ASSURANCE, DOUBT, UNBELIEF
THE ETERNAL GOODNESS
I bow my forehead to the dust,
I veil mine eyes
for shame,
And urge, in trembling self-distrust,
A prayer without
a claim.
No offering of mine own I
have,
Nor works my faith
to prove;
I can but give the gifts he
gave,
And plead his
love for love.
I dimly guess, from blessings
known,
Of greater out
of sight;
And, with the chastened psalmist,
own
His judgments
too are right.
And if my heart and flesh
are weak
To bear an untried
pain,
The bruised reed he will not
break,
But strengthen
and sustain.
I know not what the future
hath
Of marvel or surprise,
Assured alone that life and
death
His mercy underlies.
And so beside the silent sea
I wait the muffled
oar;
No harm from him can come
to me
On ocean or on
shore.
I know not where his islands
lift
Their fronded
palms in air;
I only know I cannot drift
Beyond his love
and care.
And thou, O Lord, by whom
are seen
Thy creatures
as they be,
Forgive me if too close I
lean
My human heart
on thee.
John Greenleaf
Whittier.
Forgive us, Lord, our little
faith;
And help us all,
from morn till e’en,
Still to believe that lot
the best
Which is, not
that which might have been.
And grant we may so pass the
days
The cradle and
the grave between,
That death’s dark hour
not darker be
For thoughts of
what life might have been.
THE ONE THING NEEDFUL
My prayer to the promise shall
cling
I will not give
heed to a doubt;
For I ask for the one needful
thing
Which I cannot
be happy without:
A spirit of lowly repose
In the love of
the Lamb that was slain;
A heart to be touched with
his woes,
And a care not
to grieve him again;
The peace that my Saviour
has bought,
The cheerfulness
nothing can dim,
The love that can bring every
thought
Into perfect obedience
to him;
The wisdom his mercy to own
In the way he
directs me to take
To glory in Jesus alone,
And to love and
do good for his sake.
All this thou hast offered
to me
In the promise
whereon I will rest;
For faith, O my Saviour! in
thee,
Is the substance
of all my request.
Thy word has commanded my
prayer,
Thy Spirit has
taught me to pray;
And all my unholy despair
Is ready to vanish
away.
Thou wilt not be weary of
me;
Thy promise my
faith shall sustain;
And soon, very soon, shall
I see
I have not been
asking in vain.
Anna Letitia Waring.
Ah, God! I have not had
thee day and night
In thought, nor magnified
thy name aright,
Nor lauded thee, nor glorified,
nor laid
Upon thine altars one poor
kusa-blade!
Yet now, when I seek refuge,
Lord! with thee,
I ask, and thou wilt give,
all good to me.
Edwin Arnold,
from the Sanskrit.
ABOVE ALL, THE SHIELD
Faith fails;
Then in the dust
Lie failing rest and light
and trust.
So doth the troubled soul
itself distress,
And choke the fountain in
the wilderness.
I care not what
your peace assails!
The deep root
is, faith fails.
Faith fails
When in the breast
The Lord’s sweet presence
doth not rest;
For who believes, clouds cannot
make afraid;
He knows the sun doth shine
behind the shade;
He rides at anchor
through the gales.
Do you not so?
Faith fails.
Faith fails;
Its foes alarm,
And persecution’s threats
disarm;
False friends can scarcely
wish it a good day,
Before it taketh fright and
shrinks away.
When God doth
guard, what foe prevails?
Why then the fear?
Faith fails.
Faith fails;
Else cares would die,
And we should on God’s
care rely.
Man for the coming day doth
grieve and fret,
And all past days doth sinfully
forget.
For every beast
God’s care avails;
Why not for us?
Faith fails.
Faith fails;
Then cometh fear,
If sickness comes, if death
is near.
O man, why is it, when the
times are bad
And the days evil, that thy
face is sad?
How is it that
thy courage quails?
It must be this:
Faith fails.
My God!
Let my faith be
Living, and working actively
With hope and joy, that death
may not surprise.
