How long, O Lord, will thy dread anger hold?
Thomas Cradock • English
Primary Scripture: Psalm 74
Verse 1
How long, O Lord, will thy dread anger hold? How long shall rav'ning wolves devour thy fold?
Verse 2
Remember, Lord, the purchase thou hast made, The tribes, redeem'd from bondage by thy aid, The blest inheritance thou call'dst thy own, The hill of Sion, where thou'st fix'd thy throne.
Verse 3
Arise, just God, restrain the mad'ning foe, That with such impious pride and fury glow; That, insolent and blasphemously vain, Thy hallow'd temple with their hands profane.
Verse 4
Sounds the shrill trumpet, and the nations roar, Not they who thee with humble hearts adore; But those thy foes, that vile rebellious race, Who on thy sacred tow'rs their standards place,
Verse 5
Wild with success, they range the city round, They raze thy hallow'd temple to the ground; The dread tremendous ruin, as it falls, Hark! the dire crush! our sinking hearts appalls. So fall, when conquer'd by redoubled strokes, Down the steep mountain's side the tumbling oaks.
Verse 6
They all it's glorious ornaments destroy; Beetles and bars their cruel hands employ;
Verse 7
View the whole fabrick, circled round with flame, The fabrick sacred to thy holy name.
Verse 8
Fully resolv'd, they to each other say, "Be this to Salem's pride the final day; "'Bove other towns no longer let her soar; "Fate threats her now, and she shall rule no more."
Verse 9
Mean while, no signs of thy assistance; we, No inspir'd prophet, to console us, see; Not one, who e'en a slender hope can give, That thou thy wretched people wilt relieve.
Verse 10
How long, good God, shall our insulting foes, Sport with thy people, and illude their woes; How long wilt thou permit them to blaspheme, With their reproachful taunts, thy sacred name?
Verse 11
Ah! why from us thy mighty hand withdrawn? Ah! why thy once-lov'd tribes left so forlorn?
Verse 12
Of old our leader thou, our guide hast been; For us thy wond'rous works all earth hath seen:
Verse 13
At thy command retir'd the foamy sea, And with a double wall secur'd our way; Then back at thy command obedient flows, And with her surges overwhelms our foes.
Verse 14
The haughty tyrant, insolent and vain, Fierce as the wildest monsters of the main, Sunk in her waves, and on the desart shore Was tost, for rav'nous vultures to devour:
Verse 15
Thou spak'st--hard rocks a plenteous stream supply; Thou spak'st--the rivers leave their channels dry.
Verse 16
Thine is the day, O God, and thine the night; The sun thou gildest with his beamy light;
Verse 17
Thou keep'st tthe mad'ning sea within her bounds: The earth thou strengt'nest with her rocky mounds! When rages winter with his horrid train, Thou still with suited warmth reviv'st the plain; When scorches summer with it's sultry heat, Thou fann'st the air, and giv'st a cool retreat.
Verse 18
And wilt not thou remember the disgrace, Which cast the wicked on thy faithful race? Wilt thou forget the mocking blasphemies, Wherewith thy name tremendous they despise?
Verse 19
From their big insults free thy plaintive dove, The once-blest objeft of almighty love; Hear thy afflicted people, once thy boast, Nor in oblivion let their cries be lost:
Verse 20
O call that holy covenant to mind, Which with most solemn sanctions thou didst bind: For dreadful, dreary darkness shades our head, And cruelty around, and rapine spread.
Verse 21
O let not they, that love thy sacred name, The indigent, th' opprest, return with shame.
Verse 22
Arise, almighty Lord; thy pow'r exert; Thine is the injur'd's cause; their cause assert: With rage besotted, lo! the impious croud, Speak 'gainst thy pow'r their blasphemies aloud.
Verse 23
Forget not, Lord, their vile opprobious tongues, Their big impieties, their ceaseless wrongs; Still, still their monstrous villainies increase, And with relentlefs hate they still oppress.
Scripture References
Reference 1
- psalms 74