He utters his almighty voice, The nations melt, the tumult dies. a The Lord of old for Jacob fought, And Jacob's God is fill our aid: Behold the works his hand has wrought, What defolations he has made!
3 From fea to fea, through all the shores, He makes the noife of battle cease; When from on high his thunder roars, He awes the trembling world to peace. 4 He breaks the bow, he cuts the fpear, Chariots he burns with heavenly flame; Keep filence, all the earth, and hear The found and glory of his name.
5
"Be ftill, and learn that I am God, "I'll be exalted o'er the lands, "I will be known and fear'd abroad, "But ftill my throne in Zion ftands." 6 O Lord of Hofts, almighty King,
While we fo near thy prefence dwell, Our faith fhall fit fecure, and fing Defiance to the gates of hell.
PSALM XLVII.
10
Chrift afcending and reigning. FOR a fhout of facred joy To God the fovereign King! Let every land their tongues employ, And hymns of triumph fing.
2 Jefus our God afcends on high! His heavenly guards, around, Attend him rifing through the sky, With trumpet's joyful found.
3 While angels fhout and praife their King, Let mortals learn their trains:
Let all the earth his honours fing; O'er all the earth he reigns.
4 Rehearse his praife with awe profound; Let knowledge lead the fong; Nor mock him with a folemn found Upon a thoughtless tongue.
5 In Ifrael ftood his ancient throne, He lov'd that chofen race;
But now he calls the world his own, And heathens tafte his grace.
6 The Gentile nations are the Lord's, There Abraham's God is known, While powers and princes, fhields and fwords, Submit before his throne.
PSALM XLVIII. 1A Part. Short Metre. [*]
Ver. 1-8.
1
The church is the honour and fafety of a nation. GREAT is the Lord our God, And let his praife be He makes his churches his abode, His moft delightful feat.
great;
2 Thefe temples of his grace, How beautiful they ftand! The honours of our native place, And bulwarks of our land.]
In Zion God is known, A refuge in diftrefs;
How bright has his falvation fhone Through all her palaces.
4 When kings againft her join'd, And faw the Lord was there, In wild confufion of the mind, They fled with hafty fear. When navies, tall and proud, Attempt to fpoil our peace,. He fends his tempeft, roaring loud, And finks them in the feas.
6 Oft have our fathers told, Our eyes have often feen, How well our God fecures the fold Where his own fheep have been. In every new diftrefs
7
We'll to his houfe repair, We'll think upon his wondrous grace, And feek deliverance there.
PSALM XLVIII. 2d Part. Short Metre. [*] Ver. 10-14.
The beauty of the church; or, gospel worship and order. AR as thy name is known
1
FAR
The world declares thy praise ;
Thy faints, O Lord, before thy throne, Their fongs of honour raise. With joy let Judah ftand On Zion's chofen hill, Proclaim the wonders of thy hand, And counfels of thy will. 3 Let ftrangers walk around The city where we dwell, Compass and view thine holy ground, And mark the building well; 4 The orders of thy houfe, The worship of thy court, The cheerful fongs, the folemn vows, And make a fair report.
How decent and how wife! How glorious to behold! Beyond the pomp that charms the eyes, And rites adorn'd with gold.
6 The God we worship now Will guide us till we die, Will be our God while here below, And ours above the sky.
PSALM XLIX. 1ft Part. Com. Metre. [*] Ver. 6-14:
Pride and death; or, the vanity of life and riches. HY doth the man of riches grow To infolence and pride,
1
WHY
To fee his wealth and honours flow With every rifing tide?
2 [Why doth he treat the poor with scorn, Made of the felf fame clay,
And boat as though his flesh was born Of better duft than they ?]
3 Not all his treasures can procure His foul a fhort reprieve, Redeem from death one guilty hour, Or make his brother live.
4 [Life is a bleffing can't be fold, The ranfom is too high;
Juftice will ne'er be brib'd with gold, That man may never die.]
5 He fees the brutifh and the "wife, The timorous and the brave
Quit their poffeffions, close their eyes, And haften to the grave.
"L
6 Yet 'tis his inward thought and pride, 'My houfe fhall ever fland; "And that my name may long abide, "I'll give it to my land."
7 Vain are his thoughts, his hopes are loft; How foon his memory dies! His name is written in the dust, Where his own carcafs lies. PAUSE.
8 This is the folly of their way; And yet their fons, as vain, Approve the words their fathers say, And act their works again.
9 Men void of wifdom and of grace, If honour raise them high, Live like the beaft, a thoughtlefs race, And like the beaft they die.
10 [Laid in the grave like filly fheep, Death feeds upon them there, Till the laft trumpet breaks their fleep, In terror and despair.]
PSALM XLIX. 2d Part. Com. Metre. [b] Death and the refurrection.
Ver. 14, 15.
E fons of pride, that hate the just, And trample on the poor,
When death has brought you down to dust, Your pomp fhall rise no more.
The laft great day fhall change the scene; When will that hour appear? When fhall the juft revive and reign O'er all that fcorn'd them here? 3 God will my naked foul receive, When fep'rate from the flefh; And break the prifon of the grave, To raise my bones afresh. Heaven is my everlasting home : Th' inheritance is fure; Let men of pride their rage refume, But I'll repine no more.
PSALM XLIX. Long Metre. [b] The rich finner's death, and the faint's refurrection. WHY do the proud infult the poor,
And boaft the large eftates they have? How vain are riches to fecure Their haughty owners from the grave! 2 They can't redeem one hour from death, With all the wealth in which they truft; Nor give a dying brother breath, When God commands him down to duft. 3 There the dark earth and difmal fhade Shall clafp their naked bodies round; That flefh, fo delicately fed,
Lies cold, and moulders in the ground. 4 Like thoughtless fheep the finner dies, Laid in the grave for worms to eat; The faints fhall in the morning rife, And find the oppreffor at their feet. 5 His honours perifh in the duft,
And pomp and beauty, birth and blood: That glorious day exalts the juft To full dominion o'er the proud.
![[graphic]](https://books.google.com.pr/books/content?id=YhgWAAAAYAAJ&output=html_text&pg=RA1-PA88&img=1&zoom=3&hl=en&q=%22cold+hearts+of+ours.+2+Look,+how+we+grovel+here+below,+Fond+of%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U3vgpRMsptAVP-le1IE9rvW4GfqGQ&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=222,360,699,1335)
wal
6 My Saviour fhall my life reflore, And raife me from my dark abode: 134 My flefh and foul fhall
But dwell forever near my G no more,
PSALM L. 14 Part. Common Metre. [b] Ver. 1-6. The last judgment; or, the faints rewarded. HE Lord, the judge, before his throne
« AnteriorContinuar » |