His universal, everlasting love.
WOULD Jesus have the sinner die?
Why hangs he then on yonder tree?
That means that strange expiring cry?
(Sinners, he prays for you and me)
Forgive them, Father, O forgive!
They know not that by me they live.
2 Jesus, descended from above,
Our loss of Eden to retrieve,
Great God of universal love,
If all the World through thee may live,
In us a quick’ning spirit be,
And witness thou hast died for me.
3 Thou loving, all-atoning Lamb,—
Thee, by thy painful agony,
Thy bloody sweat, thy grief and shame,
Thy cross and passion on the tree,
Thy precious death and life—I pray,
Take all, take all my sins away.
4 O let thy love my heart constrain,—
Thy love, for every sinner free,—
That every fallen son of man
May taste the grace that found out me;
That all mankind with me may prove
Thy sov’reign, everlasting love.
Charles Wesley
Methodist Episcopal hymnal (1870 edition)
<idle musing>
Hymnary.org inserts a verse before the final one:
4 O let me kiss thy bleeding feet,
And bathe and wash them with my tears;
The story of thy love repeat
In every drooping sinner’s ears,
That all may hear the quickening sound,
Since I, even I, have mercy found.
</idle musing>
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