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2 If malice lurk'd within
my heart,
Before thy piercing eyes,
I should not dare appeal to thee,
Nor ask my God to rise.

3 Impartial Judge of all the world,
I trust my cause to thee;
According to my righteousness
So let thy sentence be.

4 Let wicked arts of wicked men
Be wholly overthrown ;

But guard the just, O God, to whom
The hearts of both are known.

5 Then will I all the rhteous ways
Of Providence proclaim;

I'll sing the praise of God most high,
And celebrate his name.

TATE and WATTS united.

PSALM VIII. Common Metre.

Divine Condescension.

or b

10 THOU, to whom all creatures bow,
Within this earthly frame !

Through all the world, how great art thoù,
How glorious is thy name!

2 When heaven, thy glorious work on high, Employs my wondering sight;

The moon that nightly rules the sky,
With stars of feebler light;

3 Lord, what is man! that thou shouldst choose To keep him in thy mind!

Or what his race, that thou shouldst prove To them so wondrous kind!

4 Him next in power thou didst create To thy celestial train;

Ordain'd with dignity and state
O'er all thy works to reign.

5 They jointly own his powerful sway,
The beasts that prey or graze ;
The bird that wings its airy way,
The fish that cuts the seas.

60 thou, to whom all creatures bow,
Within this earthly frame,

Through all the world, how great art thou!

How glorious is thy name!

PSALM VIII. Long Metre.

TATE.

b

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Adam and Christ, or the old and new Creation.

1 LORD, what was man when made at first, Adam, the offspring of the dust,

That thou shouldst set him and his race,
But just below an angel's place?

2 That thou shouldst raise his nature so,
And make him Lord of all below;
Make every beast and bird submit,
And lay the fishes at his feet!
3 But what sublimer glories wait
To crown the second Adam's state !
What honours shall thy Son adorn,
Who condescended to be born!

4 See him below his angels made!
See him in dust among the dead!
To save the world from death and sin;
But he shall reign with power divine.
5 The world to come, redeem'd from all
The miseries that attend the fall,
New made and glorious, shall submit
At our exalted Saviour's feet.

WATTS.

PSALM IX. ver. 10, 11. L. M.
Encouragement to Faith.

I SING to the Lord, who loud proclaim's
His various and his saving names;
O may they not be heard alone,
But by our sure experience known.
The great Jehovah be ador'd,
Th' eternal, all-sufficient Lord;
Through all the world, most high confess'd,
By him 'twas form'd, and is possess'd.

3 Awake, our noblest powers, to bless
The God of Abra'm, God of Peace;
Now, by a dearer title known,
Father and God of Christ his Son.
4 Through every age his gracious ear
Is open to his servant's prayer;
Nor can one humble soul complain
That he has sought his God in vain.
5 What unbelieving heart shall dare
In whispers to suggest a fear,

While still he owns his ancient name,
The same his power, his love the same.

6 To thee our souls in faith arise,
To thee we lift expecting eyes,

And boldly through the desert tread,
For God will guard where God shall lead.

DODDRIDGE.

b

PSALM X. Common Metre.

A Prayer for Deliverance from Oppression. 1 WHY doth the Lord stand off so far, And why conceal his face,

When great calamities appear,
And times of deep distress?

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2 Lord, shall the wicked stilt deride
Thy justice and thy power

Shall they erect their heads in pride,
And better men devour?

3 Arise, O God! lift up thy hand,
Attend our humble cry;

No enemy shall dare to stand,
When God our help is nigh.

4 Thou wilt prepare our hearts to pray,
And still incline thine ear;

Thou knowest what thy children say,
And thou their voice wilt hear.
5 Proud tyrants shall no more oppress,
No more despise the just :

And mighty sinners shall confess
They are but earth and dust.

PSALM XI. Long Meire.
The Justice of Divine Providence.

WATTS.

1 ON God my steadfast hopes rely;
Why do my foes insulting cry,

"Fly like a timorous, trembling dove,

b

"And seek the mountain's lonesome grove?'

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2 Behold the wicked aim their darts

Against the men of upright hearts!
If government be overthrown,

Who then the injur'd cause will own ?
3 The Lord, enthron'd above the sky,
On suffering virtue casts his eye;
Though he afflict his saints, to prove
Their patience, and to try their love ;

4 Ye: lawless hands and hearts impure,
His frowns vindictive will endure ;
His lightning wings its rapid way,
His thunder fills them with dismay.

5 Where truth and justice hold their place, God will reveal his gracious face; Delighted in the upright mind

His own reflected beams to find.

PSALM XII.

MERRICK, with additions.

Common Metre. b

Corruption of Manners.

1 BELP, Lord! for men of virtue fail,
Religion loses ground;
The sons of wickedness prevail,
And treacheries abound.

2 Their oaths and promises they break,
Yet act the flatterer's part;
With fair deceitful lips they speak,
And with a double heart.

3 Scoffers appear on every side,
Where a vile race of men
Are rais'd to seats of power and pride,
And bear the sword in vain.

4 Lord, when iniquities abound,
And blasphemy grows bold;
When faith is hardly to be found,
And love is waxen cold;

5 Is not thy chariot hastening on?
Hast thou not given the sign?
May we not trust and live
A promise so divine ?

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