For I through him securely sleep,
Through him in safety wake.
6 No force nor fury of my foes My courage shall confound, Were they as many hosts as men, That have beset me round.
7 Arise, and save me, O my God, Who oft hast own'd my cause, And scatter'd oft these foes to me, And to thy righteous laws. 8 Salvation to the Lord belongs; He only can defend: His blessings he extends to all That on his power depend.
LORD, thou art my righteous Judge,
To my complaint give ear: Thou still redeem'st me from distress; Have mercy, Lord, and hear. 2 How long will ye, O sons of men, To blot my fame devise? How long your vain designs pursue, And spread malicious lies ?
3 Consider that the righteous man Is God's peculiar choice; And when to him I make my pray❜r, He always hears my voice.
4 Then stand in awe of his commands, Flee ev'ry thing that's ill; Commune in private with your hearts, And bend them to his will.
5 The place of other sacrifice Let righteousness supply; And let your hope, securely fix'd, On God alone rely.
6 While wordly minds impatient grow More prosp'rous times to see; Still let the glories of thy face
Shine brightly, Lord, on me.
7 So shall my heart o'erflow with joy, More lasting and more true Than theirs, who stores of corn and wine Successively renew.
8 Then down in peace I'll lay my head, And take my needful rest; No other guard, O Lord, I crave, Of thy defence possess❜d.
All such as act unrighteous things, Thy vengeance shall pursue.
6 The sland'ring tongue, O God of truth, By thee shall be destroy'd,
Who hat'st alike the man in blood And in deceit employ'd.
7 But when thy boundless grace shall me To thy lov'd courts restore, On thee I'll fix my longing eyes, And humbly there adore.
8 Conduct me by thy righteous laws, For watchful is my foe;
Therefore, O Lord, make plain the way Wherein I ought to go.
9 Their mouth vents nothing but deceit; Their heart is set on wrong; Their throat is a devouring grave; They flatter with their tongue. 10 By their own counsels let them fall, Oppress'd with loads of sin; For they against thy righteous laws Have harden'd rebels been.
11 But let all those who trust in thee, With shouts their joy proclaim; Let them rejoice whom thou preserv'st, And all that love thy name.
12 To righteous men, the righteous Lord His blessing will extend; And with his favour all his saints, As with a shield, defend.
THY dreadful anger, Lord, restrain, And spare a wretch forlorn; Correct me not in thy fierce wrath, Too heavy to be borne.
2 Have mercy, Lord; for I grow faint, Unable to endure
The anguish of my aching bones,
Which thou alone canst cure.
3 My tortur'd flesh distracts my mind, And fills my soul with grief; But, Lord, how long wilt thou delay To grant me thy relief?
4 Thy wonted goodness, Lord, repeat, And ease my troubled soul; Lord, for thy wondrous mercy's sake, Vouchsafe to make me whole.
5 For after death no more can I Thy glorious acts proclaim,
LORD, hear the voice of my com- No pris'ner of the silent grave
Accept my secret pray'r;
2 To thee alone, my King, my God, Will I for help repair.
3 Thou in the morn my voice shalt bear, And with the dawning day To thee devoutly I'll look up,
To thee devoutly pray.
4 For thou the wrongs that I sustain Canst never, Lord, approve, Who from thy sacred dwelling-place All evil dost remove.
5 Not long shall stubborn fools remain Unpunish'd in thy view;
Can magnify thy name.
6 Quite tir'd with pain, with groaning
No hope of ease I see;
The night, that quiets common griefs, Is spent in tears by me.
7 My beauty fades, my sight grows dim, My eyes with weakness close; Old age o'ertakes me, whilst I think On my insulting foes.
8 Depart, ye wicked; in my wrongs Ye shall no more rejoice; For God, I find, accepts my tears And listens to my voice.
9, 10 He hears, and grants my humble
And they that wish my fall, Shall blush and rage to see that God Protects me from them all.
LORD my God, since I have plac'd My trust alone in thee,
From all my persecutors' rage Do thou deliver me.
2 To save me from my threat'ning foe, Lord, interpose thy pow'r; Lest, like a savage lion, he My helpless soul devour. 3,4 If I am guilty, or did e'er Against his peace combine; Nay, If I had not spar'd his life, Who sought unjustly mine; 5 Let then to persecuting foes My soul become a prey;
Let them to earth tread down my life, In dust my honour lay.
