025 Upon Parting With His Friends Part I Part Iii
| Author | Charles Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | hymn |
| Year | 1740 |
| Passage ID | cw-025-upon-parting-with-his-friends-part-i-part-iii-full |
| Words | 209 |
Upon Parting with His Friends. [Part] I [Part] III
Source: Hymns and Sacred Poems (1740), Part I
Author: Charles Wesley (attributed)
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[Part] III.
Why should a sinful man complain,
When mildly chasten’d for his good?
Start from the salutary pain,
And tremble at a Father’s rod?
Why should I grieve his hand t’ endure,
Or murmur to accept my cure?
Beneath th’ afflictive stroke I fall,
And struggle to give up my will;
Weeping I own ’tis mercy all;
Mercy pursues and holds me still,
Kindly refuses to depart,
And strongly vindicates my heart.
Humbly I now the rod revere,
And mercy in the judgment find;
’Tis God afflicts; I own him near;
’Tis he, ’tis he severely kind,
Watches my soul with jealous care,
Disdainful of a rival there.
’Tis hence my ravish’d friends I mourn,
And grief weighs down my weary head,
Far from my bleeding bosom torn,
The dear, lov’d, dangerous joys are fled,
Hence my complaining never ends,--
Oh! I have lost my friends, my friends!
Long my reluctant folly held,
Nor gave them to my God’s command;
Hardly at length constrain’d to yield;
For Oh! The angel seiz’d my hand,
Broke off my grasp, forbad my stay,
And forc’d my ling’ring soul away.