Hymns for Christian Devotion - novelonlinefull.com
You’re read light novel Hymns for Christian Devotion Part 143 online at NovelOnlineFull.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit NovelOnlineFull.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
866. C. M. Watts.
Winter.
1 The h.o.a.ry frost, the fleecy snow, Descend, and clothe the ground; The liquid streams forbear to flow, In icy fetters bound.
2 When, from his dreadful stores on high, G.o.d pours the sounding hail, The man that does his power defy Shall find his courage fail.
3 G.o.d sends his word and melts the snow; The fields no longer mourn; He calls the warmer gales to blow, And bids the spring return.
4 The changing wind, the flying cloud, Obey his mighty word; With songs and honors sounding loud, Praise ye the sovereign Lord.
867. H. M. Freeman.
The Same.
1 Lord of the worlds below!
On earth thy glories shine; The changing seasons show Thy skill and power divine.
The rolling years Are full of thee; In all we see A G.o.d appears.
2 In winter, awful thou!
With storms around thee cast; The leafless forests bow Beneath thy northern blast.
While tempests lower, To thee, dread King, We homage bring, And own thy power.
868. L. M. H. Ballou.
The Acceptable Fast.
1 This is the fast the Lord doth choose; Each heavy burden to undo, The bands of wickedness to loose, And bid the captive freely go.
2 Let every vile and sinful yoke Of servile bondage and of fear, By mercy, love and truth be broke; And from each eye wipe every tear.
3 Yes, to the hungry deal thy bread; Bring to thine house the outcast poor; There let the fainting soul be fed, Nor spurn the needy from thy door.
4 And when thou seest the naked, spare The raiment that his wants demand; Since all mankind thy kindred are, To all thy charity expand.
5 Thus did the Saviour of our race: Himself, the Bread of Life, he gave; He clothed us with his righteousness, And broke the fetters from the slave.
869. C. M. S. Streeter.
Humiliation and Prayer.
1 Here in thy temple, Lord, we meet, And bow before thy throne; Abased and guilty, at thy feet We seek thy grace alone.
2 Our sins rise up in dread array, And fill our hearts with fear; Our trembling spirits melt away, But find no helper near.
3 O, send thy pity from on high With pardon all-divine; Bring now thy gracious spirit nigh, And make us wholly thine.
4 We humbly mourn our follies past, Each guilty path deplore; Resolved, while feeble life shall last, To tread those paths no more.
870. C. M. Anonymous.
The Same.
1 Now let our prayers ascend to thee, Thou great and holy One; Above the world raise thou our hearts; In us, thy will be done.
2 O, let us feel how frail we are, How much we need thy grace; O, strengthen, Lord, our fainting souls, While here we seek thy face.
3 Our sins, alas! before thee rise; Thou knowest all our guilt; Let not our faith, our hope, our trust, On earthly things be built.
4 Forgive our sins, thy spirit grant, Let love our souls refine, And heavenly peace and holy hope a.s.sure that we are thine.
871. S. M. Drummond.
"Is it such a fast that I have chosen?"
1 "Is this a fast for me?"-- Thus saith the Lord our G.o.d;-- "A day for man to vex his soul, And feel affliction's rod?--
2 "Like bulrush low to bow His sorrow-stricken head, With sackcloth for his inner vest, And ashes round him spread?
3 "Shall day like this have power To stay th' avenging hand, Efface transgression, or avert My judgments from the land?
4 "No; is not this alone The sacred fast I choose,-- Oppression's yoke be burst in twain, The bands of guilt unloose?--
5 "To nakedness and want Your food and raiment deal, To dwell your kindred race among, And all their sufferings heal?