6 Arise, and let thine anger, Lord, In my defence engage; Exalt thyself above my foes, And their insulting rage: Awake, awake, in my behalf, The judgment to dispense,
Which thou hast righteously ordain'd For injur'd innocence.
7 So to thy throne adoring crowds Shall still for justice fly:
Oh! therefore, for their sake, resume Thy judgment-seat on high.
8 Impartial judge of all the world, I trust my cause to thee; According to my just deserts, So let thy sentence be.
9 Let wicked arts and wicked men Together be o'erthrown;
But guard the just, thou God, to whom The hearts of both are known. 10, 11 God me protects, not only me, But all of upright heart; And daily lays up wrath for those Who from his laws depart.
12 If they persist, he whets his word, His bow stands ready bent;
13 Ev'n now, with swift destruction wing'd,
His pointed shafts are sent.
14 The plots are fruitless which my foe Unjustly did conceive;
15 The pit he digg'd for me, has prov'd His own untimely grave.
16 On his own head his spite returns, Whilst I from harm am free; On him the violence is fall'n, Which he design'd for me.
17 Therefore will I the righteous ways Of Providence proclaim;
I'll sing the praise of God most high, And celebrate his name.
O THOU, to whom all creatures bow Within this earthly frame, Through all the world how great art thou. How glorious is thy name!
In heav'n thy wondrous acts are sung, Nor fully reckon'd there;
2 And yet thou mak'st the infant tongue Thy boundless praise declare.
Through thee the weak confound the strong,
And crush their haughty foes; And so thou quell'st the wicked throng, That thee and thine oppose.
3 When heav'n, thy beauteous work on high,
Employs my wondering sight; The moon, that nightly rules the sky, With stars of feebler light;
4 What's man, say I, that, Lord, thou lov'st
To keep him in thy mind?
Or what his offspring, that thou prov'st To them so wondrous kind?
5 Him next in pow'r thou didst create To thy celestial train;
6 Ordain'd, with dignity and state, O'er all thy works to reign.
7 They jointly own his pow'rful sway; The beasts that prey or graze; 8 The bird that wings its airy way; The fish that cuts the seas.
9 O Thou, to whom all creatures bow Within this earthly frame, Through all the world how great art
How glorious is thy name!
TO celebrate thy praise, O Lord, I will my heart prepare; To all the list ning world, thy works, Thy wondrous works declare.
2 The thought of them shall to my soul Exalted pleasures bring; Whilst to thy name, O thou Most High, Triumphant praise I sing.
3 Thou mad'st my haughty foes to turn Their backs in shameful flight: Struck with thy presence, down they fell; They perish'd at thy sight.
4 Against insulting foes advanc'd,
Thou didst my cause maintain; My right asserting from thy throne, Where truth and justice reign.
5 The insolence of heathen pride Thou hast reduc'd to shame; Their wicked offspring quite destroy'd, And blotted out their name.
6 Mistaken foes, your haughty threats, Are to a period come;
Our city stands, which you design'd To make our common tomb.
7,8 The Lord for ever lives, who has His righteous throne prepar'd, Impartial justice to dispense, To punish or reward.
9 God is a constant sure defence Against oppressing rage;
As troubles rise, his needful aids In our behalf engage.
10 All those who have his goodness prov'd Will in his truth confide;
Whose mercy ne'er forsook the man That on his help rely'd.
11 Sing praises therefore to the Lord, From Sion, his abode;
Proclaim his deeds, till all the world Confess no other God.
12 When he inquiry makes for blood, He'll call the poor to mind: The injur'd humble man's complaint Relief from him shall find.
13 Take pity on my troubles, Lord, Which spiteful foes create, Thou that hast rescu'd me so oft From death's devouring gate. 14 In Sion then I'll sing thy praise To all that love thy name; And, with loud shouts of grateful joy, Thy saving power proclaim.
15 Deep in the pit they digg'd for me, The heathen pride is laid; Their guilty feet to their own snare Are heedlessly betray'd.
16 Thus, by the just return he makes, The mighty Lord is known;
While wicked men, by their own plots, Are shamefully o'erthrown.
17 No single sinner shall escape,
By privacy obscur'd;
Nor nation, from his just revenge, By numbers be secur'd.
18 His suffering saints, when most dis
He ne'er forgets to aid; Their expectations shall be crown'd, Though for a time delay'd.
19 Arise, O Lord, assert thy pow'r, And let not man o'ercome; Descend to judgment, and pronounce The guilty heathen's doom.
