< Pulpit and Press
HYMNS
By Rev. Mart Baker Eddy
[Set to the Church Chimes and Sung on This Occasion]
Laying the Corner-stone
Laus Deo, it is done! |
Rolled away from loving heart |
Is a stone. |
Joyous, risen, we depart |
Having one. |
Laus Deo, — on this rock |
(Heaven chiselled squarely good) |
Stands His church, — |
God is Love, and understood |
By His flock. |
Laus Deo, night starlit |
Slumbers not in God's embrace; |
Then, O man! |
Like this stone, be in thy place; |
Stand, not sit. |
Cold, silent, stately stone. |
Dirge and song and shoutings low, |
In thy heart |
Dwell serene, — and sorrow? No, |
It has none, |
Laus Deo! |
“Feed My Sheep”
Shepherd, show me how to go |
O'er the hillside steep, |
How to gather, how to sow, — |
How to feed Thy sheep; |
I will listen for Thy voice. |
Lest my footsteps stray; |
I will follow and rejoice |
All the rugged way. |
Thou wilt bind the stubborn will, |
Wound the callous breast. |
Make self-righteousness be still, |
Break earth's stupid rest. |
Strangers on a barren shore. |
Laboring long and lone — |
We would enter by the door, |
And Thou know'st Thine own. |
So, when day grows dark and cold, |
Tear or triumph harms. |
Lead Thy lambkins to the fold. |
Take them in Thine arms; |
Feed the hungry, heal the heart, |
Till the morning's beam; |
White as wool, ere they depart — |
Shepherd, wash them clean. |
Christ My Refuge
O'er waiting harpstrings of the mind |
There sweeps a strain, |
Low, sad, and sweet, whose measures bind |
The power of pain. |
And wake a white-winged angel throng |
Of thoughts, illumed |
By faith, and breathed in raptured song, |
With love perfumed. |
Then his unveiled, sweet mercies show |
Life's burdens light. |
I kiss the cross, and wake to know |
A world more bright. |
And o'er earth's troubled, angry sea |
I see Christ walk, |
And come to me, and tenderly, |
Divinely talk. |
Thus Truth engrounds me on the rock, |
Upon Life's shore; |
'Gainst which the winds and waves can shock, |
Oh, nevermore! |
From tired joy and grief afar, |
And nearer Thee, — |
Father, where Thine own children are, |
I love to be. |
|
My prayer, some daily good to do |
To Thine, for Thee; |
Some offering pure of Love, whereto |
God leadeth me. |
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