The believer’s rest.
LORD, I believe a rest remains 
  
To all thy people known; 
  
A rest where pure enjoyment reigns, 
  
And thou art loved alone: 
2 A rest where all our soul’s desire 
  
Is fix’d on things above; 
  
Where fear, and sin, and grief expire, 
  
Cast out by perfect love. 
3 O that I now the rest might know, 
  
Believe, and enter in: 
  
Now, Saviour, now the power bestow, 
  
And let me cease from sin. 
4 Remove this hardness from my heart; 
  
This unbelief remove : 
  
To me the rest of faith impart,—
  
The Sabbath of thy love.
                        Charles Wesley
                        Methodist Episcopal hymnal (1870 edition)
  
  <idle musing>
This marvelous hymn is based on the rest mentioned in Hebrews 3 and 4, which is intended to be experienced in this life, not just in the coming one. That was the driving force behind the Methodist Revival—heart holiness, a rest in the finished work of God. It wasn't a legalistic set of rules to follow—no whitewashed tomb for the Wesley brothers, they had already tried that—but a heart washed clean and made anew by the power of the Holy Spirit. 
Coupled with that was their belief that a person should feel/experience the witness of the Spirit that they were a child of God. They were sure (as am I) that you cannot encounter the living God and not come away knowing it and having been changed.
Hmynary.org adds a fifth verse that is also worthwhile:
5 I would be Thine, Thou know'st I would,</idle musing>
And have Thee all my own;
Thee, O my all-sufficient Good!
I want, and Thee alone.
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