owe to love divine;
- Till our bosoms grateful swell,
- And eyes begin to shine.
- Those the comforts I possess,
- Which God shall still increase,
- All his ways are pleasantness,
- And all his paths are peace.
- Nothing Jesus did or spoke,
- Henceforth let me ever slight;
- For I love his easy yoke,
- And find his burden light.
LI. THE CHRISTIAN
[edit]- HONOUR and happiness unite
- To make the Christian's name a praise;
- How fair the scene, how clear the light,
- That fills the remnant of his days!
- A kingly character he bears,
- No change his priestly office knows;
- Unfading is the crown he wears,
- His joys can never reach a close.
- Adorned with glory from on high,
- Salvation shines upon his face;
- His robe is of the ethereal dye,
- His steps are dignity and grace.
- Inferior honours he disdains,
- Nor stoops to take applause from earth;
- The King of kings himself maintains
- The expenses of his heavenly birth.
- The noblest creature seen below,
- Ordained to fill a throne above;
- God gives him all he can bestow,
- His kingdom of eternal love!
- My soul is ravished at the thought!
- Methinks from earth I see him rise!
- Angels congratulate his lot,
- And shout him welcome to the skies!
LII. LIVELY HOPE AND GRACIOUS FEAR
[edit]- I WAS a grovelling creature once,
- And basely cleaved to earth;
- I wanted spirit to renounce
- The clod that gave me birth.
- But God has breathed upon a worm,
- And sent me from above
- Wings such as clothe an angel's form,
- The wings of joy and love.
- With these to Pisgah's top I fly,
- And there delighted stand,
- To view beneath a shining sky
- The spacious promised land.
- The Lord of all the vast domain
- Has promised it to me,
- The length and breadth of all the plain
- As far as faith can see.
- How glorious is my privilege!
- To thee for help I call;
- I stand upon a mountain's edge,
- Oh save me, lest I fall!
- Though much exalted in the Lord,
- My strength is not my own;
- Then let me tremble at his word,
- And none shall cast me down.
LIII. FOR THE POOR
[edit]- WHEN Hagar found the bottle spent,
- And wept o'er Ishmael,
- A message from the Lord was sent
- To guide her to a well.
- Should not Elijah's cake and cruse
- Convince us at this day,
- A gracious God will not refuse
- Provisions by the way?
- His saints and servants shall be fed,
- The promise is secure;
- "Bread shall be given them," as he said,
- "Their water shall be sure."
- Repasts far richer they shall prove,
- Than all earth's dainties are;
- 'Tis sweet to taste a Saviour's love,
- Though in the meanest fare.
- To Jesus then your trouble bring,
- Nor murmur at your lot;
- While you are poor and He is King,
- You shall not be forgot.
Dedication and Surrender
[edit]LIV. MY SOUL THIRSTETH FOR GOD
[edit]- I THIRST, but not as once I did,
- The vain delights of earth to share;
- Thy wounds, Emmanuel, all forbid
- That I should seek my pleasures there.
- It was the sight of thy dear cross
- First wean’d my soul from earthly things;
- And taught me to esteem as dross
- The mirth of fools and pomp of kings.
- I want that grace that springs from thee,
- That quickens all things where it flows,
- And makes a wretched thorn like me
- Bloom as the myrtle or the rose.
- Dear fountain of delight unknown!
- No longer sink below the brim;
- But over flow, and pour me down
- A living and life-giving stream!
- For sure, of all the plants that share
- The notice of thy Father’s eye,
- None proves less grateful to his care,
- Or yields him meaner fruit than I.
LV. LOVE CONSTRAINING TO OBEDIENCE
[edit]- NO strength of nature can suffice
- To serve the Lord aright:
- And what she has she misapplies,
- For want of clearer light.
- How long beneath the law I lay
- In bondage and distress!
- I toil’d the precept to obey,
- But toil’d without success.
- Then, to abstain from outward sin
- Was more than I could do;
- Now, if I feel its power within,
- I feel I hate it too.
- Then, all my servile works were done
- A righteousness to raise;
- Now, freely chosen in the Son,
- I freely choose his ways.
- "What shall I do," was then the word,
- "That I may worthier grow?"
- "What shall I render to the Lord?"
- Is my inquiry now.
- To see the law by Christ fulfill’d,
- And hear his pardoning voice,
- Changes a slave into a child,
- And duty into choice.
LVI. THE HEART HEALED AND CHANGED BY MERCY
[edit]- SIN enslaved me many years,
- And led me bound and blind;
- Till at length a thousand fears
- Came swarming o'er my mind.
- "Where," said I, in deep distress,
- "Will these sinful pleasures end?
- How shall I secure my peace,
- And make the Lord my friend?"
- Friends and ministers said much
- The Gospel to enforce;
- But my blindness still was such,
- I chose a legal course:
- Much I fasted, watched and strove,
- Scarce would show my face abroad,
- Feared almost to speak or move,
- A stranger still to God.
- Thus afraid to trust his grace,
- Long time did I rebel;
- Till despairing of my case,
- Down at his feet I fell:
- Then my stubborn heart he broke,
- And subdued me to his sway;
- By a simple word he spoke,
- "Thy sins are done away."
