“A Dialogue between a
Believer and His Soul” by Joseph
Hart appears below. It was first published in Hart’s Hymns,
Composed on Various Subjects in 1759. Hart was the author of many
unique and worthy hymns, including “The
Stony Heart.” In The
Sacred Harp, we sing two stanzas of Hart’s longer “Dialogue” hymn
under the title The Grieved Soul.
The structure of the poem
is intriguing, truly a dialogue or discussion between a man and his own soul.
The internal conflict can be seen and felt as the soul’s doubts fight to be
heard. The believer reasons from the Saviour and Scripture. It begins with both
the believer and the soul alternating their speaking in 8-line stanzas. The
discussion is sophisticated in the beginning. In stanza eight this gives way to
4 lines for each, then 2 lines alternating back and forth in the ninth stanza.
It ends with a staccato flourish, the soul and the believer each quickly
alternating lines as the soul seems to exhaust its questions in a gasp, giving
way to the biblical answers of the believer. We might easily relate Hart’s
struggle to our own within ourselves.
In the presentation below “B”
stands for the dialogue of the “Believer” and “S” stands for the dialogue of
the “Soul”. It appears as in A Sheaf of Psalms, Hymns and Spiritual Songs.
246 A Dialogue between a Believer and his Soul 7s. 6s. (8 lines)
1. B: Come,
my soul, and let us try,
For a little
season,
Every burden to
lay by;
Come, and let us
reason.
What is this that
casts thee down?
Who are those that
grieve thee?
Speak, and let the
worst be known;
Speaking may
relieve thee.
2. S: O
I sink beneath the load
Of my nature’s
evil!
Full of enmity to
God;
Captived by the
devil;
Restless as the
troubled sea,
Feeble, faint, and
fearful;
Plagued by every
sore disease;
How can I be
cheerful?
3. B: Think
on what my Saviour bore
In the gloomy
garden;
Sweating blood at
every pore,
To procure thy
pardon!
See Him stretched
upon the wood,
Bleeding,
grieving, crying,
Suffering all the
wrath of God,
Groaning, gasping,
dying!
4. S: This
by faith I sometimes view,
And those views
relieve me;
But my sins return
anew;
These are they
that grieve me.
Oh! I’m leprous,
stinking, foul,
Quite throughout
infected;
Have I not if any
soul,
Cause to be
dejected?
5. B: Think
how loud thy dying Lord
Cried out, “It is
finished!”
Treasure up that
sacred word,
Whole and
undiminished;
Doubt not He will
carry on,
To its full
perfection,
That good work He
has begun;
Why, then, this
dejection?
6. S: Faith
when void of works is dead:
This the
Scriptures witness;
And what works
have I to plead,
Who am all
unfitness?
All my powers are
depraved,
Blind, perverse,
and filthy;
If from death I’m
fully saved,
Why am I not
healthy?
7. B: Pore
not on thyself too long,
Lest it sink thee
lower;
Look to Jesus,
kind as strong -
Mercy joined with
power;
Every work that
thou must do,
Will the gracious
Saviour
For thee work, and
in thee too,
Of His special
favour.
8. S: Jesus’
precious blood, once spilt,
I depend on
solely,
To release and
clear my guilt;
But I would be
holy.
B: He that bought thee on the cross
Can control thy
nature;
Fully purge away
thy dross;
Make thee a new
creature.
9. S: That
He can, I nothing doubt,
Be it but His
pleasure;
B: Though it be not done throughout,
May it not in
measure?
S: When that measure, far from great,
Still shall seem
decreasing?
B: Faint not then, but pray and wait,
Never, never
ceasing.
10. S: What
when prayer meets no regard?
B: Still repeat it often.
S: But I feel myself so hard.
B: Jesus will thee soften.
S: But my enemies make head.
B: Let them closer drive thee.
S: But I’m cold, I’m dark, I’m dead.
B : Jesus will revive thee.
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