dots-menu
×
Home  »  library  »  poem  »  Jesu, My Strength, My Hope

C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Jesu, My Strength, My Hope

By Charles Wesley (1707–1788)

JESU, my strength, my hope,

On thee I cast my care,

With humble confidence look up,

And know thou hear’st my prayer.

Give me on thee to wait,

Till I can all things do;

On thee, almighty to create,

Almighty to renew.

I rest upon thy word:

The promise is for me;

My succor and salvation, Lord,

Shall surely come from thee.

But let me still abide,

Nor from my hope remove,

Till thou my patient spirit guide

Into thy perfect love.

I want a sober mind,

A self-renouncing will,

That tramples down and casts behind

The baits of pleasing ill;

A soul inured to pain,

To hardship, grief, and loss;

Bold to take up, firm to sustain

The consecrated Cross.

I want a godly fear,

A quick discerning eye,

That looks to thee when sin is near,

And sees the Tempter fly;

A spirit still prepared,

And armed with jealous care,

Forever standing on its guard

And watching unto prayer.

I want a heart to pray,

To pray and never cease;

Never to murmur at thy stay,

Or wish my sufferings less:

This blessing above all,

Always to pray, I want;

Out of the deep on thee to call,

And never, never faint.

I want a true regard,

A single steady aim

(Unmoved by threatening or reward),

To thee and thy great name;

A jealous, just concern

For thine immortal praise;

A pure desire that all may learn

And glorify thy grace.

I want with all my heart

Thy pleasure to fulfill,

To know myself, and what thou art,

And what thy perfect will.

I want, I know not what;

I want my wants to see;

I want—alas, what want I not,

When thou art not in me!