Sunday, March 4, 2018

Jesus, Refuge of the Weary


Jesus, Refuge of the weary,
Blest Redeemer Whom we love.
Fountain in life's desert dreary,
Savior from the world above.
Oh, how oft Thine eyes, offended
Gaze upon the sinner's fall;
Yet upon the cross extended,
You have born the pain of all.

Do we pass that cross unheeding,
Breathing no repentant vow,
Though we see Thee wounded, bleeding,
See Thy thorn encircled brow?
Yet Thy sinless death has brought us
Life eternal, peace, and rest;
Only what your grace has taught us
Calms the sinner’s deep distress.

Jesus, may our hearts be burning
With more fervent love for Thee;
May our eyes be ever turning
To Thy cross of agony
Till in glory, parted never
From the blessed Savior’s side,
Carved into our hearts forever,
Dwell the cross, the Crucified.

By Girolamo Savonarola; translated by Lady Jane Wilde, adapted

Girolamo Savonarola was an Italian Dominican friar and preacher.  (In his zeal to reform the Roman Catholic Church, before Luther came along, he unfortunately destroyed some secular art in Italy.) He called for Christian renewal and expressed skepticism towards the culture of his day.


3 comments:

David C Brown said...

Very good. It's good to see evidence of active faith when much in the church was dark.

C. Marie Byars said...


Yeah, I always figure there were variations, despite what the actual policy line was back then. Johan Hus predated Luther in Bohemia. And Luther's own father-confessor, Spalatin, urged Luther to be kinder on himself; he seems sort of grace-oriented. The Bible does its work, when and where it will.

I've even heard of Mormons who read their Bibles more than other source books/documents of theirs and end up having more mainstream beliefs, regardless of what their larger religion system puts forward.

The message of grace can come through, whenever people are exposed to the word.

David C Brown said...

We were reminded at a Bible reading tonight that the fact that the Holy Spirit was here means that there must always have been something for God.