| How few receive with cordial faithThe tidings which we bring?
 How few have seen the arm revealed
 Of Heav’n’s eternal King?
 The Savior comes! no outward pompBespeaks His presence nigh;
 No earthly beauty shines in Him
 To draw the carnal eye.
 Fair as a beauteous tender flowerAmidst the desert grows,
 So slighted by a rebel race
 The heav’nly Savior rose.
 Rejected and despised of men,Behold a Man of woe!
 Grief was His close companion still
 Through all His life below.
 Yet all the griefs He felt were ours,Ours were the woes He bore:
 Pangs, not His own, His spotless soul
 With bitter anguish tore.
 We held Him as condemned by Heav’n,An outcast from His God,
 While for our sins He groaned, He bled,
 Beneath His Father’s rod.
 His sacred blood hath washed our soulsFrom sin’s polluted stain;
 His stripes have healed us, and His death
 Revived our souls again.
 We all, like sheep, had gone astrayIn ruin’s fatal road:
 On Him were our transgressions laid;
 He bore the mighty load.
 Wronged and oppressed how meekly HeIn patient silence stood!
 Mute, as the peaceful harmless lamb,
 When brought to shed its blood.
 Who can His generation tell?From prison see Him led!
 With impious show of law condemned,
 And numbered with the dead.
 ’Midst sinners low in dust He lay;The rich a grave supplied:
 Unspotted was His blameless life;
 Unstained by sin He died.
 Yet God shall raise His head on high,Though thus He brought Him low;
 His sacred offering, when complete,
 Shall terminate His woe.
 For, saith the Lord, My pleasure thenShall prosper in His hand;
 His shall a numerous offspring be,
 And still His honors stand.
 His soul, rejoicing, shall beholdThe purchase of His pain;
 And all the guilty whom He saved
 Shall bless Messiah’s reign.
 He with the great shall share the spoil,And baffle all His foes;
 Though ranked with sinners, here He fell,
 A Conqueror He rose.
 He died to bear the guilt of men,That sin might be forgiv’n:
 He lives to bless them and defend,
 And plead their cause in Heav’n.
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