Vanity of the creature sanctified by John Newton
- Honey though the bee prepares,
- An envenomed sting he wears;
- Piercing thorns a guard compose
- Round the fragrant blooming rose.
- Where we think to find a sweet,
- Oft a painful sting we meet:
- When the rose invites our eye,
- We forget the thorn is nigh.
- Why are thus our hopes beguiled?
- Why are all our pleasures spoiled?
- Why do agony and woe
- From our choicest comforts grow?
- Sin has been the cause of all!
- 'Twas not thus before the fall:
- What but pain, and thorn, and sting,
- From the root of sin can spring?
- Now with every good we find
- Vanity and grief entwined;
- What we feel, or what we fear,
- All our joys embitter here.
- Yet, through the Redeemer's love,
- These afflictions blessings prove;
- He the wounding stings and thorns,
- Into healing med'cines turns.
- From the earth our hearts they wean,
- Teach us on his arm to lean;
- Urge us to a throne of grace,
- Make us seek a resting place.
- In the mansions of our King
- Sweets abound without a sting;
- Thornless there the roses blow,
- And the joys unmingled flow.
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