So let them sweetly close
my eyes;
The Christian’s
life to death may yield
Hope stands; faith
has the field.
S. C. Schoener.
LOOKING UNTO GOD
I look to Thee in every need,
And never look
in vain;
I feel thy strong and tender
love,
And all is well
again:
The thought of thee is mightier
far
Than sin and pain and sorrow
are.
Discouraged in the work of
life,
Disheartened by
its load,
Shamed by its failures or
its fears,
I sink beside
the road;
But let me only think of Thee,
And then new heart springs
up in me.
Thy calmness bends serene
above
My restlessness
to still;
Around me flows thy quickening
life,
To nerve my faltering
will;
Thy presence fills my solitude;
Thy providence turns all to
good.
Embosomed deep in Thy dear
love,
Held in thy law,
I stand;
Thy hand in all things I behold,
And all things
in thy hand;
Thou leadest me by unsought
ways,
And turn’st my mourning
into praise.
Samuel Longfellow.
FAITH
If I could feel my hand, dear Lord,
in thine,
And surely know
That I was walking in the light divine
Through weal or woe;
If I could hear thy voice in accents
sweet
But plainly say,
To guide my groping, wandering feet,
“This is the way;”
I would so gladly walk therein;
but now
I cannot see.
Oh, give me, Lord, the faith to humbly bow
And trust in thee!
There is no faith in seeing.
Were we led
Like children here,
And lifted over rock and river-bed,
No care, no fear,
We should be useless in the busy
throng;
Life’s work undone;
Lord, make us brave and earnest, true and strong,
Till heaven is won.
Sarah Knowles Bolton.
DOUBTING NOTHING
Acts 10. 9-20.
Not to thy saints of old alone
dost Thou
In heavenly trance make known thy perfect will,
But to each hungry soul thy love would fill
Descending out of heaven, we wist not how
Comes by thy grace the holy vision now;
While we whose hearts should with the message
thrill
Cry “Common and unholy!” to thee
still,
And, uninspired, in grief before thee bow.
O Thou, whose Own the way
we fare hath trod,
Give to thy children
quick, discerning eyes
To see in life upspringing
from the sod
All the divineness
that within it lies,
Till humble service
lift us to the skies
Who, “doubting nothing,”
seek thy will, O God!
Louise Manning
Hodgkins.
THE EYE OF FAITH
I do not ask for earthly store
Beyond a day’s
supply;
I only covet more and more
The clear and
single eye.
To see my duty face to face
And trust the Lord for daily
grace.
I care not for the empty show
That thoughtless
worldlings see;
I crave to do the best I know,
And leave the
rest with thee;
Well satisfied that sweet
reward
Is sure to those who trust
the Lord.
Whate’er the crosses
mine shall be,
I will not dare
to shun;
I only ask to live for thee,
And that thy will
be done;
Thy will, O Lord, be mine
each day,
While passing on my homeward
way.
And when at last, my labor
o’er,
I cross the narrow
sea,
Grant, Lord, that on the other
shore
My soul may dwell
with thee,
And learn what here I cannot
know:
Why thou hast ever loved me
so.
J. J. Maxfield.
HAVE FAITH IN GOD
Have faith in God! for he who reigns
on high
Hath borne thy grief and hears the suppliant’s
sigh,
Still to his arms, thine only refuge, fly.
Have
faith in God!
Fear not to call on him, O soul distressed!
Thy sorrow’s whisper wooes thee to his breast;
He who is oftenest there is oftenest blest.
Have
faith in God!
Lean not on Egypt’s reeds; slake
not thy thirst
At earthly cisterns. Seek the kingdom first.
Though man and Satan fight thee with their worst,
Have
faith in God!
Go tell him all! The sigh thy bosom
heaves
Is heard in heaven. Strength and grace he
gives
Who gave himself for thee. Our Jesus lives;
Have
faith in God!
FAITH IN GOD
Though time may dig the grave of
creeds,
And dogmas wither in the sod,
My soul will keep the thought it needs
Its swerveless faith in God.
