The vanity of mere formality.
LONG have I seem’d to serve thee, Lord, 
  
With unavailing pain; 
  
Fasted, and pray’d, and read thy word,
   
And heard it preach’d in vain. 
2 Oft did I with the assembly join, 
  
And near thy altar drew: 
  
A form of godliness was mine,—
  
The power, I never knew. 
3 I rested in the outward law, 
  
Nor knew its deep design: 
  
The length and breadth, I never saw, 
  
And height, of love divine. 
4 To please thee, thus at length I see, 
  
Vainly I hoped and strove; 
  
For what are outward things to thee, 
  
Unless they spring from love? 
5 I see the perfect law requires 
  
Truth in the inward parts; 
  
Our full consent, our whole desires,
  
Our undivided hearts. 
6 But I of means have made my boast; 
  
Of means an idol made: 
  
The spirit in the letter lost,— 
  
The substance, in the shade. 
7 Where am I now, or what my hope? 
  
What can my weakness do? 
  
Jesus, to thee my soul looks up: 
  
’Tis thou must make it new. 
                        
Charles Wesley 
                        
Methodist Episcopal hymnal (1870 edition)
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