LVII. HATRED OF SIN
[edit]- HOLY Lord God! I love thy truth,
- Nor dare thy least commandment slight;
- Yet pierced by sin, the serpent's tooth,
- I mourn the anguish of the bite.
- But though the poison lurks within,
- Hope bids me still with patience wait;
- Till death shall set me free from sin,
- Free from the only thing I hate.
- Had I a throne above the rest,
- Where angels and archangels dwell,
- One sin, unslain, within my breast,
- Would make that heaven as dark as hell.
- The prisoner sent to breathe fresh air,
- And blessed with liberty again,
- Would mourn were he condemned to wear
- One link of all his former chain.
- But, oh! no foe invades the bliss,
- When glory crowns the Christian's head;
- One view of Jesus as he is
- Will strike all sin for ever dead.
LVIII. THE NEW CONVERT
[edit]- THE new-born child of Gospel grace,
- Like some fair tree when summer's nigh,
- Beneath Emmanuel's shining face
- Lifts up his blooming branch on high.
- No fears he feels, he sees no foes,
- No conflict yet his faith employs,
- Nor has he learnt to whom he owes
- The strength and peace his soul enjoys.
- But sin soon darts its cruel sting,
- And comforts sinking day by day,
- What seemed his own, a self-fed spring,
- Proves but a brook that glides away.
- When Gideon armed his numerous host,
- The Lord soon made his numbers less;
- And said, "Lest Israel vainly boast,
- 'My arm procured me this success.'"
- Thus will he bring our spirits down,
- And draw our ebbing comforts low,
- That saved by grace, but not our own,
- We may not claim the praise we owe.
LIX. TRUE AND FALSE COMFORTS
[edit]- O GOD, whose favourable eye
- The sin-sick soul revives,
- Holy and heavenly is the joy
- Thy shining presence gives.
- Not such as hypocrites suppose,
- Who with a graceless heart
- Taste not of thee, but drink a dose
- Prepared by Satan's art.
- Intoxicating joys are theirs,
- Who while they boast their light,
- And seem to soar above the stats,
- Are plunging into night.
- Lulled in a soft and fatal sleep,
- They sin and yet rejoice;
- Were they indeed the Saviour's sheep,
- Would they not hear his voice?
- Be mine the comforts that reclaim
- The soul from Satan's power;
- That make me blush for what I am,
- And hate my sin the more.
- 'Tis joy enough, my All in All,
- At thy dear feet to lie;
- Thou wilt not let me lower fall,
- And none can higher fly.
LX. A LIVING AND A DEAD FAITH
[edit]- THE Lord receives his highest praise
- From humble minds and hearts sincere;
- While all the loud professor says
- Offends the righteous Judge's ear.
- To walk as children of the day,
- To mark the precepts' holy light,
- To wage the warfare, watch, and pray,
- Show who are pleasing in his sight.
- Not words alone it cost the Lord
- To purchase pardon for his own;
- Nor will a soul by grace restored
- Return the Saviour words alone.
- With golden bells, the priestly vest,
- And rich pomegranates bordered round,
- The need of holiness expressed,
- And called for fruit as well as sound.
- Easy indeed it were to reach
- A mansion in the courts above,
- If swelling words and fluent speech
- Might serve instead of faith and love.
- But none shall gain the blissful place,
- Or God's unclouded glory see,
- Who talks of free and sovereign grace,
- Unless that grace has made him free!
Cautions
[edit]LXI. ABUSE OF THE GOSPEL
[edit]- TOO many, Lord, abuse thy grace
- In this licentious day,
- And while they boast they see thy face
- They turn their own away.
- Thy book displays a gracious light
- That can the blind restore;
- But these are dazzled by the sight,
- And blinded still the more.
- The pardon such presume upon,
- They do not beg, but steal;
- And when they plead it at thy throne,
- Oh! where's the Spirit's seal?
- Was it for this, ye lawless tribe,
- The dear Redeemer bled?
- Is this the grace the saints imbibe
- From Christ the living head?
- Ah, Lord, we know thy chosen few
- Are fed with heavenly fare;
- But these,—the wretched husks they chew
- Proclaim them what they are.
- The liberty our hearts implore
- Is not to live in sin;
- But still to wait at Wisdom's door,
- Till Mercy calls us in.
LXII. THE NARROW WAY
[edit]- WHAT thousands never knew the road!
- What thousands hate it when 'tis known!
- None but the chosen tribes of God
- Will seek or choose it for their own.
- A thousand ways in ruin end,
- One only leads to joys on high;
- By that my willing steps ascend,
- Pleased with a journey to the sky.
- No more I ask or hope to find
- Delight or happiness below;
- Sorrow may well possess the mind
- That feeds where thorns and thistles grow.
- The joy that fades is not for me,
- I seek immortal joys above;
- There glory without end shall be
- The bright reward of faith and love.
- Cleave to the world, ye sordid worms,
- Contented lick your native dust!
- But God shall fight with all his storms
- Against the idol of your trust.