No matter how the world began,
Nor where the march of science goes,
My trust in something more than man
Shall help me bear life’s woes.
Let progress take the props
away,
And moldering
superstitions fall;
Still God retains his regal
sway
The Maker of us
all.
Why cavil over that or this?
One thought is
vast enough for me
The great Creator was, and
is,
And evermore will
be.
A STRONGER FAITH
Perplext in faith, but pure
in deeds,
At last he beat
his music out.
There lives more
faith in honest doubt,
Believe me, than in half the
creeds.
He fought his doubts and gathered
strength,
He would not make
his judgment blind,
He faced the specters
of the mind
And laid them; thus he came
at length
To find a stronger faith his
own,
And Power was
with him in the night,
Which makes the
darkness and the light,
And dwells not in the light
alone.
Alfred Tennyson.
A PERFECT FAITH
O for a faith that will not
shrink
Though pressed
by every foe,
That will not tremble on the
brink
Of any earthly
woe!
That will not murmur nor complain
Beneath the chastening
rod,
But in the hour of grief or
pain
Will lean upon
its God;
A faith that shines more bright
and clear
When tempests
rage without;
That when in danger knows
no fear.
In darkness feels
no doubt;
That bears, unmoved, the world’s
dread frown,
Nor heeds its
scornful smile;
That seas of trouble cannot
drown,
Nor Satan’s
arts beguile.
Lord, give us such a faith
as this,
And then, whate’er
may come,
We’ll taste, e’en
here, the hallowed bliss
Of an eternal
home.
William H. Bathurst.
Who liveth best? Not
he whose sail,
Swept on by favoring tide
and gale,
Swift wins the haven fair;
But he whose spirit strong
doth still
A victory wrest from every
ill;
Whose faith sublime
On every cloud a rainbow paints
’Tis he redeems the
time.
BELIEVE GOOD THINGS OF GOD
When in the storm it seems
to thee
That he who rules the raging
sea
Is sleeping still,
with bended knee,
Believe good things
of God.
When thou hast sought in vain
to find
The silver thread of love
entwined
With life’s oft-tangled
web resigned,
Believe good things
of God.
And should he smite thee till
thy heart
Is crushed beneath the bruising
smart,
Still, while the bitter tear-drops
start,
Believe good things
of God.
’Tis true, thou canst
not understand
The dealings of thy Father’s
hand;
But, trusting what his love
has planned,
Believe good things
of God.
He loves thee! In that
love confide
Unchanging, faithful, true,
and tried;
And let or joy or grief betide,
Believe good things
of God.
Thou canst not raise thy thoughts
too high;
As spreads above the earth
the sky,
So do his thoughts thy thoughts
outvie:
Believe good things
of God.
In spite of what thine eyes
behold;
In spite of what thy fears
have told;
Still to his gracious promise
hold
Believe good things
of God.
For know that what thou canst
believe
Thou shalt in his good time
receive;
Thou canst not half his love
conceive
Believe good things
of God.
William Luff.
BE NOT WEARY
Then, fainting soul, arise
and sing;
Mount, but be sober on the
wing;
Mount up, for heaven is won
by prayer,
Be sober, for thou art not
there.
Till death the weary spirit
free,
Thy God hath said ’tis
good for thee
To walk by faith, and not
by sight,
Take it on trust
a little while;
Soon thou shalt read the mystery
right
In the full sunshine
of his smile.
John Keble.
ALL’S FOR THE BEST
All’s for the best;
be sanguine and cheerful;
Trouble and sorrow
are friends in disguise;
Nothing but folly goes faithless
and fearful,
Courage forever
is happy and wise.
All’s for the best,
if a man would but know it;
Providence wishes
us all to be blest;
This is no dream of the pundit
or poet,
Heaven is gracious
and all’s for the best.
All’s for the best;
then fling away terrors;
Meet all your
fears and your foes in the van;
And in the midst of your dangers
or errors,
Trust like a child,
while you strive like a man.
