1 'Tis finished! The Messiah dies-
cut off for sins, but not His own;
accomplished is the sacrifice-
the great redeeming work is done.
2 The veil is rent; in Christ alone
the living way to heav'n is seen;
the middle wall is broken down,
and all mankind may enter in.
3 'Tis finished! All my guilt and pain,
I want no sacrifice beside;
for me, for me the Lamb is slain,
'tis finished! I am justified.
4 The reign of sin and death is o'er;
all grace is now to sinners giv'n;
and, lo! I plead th'atoning blood,
and in Thy right I claim my heav'n.
Source: Psalms and Hymns to the Living God #271
First Line: | 'Tis finished! the Messiah dies |
Title: | 'Tis finished! The Messiah Dies |
Author: | Charles Wesley (1749-51 and 1762) |
Meter: | 8.8.8.8 |
Language: | English |
Copyright: | Public Domain |
’Tis finished, the Messias dies, Cut off for sins, &c. C. Wesley. [Good Friday.] In 1762 this hymn, in 2 stanzas of 8 lines, appeared in C. Wesley's Short Hymns, vol. ii. p. 234. These stanzas are:—
" 'Tis finished! the Messias dies,
Cut off for sins, but not His own!
Accomplish'd is the sacrifice,
The great redeeming work is done;
Finish'd the first transgression is,
And purg'd the guilt of actual sin,
And everlasting righteousness
Is now to all the world brought in.
" 'Tis finish'd, all my guilt and pain,
I want no sacrifice beside,
For me, for me, the Lamb is slain.
And I am more than justified;
Sin, death, and hell are now subdued,
All grace is now to sinners given,
And, lo, I plead th' atoning blood,
For pardon, holiness, and heaven."
It is from the first four lines of this hymn that Blair formed stanza iv. of his cento, "Behold the Saviour on the cross". The original, as above, was given in A. M. Toplady's Psalms & Hymns, 1776, No. 223, and thus came into use in the Church of England. Charles Wesley, however, was not satisfied with these stanzas, and at his death he left in manuscript another hymn on the same text, "It is finished," in 8 stanzas of 4 lines, of which stanzas i. and viii. are stanza i. 11.1-4, and stanza ii. 11. 5-8 (slightly altered) respectively of the 1762 text, and stanzas ii.-vii. are new. This text was given in the 1830 Supplement to the Wesleyan Hymn Book, and again in the Poetical Works, 1868-72, vol. xii. p. 99.
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology (1907)