This entire blog post is copied word for word from Justin Taylor's blog. The structure is Mr Taylor's work and the actual poem Mr Hart's work. Very obviously then - this work is not my own. It is worth copying as it is both greatly encouraging and a wonderful depiction of preaching the gospel to yourself day after day. The author gets the Christian life and the continual contrast between the beauty of Christ and the ugliness of our own lives. The words to “The Grieved Soul,” by Joseph Hart (1712-1768): Believer: 1. Come, my soul and let us try For a little season, Ev’ry burden to lay by; Come and let us reason. What is this that casts you down? Who are those that grieve you? Speak and let the worst be known; Speaking may relieve thee. Soul: 2. O, I sink beneath the load Of my nature’s evil! Full of enmity to God; Captived by the devil! Restless as the troubled seas, Feeble, faint and fearful; Plagued with ev’ry sore disease, How can I be cheerful? Believer:
3. Think on what thy Saviour bore In the gloomy garden. Sweating blood at every pore, To procure thy pardon! See him stretched upon the wood, Bleeding, grieving, crying, Suffering all the wrath of God, Groaning, gasping, dying! Soul: 4. This by faith I sometimes view, And those views relieve me; But my sins return anew; These are they that grieve me. O, I’m leprous, stinking, foul, Quite throughout infected; Have not I, if any soul, Cause to be dejected? Believer: 5. Think how loud thy dying Lord Cried out, “It is finished!” Treasure up that sacred word, Whole and undiminished; Doubt not he will carry on, To its full perfection, That good work he has begun; Why, then, this dejection? Soul: 6. Faith when void of works is dead; This the Scriptures witness; And what works have I to plead, Who am all unfitness? All my powers are depraved, Blind, perverse, and filthy; If from death I’m fully saved, Why am I not healthy? Believer: 7. Pore not on thyself too long, Lest it sing thee lower; Look to Jesus, kind as strong Mercy joined with power; Every work that thou must do, Will thy gracious Saviour For thee work, and in thee too, Of his special favour. Soul: 8. Jesus’ precious blood, once spilt, I depend on solely, To release and clear my guilt; But I would be holy. Believer: He that bought thee on the cross Can control thy nature; Fully purge away thy dross; Make thee a new creature. Soul: 9. That he can I nothing doubt, Be it but his pleasure. Believer: Though it be not done throughout, May it not in measure? Soul: When that measure, far from great, Still shall seem decreasing? Believer: Faint not then, but pray and wait, Never, never ceasing. Soul: 10. What when prayer meets no regard? Believer: Still repeat it often. Soul: But I feel myself so hard. Believer: Jesus will thee soften. Soul: But my enemies make head. Believer: Let them closer drive thee. Soul: But I’m cold, I’m dark, I’m dead. Believer: Jesus will revive thee.
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