All’s for the best;
unbiased, unbounded,
Providence reigns
from the east to the west;
And, by both wisdom and mercy
surrounded,
Hope, and be happy,
that all’s for the best.
Martin Farquhar
Tupper.
BLEST IS THE FAITH DIVINE AND STRONG
Blest is the faith divine
and strong,
Of thanks and
praise an endless fountain,
Whose life is one perpetual
song
High up the Saviour’s
holy mountain.
Blest is the hope that holds
to God,
In doubt and darkness
still unshaken;
And sings along the heavenly
road,
Sweetest when
most it seems forsaken.
Blest is the love that cannot
love
Aught that earth
gives of best and brightest;
Whose raptures thrill, like
saints above,
Most when its
earthly gifts are lightest.
Blest is the time that in
the eye
Of God its hopeful
watch is keeping,
And grows into eternity
Like noiseless
trees when men are sleeping.
Frederick William
Faber.
GOD’S VOICE
Around my path life’s
mysteries
Their deepening
shadows throw;
And as I gaze and ponder,
They dark and
darker grow;
Yet still amid the darkness
I feel the light
is near,
And in the awful stillness
God’s voice
I seem to hear.
Thy voice I hear above me,
Which says, “Wait,
trust, and pray,
The night will soon be over,
And light will
come with day.”
Amen! the light and darkness
Are both alike
to thee;
Then to thy waiting servant
Alike they both
shall be.
That great unending future,
I cannot pierce
its shroud,
But nothing doubt nor tremble,
God’s bow
is on the cloud;
To him I yield my spirit,
On him I lay my
load;
Fear ends with death; beyond
it
I nothing see
but God.
Samuel Greg.
FLOWERS WITHOUT FRUIT
Prune thou thy words; the
thoughts control
That o’er
thee swell and throng;
They will condense within
thy soul,
And change to
purpose strong.
But he who lets his feelings
run
In soft luxurious
flow
Shrinks when hard service
must be done,
And faints at
every woe.
Faith’s meanest deed
more favor bears,
Where hearts and
wills are weighed,
Than brightest transports,
choicest prayers,
Which bloom this
hour, and fade.
John Henry Newman.
Fair is the soul, rare is
the soul
Who has kept,
after youth is past,
All the art of the child,
all the heart of the child,
Holding his faith
at last.
Frank Gelett Burgess.
GOD KNOWS
God knows not I the
devious way
Wherein my faltering
feet may tread,
Before into the light of day,
My steps from
out this gloom are led,
And, since my Lord the path
doth see,
What matter if ’tis
hid from me?
God knows not I how
sweet accord
Shall grow at
length from out this clash
Of earthly discords which
have jarred
On soul and sense;
I hear the crash,
Yet feel and know that on
his ear
Breaks harmony full,
deep, and clear.
God knows not I why,
when I’d fain
Have walked in
pastures green and fair,
The path he pointed me hath
lain
Through rocky
deserts, bleak and bare.
I blindly trust since
’tis his will
This way lies safety, that
way ill.
He knoweth, too, despite my
will
I’m weak
when I should be most strong.
And after earnest wrestling
still
I see the right
yet do the wrong.
Is it that I may learn at
length
Not mine, but his, the saving
strength?
His perfect plan I may not
grasp,
Yet I can trust
Love Infinite,
And with my feeble fingers
clasp
The hand which
leads me into light.
My soul upon his errands goes,
The end I know not but
God knows.
THE LORD’S LEADING
Thus far the Lord hath led
us, in darkness and in day,
Through all the varied stages
of the narrow homeward way;
Long since he took that journey he
trod that path alone;
Its trials and its dangers
full well himself hath known.
Thus far the Lord hath led
us; the promise hath not failed.
The enemy, encountered oft,
has never quite prevailed:
The shield of faith has turned
aside, or quenched each fiery dart,
The Spirit’s sword in
weakest hands has forced him to depart.
