Trust of the wicked, and the righteous compared by John Newton
- As parched in the barren sands
- Beneath a burning sky,
- The worthless bramble with'ring stands,
- And only grows to die.
- Such is the sinner's aweful case,
- Who makes the world his trust;
- And dares his confidence to place
- In vanity and dust.
- A secret curse destroys his root,
- And dries his moisture up;
- He lives awhile, but bears no fruit,
- Then dies without a hope.
- But happy he whose hopes depend
- Upon the LORD alone;
- The soul that trusts in such a friend,
- Can ne'er be overthrown.
- Though gourds should wither, cisterns break,
- And creature-comforts die;
- No change his solid hope can shake,
- Or stop his sure supply.
- So thrives and blooms the tree whose roots
- By constant streams are fed;
- Arrayed in green, and rich in fruits,
- It rears its branching head.
- It thrives, though rain should be denied,
- And drought around prevail;
- 'Tis planted by a river's side
- Whose waters cannot fail.
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