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232. c. M.

To be ashamed of Jesus, absurd and dangerous.

1 Is there on earth a nobler name
Than Jesus to be found?
Who can assert a higher claim,
Or more with truth abound?

2 The Son of God, adorned with grace Commissioned from above,

He bears to our rebellious race
The messages of love.

3 Behold his gentle spirit feel

The sufferings of mankind;

And with a word, the sorrows heal
Of body and of mind.

4 How noble were the truths he taught!
How pure the life he led !
And shall another Lord be sought,
And we disown our Head?

5 Ashamed of Jesus! shall we let
Our heavenly prospects go?
And, madly, at defiance set
The threats of future wo!

6 Forbid it, Lord! nor let us yield
To this unworthy shame;
But each, with holy courage filled,
Rejoice in Jesus' name.

+ Exeter Coll.

233. c. M.

God's Dominion and Decrees.

1 KEEP silence, all created things,
And wait your Maker's nod!

The muse stands trembling while she sings
The honours of her God.

2 Life, death, and hell, and worlds unknown,
Hang on his firm decree;
He sits on no precarious throne,
Nor borrows leave to be.

3 Unnumbered ages ere the skies
Were into motion brought,

Whate'er through endless years should rise,
Stood present to his thought.

4 His mighty voice bids ancient night
Her endless realms resign;

And lo! ten thousand globes of light
In fields of azure shine.

5 His wisdom with resistless sway
Guides the vast moving frame;
While all the ranks of beings pay
Deep reverence to his name.

234. c. M.

Watts.

Instructions to the Young, from a Review of past Dispensations of Providence. Ps. lxxviii.

1 LET children hear the mighty deeds.
Which God performed of old;

Which in our younger years we saw,
And which our fathers told.

2 He bids us make his glories known,
His works of power and grace;
And we'll convey his wonders down
Through every rising race.

3 Our lips shall tell them to our sons,
And they again to theirs ;
That generations yet unborn

May teach them to their heirs.

4 Thus shall they learn, in God alone
Their hope securely stands ;
That they may ne'er forget his works,
But practise his commands.

235. c. M.

The Creation. Gen. 1.

Watts.

1 'LET heaven arise, let earth appear!" Said the Almighty Lord:

The heaven arose, the earth appeared
At his creating word.

2 Thick darkness brooded o'er the deep: God said 'Let there be light!'

The light shone forth with smiling ray,
And scattered ancient night.

3 He bade the clouds ascend on high;
The clouds ascend and bear
A watery treasure to the sky,
And float upon the air.

4 The liquid element below

Was gathered by his hand;
The rolling seas together flow,
And leave the solid land.

5 With herbs, and plants, and fruitful trees,
The new-formed globe he crowned,
Ere there was rain to bless the soil,
Or sun to warm the ground.

6 Then, high in heaven's resplendent arch,
He placed those orbs of light;
He set the sun to rule the day,
The moon to rule the night.

7 Next, from the deep, the almighty King:
Did vital beings frame;
Fowls of the air of every wing,
And fish of every name.

8 To all the various brutal tribes
He gave their wondrous birth:
At once the lion and the worm
Sprang from the teeming earth.

9 Then, chief o'er all his works below,
At last was Adam made:

His Maker's image blessed his soul,
And glory crowned his head.

10 Fair in the almighty Maker's eye
The whole creation stood;

He viewed the fabric he had raised;
His word pronounced it good.

236. L. M.

Watts.

The Properties of Christian Charity. 1 Cor. xiii.

1 LET men of high conceit and zeal
Their fervour and their faith proclaim ;-
If charity be wanting still,

The rest is but a sounding name.

2 Knowledge is apt to bloat the mind, And zeal to set the world on fire; But charity is calm and kind,

And gentle thoughts will still inspire.
3 Patient and meek, she suffers long,
And slowly her resentments rise;
Soon she forgets the greatest wrong,
And rage retires, and malice dies.

4 She envies none their better state,
But makes her neighbour's bliss her own;
Nor vaunts herself with mind elate,
But still a modest air puts on.

5 This is the grace that reigns on high,
And will for ever brightly burn,
When hope shall in fruition die,
And faith to sight triumphant turn.

237. L. M.

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Browne.

Peace and Happiness the Portion of the Righteous. Ps. xxxvii

1 LET none be envious when they see
The wicked in a prosperous state;
Or, tempted by their short success,
Grow bold their crimes to imitate.

2 Think not mere wealth makes happy men;
The portion of the virtuous poor

Is better far than wicked men's
Ill-got, or ill-employed store.

3 Let others foolishly expect

How kind the flattering world will prove :
We'll seek our God alone to please,

And be ambitious of his love.

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