When Adam fell he quickly lost
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This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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CAIN and ABEL by John Newton
- When Adam fell he quickly lost
- God's image, which he once possessed:
- See All our nature since could boast
- In Cain, his first-born Son, expressed!
- The sacrifice the Lord ordained
- In type of the Redeemer's blood,
- Self-righteous reas'ning Cain disdained,
- And thought his own first-fruits as good.
- Yet rage and envy filled his mind,
- When, with a fallen, downcast look,
- He saw his brother favor find,
- Who GOD's appointed method took.
- By Cain's own hand, good Abel died,
- Because the Lord approved his faith;
- And, when his blood for vengeance cried,
- He vainly thought to hide his death.
- Such was the wicked murd'rer Cain,
- And such by nature still are we,
- Until by grace we're born again,
- Malicious, blind and proud, as he.
- Like him the way of grace we slight,
- And in our own devices trust;
- Call evil good, and darkness light,
- And hate and persecute the just.
- The saints, in every age and place,
- Have found this history fulfilled;
- The numbers all our thoughts surpass
- Of Abels, whom the Cains have killed!
- Thus JESUS fell--but O! his blood
- Far better things than Abel's cries:
- Obtains his murd'rers peace with God,
- And gains them mansions in the skies.