Thus far the Lord hath led
us; the waters have been high,
But yet in passing through
them we felt that he was nigh.
A very present helper in trouble
we have found,
His comforts most abounded
when our sorrows did abound.
Thus far the Lord hath led
us; our need hath been supplied,
And mercy hath encompassed
us about on every side;
Still falls the daily manna;
the pure rock-fountains flow;
And many flowers of love and
hope along the wayside grow.
Thus far the Lord hath led
us; and will he now forsake
The feeble ones whom for his
own it pleases him to take?
Oh, never, never! earthly
friends may cold and faithless prove,
But his is changeless pity
and everlasting love.
Calmly we look behind us,
our joys and sorrows past,
We know that all is mercy
now, and shall be well at last;
Calmly we look before us;
we fear no future ill,
Enough for safety and for
peace, if Thou art with us still.
Yes, they that know thy name,
Lord, shall put their trust in thee,
While nothing in themselves
but sin and helplessness they see.
The race thou hast appointed
us with patience we can run,
Thou wilt perform unto the
end the work thou hast begun.
Have you found your life distasteful?
My life did and
does smack sweet.
Was your youth of pleasure
wasteful?
Mine I saved,
and hold complete.
Do your joys with age diminish?
When mine fail
me I’ll complain.
Must in death your daylight
finish?
My sun sets to
rise again.
I find earth not gray, but
rosy;
Heaven not grim,
but fair of hue.
Do I stoop? I pluck a
posy;
Do I stand and
stare? All’s blue.
Robert Browning.
WE SHALL KNOW
In wise proportion does a
fond hand mingle
The sweet and
bitter in our life-cup here;
Each drop of either is by
love eternal
Poured forth in
wisdom for his children dear.
The loving Father, as a wise
physician,
Knows what the
wants of all those children are;
Knows which is needed most the
joy or sorrow,
The peace of comfort,
or affliction’s war.
Then, should the bitter be
our daily portion,
So that we cannot
any sweet discern,
Let us, in childlike faith,
receive with meekness
The needed tonic,
and its lessons learn.
And if we cannot even that
decipher,
Let us be still,
nay, thank him for his care,
Contented that we soon shall
know hereafter
When we the fullness
of his presence share.
Charlotte Murray.
THE STEPS OF FAITH
Know well, my soul, God’s
hand controls
Whate’er
thou fearest;
Round him in calmest music
rolls
Whate’er
thou hearest.
Nothing before, nothing behind;
The steps of faith
Fall on the seeming void,
and find
The rock beneath.
The Present, the Present is
all thou hast
For thy sure possessing;
Like the patriarch’s
angel, hold it fast
Till it gives
its blessing.
John Greenleaf
Whittier.
I am of sinfulness and sorrows
full!
Thou art the Mighty, Great,
and Merciful!
How should we not be friends,
or thou not save
Me who bring naught to thee
who all things gave?
Edwin Arnold,
from the Sanskrit.
MY GUIDE
I know not the way I am going,
But well do I
know my Guide!
With a childlike trust do
I give my hand
To the mighty
Friend by my side;
And the only thing that I
say to him,
As he takes it,
is, “Hold it fast!
Suffer me not to lose the
way,
And lead me home
at last.”
As when some helpless wanderer
Alone in some
unknown land,
Tells the guide his destined
place of rest,
And leaves all
else in his hand;
’Tis home ’tis
home that I wish to reach,
He who guides
me may choose the way;
And little I care what path
I take
When nearer home
each day.
THE LORD’S PROVISION
In some way or other the Lord
will provide;
It may not be my way,
it may not be thy way;
And yet in his own
way, “The Lord will provide.”
At some time or other the
Lord will provide;
It may not be my time,
it may not be thy time;
And yet in his own
time, “The Lord will provide.”
Despond, then, no longer,
the Lord will provide.
And this be the token no
word he hath spoken
Was ever yet broken:
“The Lord will provide.”
March on, then, right boldly; the
sea shall divide;
The pathway made glorious, with shoutings victorious
We’ll join in the chorus, “The Lord
will provide.”