20 Strike terror through the nations round,
Till, by consenting fear,
They to each other, and themselves, But mortal men appear.
Why hid'st thou now thy face, When dismal times of deep distress Call for thy wonted grace?
2 The wicked, swell'd with lawless pride, Have made the poor their prey;
O let them fall by those designs Which they for others lay.
3 For straight they triumph, if success Their thriving crimes attend; And sordid wretches, whom God hates, Perversely they commend.
4 To own a pow'r above themselves, Their haughty pride disdains; And therefore in their stubborn mind No thought of God remains.
5 Oppressive methods they pursue, And all their foes they slight; Because thy judgments unobserv'd, Are far above their sight.
6 They fondly think their prosp'rous state Shall unmolested be;
They think their vain designs shall thrive From all misfortunes free.
7 Vain and deceitful is their speech, With curses fill'd, and lies;
By which the mischief of their heart They study to disguise.
8 Near public roads they lie conceal'd, And all their art employ,
The innocent and poor at once To rifle and destroy.
9 Not lions, couching in their dens, Surprise their heedless prey
With greater cunning, or express More savage rage than they.
10 Sometimes they act the harmless man, And modest looks they wear; That so deceiv'd, the poor may less Their sudden onset fear.
11 For God, they think, no notice takes Of their unrighteous deeds;
He never minds the suff'ring poor,
Nor their oppression heeds.
12 But thou, O Lord, at length arise, Stretch forth thy mighty arm; And, by the greatness of thy pow'r, Defend the poor from harm.
13 No longer let the wicked vaunt And, proudly boasting, say, "Tush, God regards not what we do; "He never will repay."
14 But sure thou seest, and all their deeds Impartially dost try;
The orphan, therefore, and the poor On thee for aid rely.
15 Defenceless let the wicked fall, Of all their strength bereft; Confound, O God, their dark designs, Till no remains are left.
16 Assert thy just dominion, Lord, Which shall for ever stand; Thou who the heathen didst expel From this thy chosen land.
17 Thou hear'st the humble supplicants That to thy throne repair;
Thou first prepar'st their hearts to pray, And then accept'st their pray'r.
18 Thou, in thy righteous judgment, 8 Then shall the wicked be perplex'd,
The fatherless and poor;
That so the tyrants of the earth
May persecute no more.
PSALM 11.
SINCE I have plac'd my trust in God, A refuge always nigh,
Why should I, like a tim'rous bird, To distant mountains fly?
1 Behold, the wicked bend their bow, And ready fix their dart, Lurking in ambush to destroy The men of upright heart.
3 When once the firm assurance fails, Which public faith imparts, "Tis time for innocence to fly
From such deceitful arts.
4 The Lord hath both a temple here, And righteous throne above; Where he surveys the sons of men, And how their councils move.
5 If God the righteous, whom he loves, For trials does correct, What must the sons of violence,
Whom he abhors, expect?
6 Snares, fire, and brimstone, on their heads
Shall in one tempest show'r; This dreadful mixture his revenge Into their cup shall pour.
7 The righteous Lord will righteous deeds With signal favour grace,
And to the upright man disclose The brightness of his face.
SINCE godly men decay, O Lord, Do thou my cause defend,
For scarce these wretched times afford One just and faithful friend.
2 One neighbour now can scarce believe What t'other does impart; With flatt'ring lips they all deceive, And with a double heart.
3 But lips that with deceit abound Can never prosper long; God's righteous vengeance will confound The proud blaspheming tongue.
4 In vain those foolish boasters say, "Our tongues are sure our own; "With doubtful words we'll still betray, "And be controll'd by none."
5 For God, who hears the suff'ring poor, And their oppression knows, Will soon arise and give them rest, In spite of all their foes.
6 The word of God shall still abide, And void of falsehood be, As is the silver, sev'n times try'd, From drossy mixture free.
7 The promise of his aiding grace Shall reach its purpos'd end;
His servants from this faithless race He ever shall defend.
Nor know which way to fly;
When those whom they despis'd and
Shall be advanc'd on high.
HOW long wilt thou forget me, Lord?
Must I for ever mourn?
How long wilt thou withdraw from me, Oh! never to return?
How long shall anxious thoughts my soul,
And grief my heart oppress? How long my enemies insult, And I have no redress?
