New Testament
Inspired:
Beautiful Quaker
Words: James Nayler’s Deathbed Testimony
There is a spirit which I feel
that delights to do no evil, nor to revenge any wrong, but delights to endure
all things, in hope to enjoy its own in the end. Its hope is to outlive all
wrath and contention, and to weary out all exaltation and cruelty, or whatever
is of a nature contrary to itself. It sees to the end of all temptations. As it
bears no evil in itself, so it conceives none in thought to any other. If it be
betrayed, it bears it, for its ground and spring is the mercies and forgiveness
of God. Its crown is meekness, its life is everlasting love unfeigned; it takes
its kingdom with entreaty and not with contention, and keeps it by lowliness of mind. In God alone it can rejoice, though none else regard it, or can own
its life. It is conceived in sorrow, and brought forth without any to pity it;
nor doth it murmur at grief and oppression. It never rejoiceth but through
sufferings; for with the world's joy it is murdered. I found it alone, being
forsaken. I have fellowship therein with them who lived in dens and desolate
places of the earth, who through death obtained this resurrection and eternal
holy life.
Thou wast with me when I fled from the face of mine enemies: then didst Thou warn me in the night: Thou carriedst me in Thy power into the hiding-place Thou hadst prepared for me: there Thou coveredst me with Thy Hand that in time Thou mightst bring me forth a rock before all the world. When I was weak Thou stayedst me with Thy Hand, that in Thy time Thou mightst present me to the world in Thy strength in which I stand, and cannot be moved. Praise the Lord, O my soul. Let this be written for those that come after. Praise the Lord.
Thou wast with me when I fled from the face of mine enemies: then didst Thou warn me in the night: Thou carriedst me in Thy power into the hiding-place Thou hadst prepared for me: there Thou coveredst me with Thy Hand that in time Thou mightst bring me forth a rock before all the world. When I was weak Thou stayedst me with Thy Hand, that in Thy time Thou mightst present me to the world in Thy strength in which I stand, and cannot be moved. Praise the Lord, O my soul. Let this be written for those that come after. Praise the Lord.
Kenneth Boulding’s Nayler
Sonnets:
18. In God alone it can rejoice
I
plunge me, shouting, in the fecund tide
Of
vast creation; lave myself in light,
Dwell
with imperial clouds, cloak with the night,
And
woo the earth as lover woos a bride;
Through
intricate kingdoms of pure sound I ride
On
music, and on laughter, and invite
My
joyful body-spirit to unite
With
scent, taste, touch: all senses
sanctified.
What
then! In God alone I must rejoice?
Not
in His creatures, His abounding gifts?
The
veil of sensual goodness lightly lifts
And
through the inward seam there drops a voice:
“Could
any gift its giver’s loss atone,
or
joy be sure, except its source be known?”
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