1 O Lord, our Lord, how wondrous great
Is thine exalted name!
The glories of thy heavenly state
Let men and babes proclaim.
2 When I behold your works on high,
The moon that rules the night,
The shining stars that grace the sky,
Those moving worlds of light;
3 Lord, what is man, or all his race,
Who dwells so far below,
That thou shouldst visit him with grace,
And love his nature so?
4 That thine eternal Son should bear
To take a mortal form,
Made lower than the angels are,
To save a dying worm.
5 [Yet while he liv'd on earth unknown,
And men would not adore,
Behold obedient nature own,
His Godhead and his power.
6 The waves lay spread beneath his feet,
And fish, at his command,
Bring their large shoals to Peter's net,
Bring tribute to his hand.
7 These smaller glories of the Son,
Shone through the fleshy cloud;
Now we behold him on his throne,
And men confess him GOD.]
8 Let him with majesty be crown'd,
Who bow'd his head to death;
And his eternal honours sound,
From all things that have breath.
9 Jesus, our Lord, how wondrous great
Is thine exalted name!
The glories of thy heavenly state
Let the whole earth proclaim.
Text Information | |
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First Line: | O Lord, our Lord, how wondrous great |
Title: | Christ's Condescension and Glorification; or, God made Man |
Meter: | Common Metre |
Language: | English |
Publication Date: | 1785 |
Scripture: | |
Notes: | Public Domain. |