3 Oh! hear, and to my longing eyes Restore thy wonted light, And suddenly, or I shall sleep In everlasting night.
4 Restore me, lest they proudly boast "Twas their own strength o'ercame; Permit not them that vex my soul To triumph in my shame.
5 Since I have always plac'd my trust Beneath thy mercy's wing,
Thy saving health will come; and then My heart with joy shall spring.
6 Then shall my song, with praise in- spir'd,
To thee my God ascend, Who to thy servant in distress Such bounty didst extend.
SURE wicked fools must needs suppose That God is nothing but a name; Corrupt and lewd their practice grows; No breast is warm'd with holy flame.
2 The Lord look'd down from Heav'n's high tow'r,
And all the sons of men did view, To see if any own'd his pow'r;
If any truth or justice knew.
3 But all, he saw, were gone aside, All were degen'rate grown and base; None took religion for their guide, Not one of all the sinful race.
4 But can these workers of deceit Be all so dull and senseless grown, That they, like bread, my people eat, And God's almighty power disown? 5 How will they tremble then for fear, When his just wrath shall them o'er- take?
For, to the righteous, God is near,
And never will their cause forsake.
6 Il men, in vain, with scorn expose Those methods which the good pursue, Since God a refuge is for those,
Whom his just eyes with favour view. 7 Would he bis saving pow'r employ To break his people's servile band, Then shouts of universal joy
Should loudly echo through the land.
19 Therefore my heart all grief defies, My glory does rejoice;
LORD, who's the happy man that may My Besh shall rest, in hope to rise,
To thy olest courts repair,
Not, stranger like, to visit them, But to inhabit there?
2 'Tis he, whose every thought and deed By rules of virtue moves į Whose gen'rous tongue disdains to speak The thing his heart disproves.
3 Who never did a slander forge, His neighbour's fame to wound; Nor hearken to a false report,
Wak'd by his pow'rful voice.
10 Thou, Lord, when I resign my breath, My soul from hell shalt free; Nor let thy Holy One in death
The least corruption see.
11 Thou shalt the paths of life display, Which to thy presence lead; Where pleasures dwell without allay, And joys that never fade.
pow'r,TO my just plea and sad complaint, Attend, O righteous Lord;
By malice whisper'd round. 4 Who vice, in all its pomp and Can treat with just neglect; And piety, though cloth'd in rags, Religiously respect.
5 Who to his plighted vows and trust Has ever firmly stood;
And though he promise to his loss, He makes his promise good.
Whose soul in usury disdains His treasure to employ ; Whom no rewards can ever bribe
The guiltless to destroy.
7 The man who, by his steady course, Has happiness insur'd,
When earth's foundation shakes, shall stand,
By providence secur'd.
PROTECT me from my cruel foes, And shield me, Lord, from harm; Because my trust I still repose On thy Almighty arm.
2 My soul all help but thine does slight All gods but thee disown; Yet can no deeds of mine requite
The goodness thou hast shown.
3 But those that strictly virtuous are, And love the thing that's right, To favour always, and prefer, Shall be my chief delight.
4 How shall their sorrows be increas'd, Who other gods adore! Their bloody off"rings I detest, Their very names abhor.
5 My lot is fall'n in that blest land Where god is truly known; He fills my cup with lib'ral hand, "Tis he supports my throne.
6 In nature's most delightful scene My happy portion lies;
The place of my appointed reign All other lands outvies.
7 Therefore my soul shall bless the Lord,
Whose precepts give me light; And private counsel still afford In sorrow's dismal night.
I strive each action to approve To his all-seeing eye;
No danger shall my hopes remove, Because he still is nigh.
And to my prayer, as 'tis unfeign'd, A gracious ear afford.
2 As in thy sight I am approv'd, So let my sentence be;
And with impartial eyes, O Lord, My upright dealing see.
3 For thou hast search'd my heart by day, And visited by night;
And, on the strictest trial, found
Its secret motions right.
Nor shall thy justice, Lord, alone My heart's designs acquit; For I have purpos'd that my tongue Shall no offence commit.
4 I know what wicked men would do, Their safety to maintain;
But me thy just and mild commands From bloody paths restrain.
5 That I may still, in spite of wrongs, My innocence secure,
O guide me in thy righteous ways, And make my footsteps sure.
6 Since, heretofore, I ne'er in vain To thee my pray'r address'd; O! now, my God, incline thine ear To this my just request.
7 The wonders of thy truth and love In my defence engage;
Thou, whose right hand preserves thy
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