Mary Ann W. Cook.
It
is faith,
The feeling that there’s
God. He reigns and rules
Out of this low world.
Robert Browning.
FAITH IS THE VICTORY
Encamped along the hills of light,
Ye Christian soldiers, rise,
And press the battle ere the night
Shall veil the glowing skies;
Against the foe in vales below
Let all our strength be hurled;
Faith is the victory, we know,
That overcomes the world.
His banner over us is love,
Our sword the
word of God;
We tread the road the saints
above
With shouts of
triumph trod;
By faith they, like a whirlwind’s
breath,
Swept on o’er
every field;
The faith by which they conquered
death
Is still our shining
shield.
On every hand the foe we find
Drawn up in dread
array;
Let tents of ease be left
behind,
And onward
to the fray;
Salvation’s helmet on
each head,
With truth all
girt about,
The earth shall tremble ’neath
our tread,
And echo with
our shout.
To him that overcomes the
foe
White raiment
shall be given;
Before the angels he shall
know
His name confessed
in heaven;
Then onward from the hills
of light,
Our hearts with
love aflame,
We’ll vanquish all the
hosts of night
In Jesus’
conquering name.
John H. Yates.
RELIGIOUS DIFFERENCES
Yes, we do differ when we
most agree,
For words are not the same
to you and me,
And it may be our several
spiritual needs
Are best supplied by seeming
different creeds.
And, differing,
we agree in one
Inseparable communion,
If the true life be in our
hearts; the faith
Which not to want
is death;
To want is penance;
to desire
Is purgatorial
fire;
To hope is paradise; and to
believe
Is all of heaven that earth
can e’er receive.
Hartley Coleridge.
THE LORD WILL PROVIDE
Though troubles assail, and
dangers affright,
Though friends should all
fail, and foes all unite,
Yet one thing secures us,
whatever betide,
The promise assures us, “The
Lord will provide.”
The birds, without barn or
storehouse, are fed;
From them let us learn to
trust for our bread:
His saints what is fitting
shall ne’er be denied,
So long as ’tis written,
“The Lord will provide.”
When Satan appears to stop
up our path,
And fills us with fears, we
triumph by faith;
He can not take from us, though
oft he has tried,
The heart-cheering promise,
“The Lord will provide.”
He tells us we’re weak,
our hope is in vain;
The good that we seek we ne’er
shall obtain:
But when such suggestions
our graces have tried,
This answers all questions,
“The Lord will provide.”
No strength of our own nor
goodness we claim;
Our trust is all thrown on
Jesus’s name:
In this our strong tower for
safety we hide:
The Lord is our power, “The
Lord will provide.”
When life sinks apace, and
death is in view,
The word of his grace shall
comfort us through;
Not fearing or doubting, with
Christ on our side,
We hope to die shouting, “The
Lord will provide.”
John Newton.
Art thou afraid his power
will fail
When comes thy
evil day?
And can an all-creating arm
Grow weary, or
decay!
IF WE BELIEVED
If we believed we should arise
and sing,
Dropping our burdens
at his pierced feet.
Sorrow would flee and weariness
take wing,
Hard things grow
fair, and bitter waters sweet.
If we believed, what room
for fear or care
Within his arms,
safe sheltered on his breast?
Peace for our pain, and hope
for our despair,
Is what he meant
who said, “I give thee rest.”
Why linger, turn away, or
idly grieve?
Where else is
rest the soul’s supremest need?
Grandly he offers; meanly
we receive.
Yet love that
gives us rest is love indeed.
The love that rests say,
shall it not do more?
Make haste, sad
soul, thy heritage to claim.
It calms; it heals; it bears
what erst ye bore,
And marks thy
burdens with his own dear name.
Carried in him and for him,
can they harm
Or press thee
sore, or prove a weary weight?
Nay, nay; into thy life his
blessed calm
Shall drop, and
thou no more be desolate.