LXIII. DEPENDENCE
[edit]- TO keep the lamp alive,
- With oil we fill the bowl;
- 'Tis water makes the willow thrive,
- And grace that feeds the soul.
- The Lord's unsparing hand
- Supplies the living stream;
- It is not at our own command,
- But still derived from him.
- Beware of Peter's word,
- Nor confidently say,
- "I never will deny thee, Lord,"—
- But,—"Grant I never may."
- Man's wisdom is to seek
- His strength in God alone;
- And even an angel would be weak
- Who trusted in his own.
- Retreat beneath his wings,
- And in his grace confide!
- This more exalts the King of kings
- Than all your works beside.
- In Jesus is our store,
- Grace issues from his throne;
- Whoever says, "I want no more,"
- Confesses he has none.
LXIV. NOT OF WORKS
[edit]- GRACE, triumphant in the throne
- Scorns a rival, reigns alone;
- Come and bow beneath her sway,
- Cast your idol works away!
- Works of man, when made his plea,
- Never shall accepted be;
- Fruits of pride (vain-glorious worm!)
- Are the best he can perform.
- Self, the god his soul adores,
- Influences all his powers;
- Jesus is a slighted name,
- Self-advancement all his aim:
- But when God the Judge shall come
- To pronounce the final doom,
- Then for rocks and hills to hide
- All his works and all his pride!
- Still the boasting heart replies,
- "What! the worthy and the wise,
- Friends to temperance and peace,
- Have not these a righteousness?"
- Banish every vain pretence
- Built on human excellence;
- Perish everything in man,
- But the grace that never can.
Praise
[edit]LXV. PRAISE FOR FAITH
[edit]- OF all the gifts thine hand bestows,
- Thou Giver of all good!
- Not heaven itself a richer knows
- Than my Redeemer's blood.
- Faith too, the blood-receiving grace,
- From the same hand we gain;
- Else, sweetly as it suits our case,
- That gift had been in vain.
- Till thou thy teaching power apply,
- Our hearts refuse to see,
- And weak, as a distempered eye,
- Shut out the view of thee.
- Blind to the merits of thy Son,
- What misery we endure!
- Yet fly that hand from which alone
- We could expect a cure.
- We praise thee, and would praise thee more,
- To thee our all we owe;
- The precious Saviour, and the power
- That makes him precious too.
LXVI. GRACE AND PROVIDENCE
[edit]- ALMIGHTY King! whose wondrous hand
- Supports the weight of sea and land;
- Whose grace is such a boundless store,
- No heart shall break that sighs for more.
- Thy providence supplies my food,
- And 'tis thy blessing makes it good;
- My soul is nourished by thy word:
- Let soul and body praise the Lord!
- My streams of outward comfort came
- From him who built this earthly fraime;
- Whate'er I want his bounty gives,
- By whom my soul for ever lives.
- Either his hand preserves fronm pain,
- Or, if I feel it, heals again;
- From Satan's malice shields my breast,
- Or overrules it for the best.
- Forgive the song that falls so low
- Beneath the gratitude I owe!
- It means thy praise, however poor,
- An angel's song can do no more.
LXVII. I WILL PRAISE THE LORD AT ALL TIMES
[edit]- WINTER has a joy for me,
- While the Saviour's charms I read,
- Lowly, meek, from blemish free,
- In the snowdrop's pensive head.
- Spring returns, and brings along
- Life-invigorating suns:
- Hark! the turtle's plaintive song
- Seems to speak his dying groans!
- Summer has a thousand charms,
- All expressive of his worth;
- 'Tis his sun that lights and warms,
- His the air that cools the earth.
- What! has Autumn left to say
- Nothing of a Savior's grace?
- Yes, the beams of milder day
- Tell me of his smiling face.
- Light appears with early dawn,
- While the sun makes haste to rise;
- See his bleeding beauties drawn
- On the blushes of the skies.
- Evening with a silent pace,
- Slowly moving in the west,
- Shows an emblem of his grace,
- Points to an eternal rest.
LXVIII. LONGING TO BE WITH CHRIST
[edit]- TO Jesus, the Crown of my Hope,
- My soul is in haste to be gone;
- Oh bear me, ye cherubim, up,
- And waft me away me away to his throne!
- My Saviour, whom absent I love,
- Whom, not having seen, I adore;
- Whose name is exalted above
- All glory, dominion, and power;
- Dissolve thou these bonds, that detain
- My soul from her portion in thee,
- Ah! strike off this adamant chain,
- And make me eternally free.
- When that happy era begins,
- When arrayed in thy glories I shine,
- Nor to grieve any more, by my sins,
- The bosom on which I recline;
- O then shall the veil be removed,
- And round me thy brightness be poured,
- I shall meet Him whom absent I loved,
- Shall see him whom unseen I adored.
- And then, never more shall the fears,
- The trials, temptations, and woes,
- Which darken this valley of tears,
- Intrude on my blissfull repose.
- Or, if yet remembered above,
- Remembrance no sadness shall raise,
- They will be but new signs of they love,
- New themes for my wonder and praise.
- Thus the strokes which from sin and from pain
- Shall set me eternally free,
- Will but strengthen and rivet the chain
- Which binds me, my Saviour! to thee.