037 A Morning Hymn
| Author | Charles Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | hymn |
| Year | 1739 |
| Passage ID | cw-037-a-morning-hymn-full |
| Words | 222 |
A Morning Hymn 1 "See the day-spring from afar Usher'd by the morning-star!" Haste; to him who sends the light, Hallow the remains of night. Souls, put on your glorious dress, Waking into righteousness: Cloath'd with Christ aspire to shine, Radiance he of light divine; Beam of the eternal beam, He in God, and God in him! Strive we him in us to see, Transcript of the deity. 2 Burst we then the bands of death, Rais'd by his all-quickning breath; Long we to be loos'd from earth, Struggling51 into second birth. Spent at length is nature's night; Christ attends to give us light, Christ attends himself to give; God we now may see, and live. 51"Struggling" changed to "Struggle" in 4th end. (1743) and 5th edn. (1756). Tho' the outward man decay; Form'd within us day by day Still the inner man we view, Christ creating all things new. 3 Turn, O turn us, Lord, again, Raiser thou of fallen man! Sin destroy and nature's boast, Saviour thou of spirits lost! Thy great will in us be done: Crucified and dead our own, Ours no longer let us be; Hide us from ourselves in thee! Thou the life, the truth, the way, Suffer us no more to stray; Give us, Lord, and ever give Thee to know, in thee to live!