| Hymns, English - 1840 - 498 pages
...the heav'nly Lamb, Takes all our sins away ; A sacrifice of nobler name, And richer blood than they. 3 My faith would lay her hand On that dear head of...to see The burdens thou didst bear, When hanging on th' accursed tree, And hopes her guilt was there. 5 Believing, we rejoice To see the curse remove ;... | |
| Collection - 1840 - 660 pages
...the heavenly Lamb, Takes all our sins away ; A sacrifice of nobler name, And richer blood than they. 3 My faith would lay her hand On that dear head of...to see The burdens thou didst bear, When hanging on th' accursed tree ; And hopes her guilt was there. 5 Believing, we rejoice To see the curse remove... | |
| Hymns - 1840 - 464 pages
...all our sins away, — A sacrifice of nobler name, And richer blood than they. 3 By faith I lay my hand On that dear head of Thine, While like a penitent...there confess my sin. 4 My soul looks back to see The burden Thou didst bear, When hanging on th' accursed tree, For all my guilt was there. Believing, I... | |
| Christian education - 1847 - 720 pages
...if we confess our sins before Christ, they are for ever horne away. They shall be found no more. ' My faith would lay her hand On that dear head of thine,...While like a penitent I stand, And there confess my sins.' PRAYING ALWAYS. — Sabbath school teachers often need encouragement. Twenty-two years' occupation... | |
| Bible - 1841 - 306 pages
...the heavenly Lamb, Takes all our sins away ; A sacrifice of nobler name, And richer blood than they. 3 My faith would lay her hand On that dear head of...there confess my sin. 4 My soul looks back to see The burden thou didst bear, When hanging on th' accursed tree, And hopes her guilt was there. 5 Believing,... | |
| Thomas Tunstall Smith - Sermons, English - 1841 - 336 pages
...uncertainty to which he is invited. Hear 8 In a well-known hymn there occur the following lines,— My soul looks back to see The burdens thou didst bear,...on the cursed tree, And hopes her guilt was there. the asseveration of him who spake as never man spake ; " Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that heareth... | |
| Horace Lorenzo Hastings - Congregational churches - 1888 - 590 pages
...of thine ; While like a penitent I stand, And there confess my sin. My soul looks back to see T lie burdens Thou didst bear When hanging on the cursed tree, And hopes her guilt was there. Believing, we rejoice To see the curse remove ; We bless the Lamb with cheerful voice And sing his... | |
| Augustus Hopkins Strong - Philosophy and religion - 1888 - 676 pages
...recognize an imputed guilt, as furnishing an explanation of Christ's sufferings. The poet says : " My soul looks back to see The burdens thou didst bear When hanging on the accursed tree, And hopes her guilt was there." But this imputation of others' guilt is very difficult... | |
| Robert William Dale - Atonement - 1888 - 586 pages
...the words of the poet," if not in the poet's meaning, yet in the meaning which they ought to have. " My soul looks back to see The burdens thou didst bear, When hanging on the accursed tree, And hopes her guilt was there.'' " We want, in short, to use these altar terms just... | |
| Henry Martin Sanders, George Claude Lorimer - Baptists - 1889 - 472 pages
...the heavenly Lamb, Takes all our sins away ; A sacrifice of nobler name, And richer blood, than they. 3 My faith would lay her hand On that dear head of...on the cursed tree, And hopes her guilt was there. —U BERTHOLD TOCRS (I8S8— ), 1877. way, With - out cit wall, 9flR „.„ . , ... 4UO " Ha dtar... | |
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