TO FAITH
Beside thy gracious hearth
content I stay,
Or with thee fate’s
appointed journey go;
I lean upon thee
when my step is slow,
I wrap me with thee in the
naked day.
With thee no loneliness, no
pathless way;
The wind is heaven’s,
to take as it shall blow;
More than thy
voice, thy hand, I need not know;
I may not murmur, for I shall
not stray.
WAIT ON GOD
Not so in haste, my heart!
Have faith in
God, and wait;
Although he seems to linger
long
He never comes
too late.
He never comes too late;
He knoweth what
is best;
Vex not thyself, it is in
vain;
Until he cometh,
rest.
Until he cometh, rest;
Nor grudge the
hours that roll;
The feet that wait for God,
’tis they
Are soonest at
the goal.
Are soonest at the goal
That is not gained
by speed;
Then hold thee still, O restless
heart,
For I shall wait
his lead.
Bradford Torrey.
BEGONE, UNBELIEF
Begone, unbelief, my Saviour
is near,
And for my relief will surely
appear.
His love in time past forbids
me to think
He’ll leave me at last
in trouble to sink.
Since all that I meet shall
work for my good,
The bitter is sweet, the medicine
food;
Though painful at present,
’twill cease before long,
And then, oh, how pleasant
the conqueror’s song!
John Newton.
As yonder tower outstretches
to the earth
The dark triangle of its shade
alone
When the clear day is shining
on its top,
So, darkness in the pathway
of man’s life
Is but the shadow of God’s
providence,
By the great Sun of Wisdom
cast therein;
And what is dark below is
light in Heaven.
John Greenleaf
Whittier.
Faith is a grasping of Almighty
power;
The hand of man laid on the
arm of God;
The grand and blessed hour
In which the things impossible
to me
Become the possible, O Lord,
through thee.
Anna E. Hamilton.
There is no faith in seeing.
Were we led
Like
children here,
And lifted over rock and river
bed,
No
care, no fear,
We should be useless in the
busy throng,
Life’s
work undone;
Lord, make us brave and earnest,
in faith strong,
Till
heaven is won.
The cross on Golgotha can
never save
Thy soul from
deepest hell;
Unless with loving faith thou
setts’t it up
Within thy heart
as well.
Scheffler, tr.
by Frederic Rowland Marvin.
In vain they smite me.
Men but do
What God permits with different
view.
To outward sight they hold
the rod,
But faith proclaims it all
of God.
Madame Guyon.
Talk Faith. The world
is better off without
Your uttered ignorance and
morbid doubt.
If you have faith in God,
or man, or self,
Say so; if not, push back
upon the shelf
Of silence lower thoughts
till faith shall come.
The body sins not, ’tis
the will
That makes the action good
or ill.
Robert Herrick.
Who never doubted, never half
believed;
Where doubt, there truth is ’tis
her shadow.
Philip James Bailey.
’Tis not the grapes
of Canaan that repay,
But the high faith that failed
not by the way.
James Russell
Lowell.
No more with downcast eyes
go faltering on,
Alone and sick
at heart, and closely pressed.
Thy chains shall break, thy
heavy heart is gone,
For he who calls
thee, he will “give thee rest.”
Mary Lowe Dickinson.
My
God, I would not live
Save that I think this gross
hard-seeming world
Is our misshaping vision of
the Powers
Behind the world that make
our griefs our gains.
Alfred Tennyson.
And all is well, though faith
and form
Be sundered in
the night of fear.
Well roars the
storm to those that hear
A deeper voice across the
storm.
Alfred Tennyson.
The crowd of cares, the weightiest
cross,
Seem trifles less
than light;
Earth looks so little and
so low,
When faith shines
full and bright.
Frederick William
Faber.
A faith that shines by night
and day
Will lighten every earthly
load.
Grant us, O God, in love to
thee
Clear eyes to
measure things below,
Faith the invisible to see,
And wisdom thee
in all to know.
Our
doubts are traitors,
And make us lose the good
we oft might win,
By fearing to attempt.
William Shakespeare.