But shall I then through fear forbear

Verse 1
“But shall I then thro’ fear forbear,
“And evil in the greatest spare?
“I must let loose my flaming zeal,
“I must rebuke their crimes, and will.[”]

Verse 2
Your sin-detesting virtue show:
But first the time and manner know:
With censure of yourself begin,
Nor suffer vice to chasten sin.

Verse 3
Before another’s mote you spy,
The beam cast out of your own eye,
The beam of zeal unsanctified,
The beam of self-preferring pride.

Verse 4
Arm’d with your Lord’s authority,
When faults you in Superiors see,
The seasons watch, and various ways
Of ministring his balmy grace.

Verse 5
Out of an humble heart and meek
With fear, and due submission speak,
Or with the eyes of Jesus look,
And dart the pitiful rebuke.

Verse 6
Will they not now your words receive?
Yet show them how they ought to live,
And sin in Governors reprove
By modest grief, and silent love.

Hymnal/Album: Originally titled: “‘Is it fit to say to a king, thou art wicked? and to princes, ye are ungodly?’—[Job] 34:18.” This hymn appears in the 1783 manuscript “MS Scriptural Hymns.” This manuscript is part of the collection of the Methodist Archive and Research Centre in The John Rylands Library, The University of Manchester (accession number MA 1977/576, Charles Wesley Notebooks Box 3). Accessed through the website of The Center for Studies in the Wesleyan Tradition, Duke Divinity School. Published in The Poetical Works of John and Charles Wesley, Collected and Arranged by G. Osborn, Vol. 9 (London: Wesleyan-Methodist Conference Office, 1870), page 266.
Publishing: Public Domain