XLV. Immutability of God

1 Great Former of this various frame,
Our souls adore thine awful name;
And bow and tremble, while they praise
The ancient of eternal days.

2 Thou, Lord, with unsurpris'd survey,
Saw'st nature rising yesterday;
And, as tomorrow, shall thine eye
See earth and stars in ruin lie.

3 Beyond an angel's vision bright,
Thou dwell'st in self-existent light.
Which shines with undiminish'd ray,
While suns and worlds in smoke decay.

4 Our days a transient period run,
And change with ev'ry circling sun,
And in the firmest state we boast,
A moth can crush us into dust.

5 But let the creatures fall around;
Let death consign us to the ground,
Let the last general flame arise,
And melt the Arches of the skies:

6 Calm as the summer's ocean, we,
Can all the wreck of nature see,
While grace secures us an abode,
Unshaken as the throne of God.

Text Information
First Line: Great Former of this various frame
Title: Immutability of God
Author: Dr. Doddridge
Meter: Long Metre
Language: English
Publication Date: 1790
Topic: Before Sermon
Tune Information
(No tune information)



Media
More media are available on the text authority page.

Suggestions or corrections? Contact us