To God thy way commending, Trust Him Whose Arm of might, The heavenly circles bending, Guides every star aright: The winds, and clouds, and lightning By His sure Hand are led; And He will, dark shades brightening, Shew thee what path to tread. | Trust God, His time awaiting, If thou wilt have success; Work, His Work contemplating, That He thy work may bless: Whate’er is worth thy getting By prayer thou shalt obtain, And not by anxious fretting, Or self-inflicted pain. | Thy love, O Father, gloweth With zeal for mortals’ good, And what is hurtful knoweth To human flesh and blood: Our future Thou foreseèst, And, through Thy strong Right Hand, The counsel Thou decreèst Shall ever firmly stand. | Resources rich possessing, That love still finds a way, Thy every act a blessing, Thy pathway cloudless day; In one unbroken tissue, Which no let e’er withstood, It brings to happy issue Plans for Thy children’s good. | Although to make God falter The powers of hell combine, One jot they cannot alter Of His all-wise design: All projects and volition Of His eternal Mind, Despite all opposition, Their due fulfilment find. | No more then droop and languish, Thou sorrow-stricken soul; E’en from the depths of anguish, Whose billows o’er thee roll, Thy Father’s Hand shall draw thee: In hope and patience stay, And joy will soon shed o’er thee An ever brightening ray. | All faithless murmurs leaving, Bid them a last good-night, No more thy vexed soul grieving, Because things seem not right: Wisely His Sceptre wielding, God sits in regal state, No power to mortals yielding, Events to regulate. | Trust with a faith untiring In thine Omniscient King, And thou shalt see admiring What He to light will bring: Of all thy griefs the reason Shall at the last appear; Why now denied a season, Will shine in letters clear. | Awhile, perchance to try thee, He seems to hear thee not, All comfort to deny thee, As if thou wert forgot; As though He disregarded Thy bitter cry and moan, His care for thee discarded, And left thee quite alone. | But if all ills thou brookest, With constant faith and love, When least for help thou lookest, Thy cross He will remove: At last, compassion taking On thine estate forlorn, Will ease the woe heart-breaking Which thou hast meekly borne. | Then raise thine eyes to heaven, Thou who canst trust His frown; Thence shall thy meed be given, The chaplet and the crown: Then God the palm victorious In thy right hand shall plant, Whilst thou, in accents glorious, Melodious hymns shalt chant. | End, if Thou wilt, our sorrow, And our probation close; Till then, we fain would borrow Strength to support life’s woes: To Thee our way commending, Whose Wisdom orders best, We tread the pathway tending To heaven’s eternal rest. | |