FESTIVAL HYMNS. I will sing with the Spirit, and I will sing with the understanding also. THE YEAR, ACCORDING TO THE MANNER OF THE ANCIENT CHURCH; FITTED TO THE FANCY AND DEVOTION OF THE YOUNGER AND PIOUS PERSONS: APT FOR MEMORY, AND TO BE JOINED TO THEIR OTHER PRAYERS. Hymns for Advent, or the Weeks immediately before the Birth of our Blessed Saviour. I. WHEN, Lord, O when, shall we Our dear salvation see? Arise, arise; Our fainting eyes Have long'd all night: and 'twas a long one too. Man never yet could say He saw more than one day, One day of Eden's seven : The guilty hours, there blasted with the breath Of sin and death, Have, ever since, worn a nocturnal hue. But thou hast given us hopes, that we, Wherein each vile neglected place, Shall be, like that, the porch and gate of heaven. How long, dear God, how long! Knit and combin'd Into one body, look for thee their head. Lord, we are vile and rude, Headless, and senseless, without thee, And thy bright self to this our body wed; Spruce, as the childhood of the year, When thou to it shall so united be.-Amen. The second Hymn for Advent; or, Christ's coming to Jerusalem in triumph. LORD, come away; Why dost thou stay? Thy road is ready; and thy paths, made straight, The consecration of thy beauteous feet. Ride on triumphantly: behold, we lay Hosannah! welcome to our hearts: Lord, here Nothing but thieves and robbers dwell therein. Profane that holy place, Where thou hast chose to set thy face. And then if our stiff tongues shall be Mute in the praises of thy deity, The stones out of the temple-wall Hosannah! and thy glorious footsteps greet.-Amen. Hymns for Christmas Day. I. MYSTERIOUS truth! that the self-same should be Whom first the shepherds knew, When they themselves became Let Jews and Gentiles hither come In numbers great, that can't be told; And call thy lambs, that wander, home. All glories be to the glorious Deity. The second Hymn; being a Dialogue between three Shepherds. 1. WHERE is this blessed Babe, That hath made All the world so full of joy And expectation? That glorious boy, That crowns each nation With a triumphant wreath of blessedness? 2. Where should he be but in the throng, An ox, and mule, stand and behold,— That a stable should enfold Him that can thunder. Chorus. O what a gracious God have we! How good, how great !-ev'n as our misery. The third Hymn: of Christ's Birth in an Inn. THE blessed Virgin travail'd without pain, And lodged in an inn; A glorious star the sign, But of a greater guest than ever came that That is the God of night and day, way; And over all the pow'rs of heaven doth reign. And then he comes, That pays all sums, Ev'n the whole price of lost humanity, And sets us free From the ungodly empery Of sin, and Satan, and of death. O make our hearts, blest God, thy lodging place; And in our breast Be pleas'd to rest, For thou lov'st temples better than an inn; May not profane the Deity within, And sully o'er the ornaments of grace.-Amen. Which, to the world dispensed by his hand, Made it stand Fix'd in amazement to behold that light, From the throne of the Lamb, To invite Our wretched eyes (which nothing else could see To anticipate, by their ravish'd sight, Shall fall away, O let thy gracious hand conduct me up, May, with thy friend, in thy sweet bosom lie, For ever in eternity. Hallelujah. Upon the Day of the Holy Innocents. MOURNFUL Judah shrieks and cries Of their babes, that cry More that they lose their paps, than that they die. Who did redeem us all from sin. They, like himself, went spotless hence, Which now does ride Trampling upon Herod's pride; Passing, from their fontinels of clay, All their tears and groans are dead, And they to rest and glory fled; Lord, who wert pleas'd so many babes should fall, Whilst each sword hop'd that ev'ry of the all Was the desired King: make us to be In innocence like them,-in glory, Thee.-Amen. |