Wesley Corpus

Hymns in Word in Season (1745) (Stanza 3)

AuthorCharles Wesley
Typehymn-stanza
Year1745
Passage IDcw-duke-hymns-in-word-in-season-1745-stanza-03
Words156
Sourcehttps://divinity.duke.edu/initiatives/wesleyan-methodist/...
Catholic Spirit Universal Redemption Prevenient Grace
Page 9 An Hymn. Regard, thou righteous God, and true, Regard thy weeping people's prayer, Before the sword our land go through, Before thy latest plague we bear, Let all to thee their smiter turn, Let all beneath thine anger mourn. The sword, which first bereav'd abroad, We now within our borders see: We see, but slight thy nearer rod, So oft so kindly warn'd by thee: We still thy warning love despise, And dare thine utmost wrath to rise. Yet for the faithful remnant's sake Thine utmost wrath a while defer, If haply we at last may wake, And trembling at destruction near The cause of all our evils own, And leave the sins for which we groan. Or if the wicked will not mourn, And 'scape the long-suspended blow, Yet shall it to thy glory turn, Yet shall they all thy patience know, Thy slighted love and mercy clear, And vindicate thy justice here.
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