
1 He wants not friends that hath thy love,
and may converse and walk with thee,
and with thy saints here and above,
with whom for ever I must be.
2 In the blest fellowship of saints
is wisdom, safety, and delight;
and when my heart declines and faints,
it’s raisèd by their heat and light.
3 As for my friends, they are not lost;
the several vessels of thy fleet,
though parted now, by tempests tossed,
shall safely in the haven meet.
4 Still we are centred all in thee,
members, though distant, of one Head;
in the same family we be,
by the same faith and spirit led.
5 Before thy throne we daily meet
as joint-petitioners to thee;
in spirit we each other greet,
and shall again each other see.
6 The heavenly hosts, world without end,
shall be my company above;
and thou, my best and surest Friend,
who shall divide me from thy love?
Source: Common Praise: A new edition of Hymns Ancient and Modern #459a
First Line: | He wants not friends that hath Thy love |
Author: | Richard Baxter |
Meter: | 8.8.8.8 |
Language: | English |
Copyright: | Public Domain |
He wants not friends that hath Thy love. R. Baxter. [The Communion of Saints.] This, in The English Hymnal, 1906, No. 401, is a cento from Baxter's poem, "The Resolution," in his Poetical Fragments, 1681, pp. 51-61. The poem is headed "Written when I was. silenced and cast out," and dated Dec. 3, 1663. The first stanza is "Lord, I have cast up the account." [Rev. James Mearns, M.A.]
--John Julian, Dictionary of Hymnology, New Supplement (1907)