O Love Divine, what hast Thou done!

Verse 1
O love divine, what hast thou done!
Th’ immortal God hath died for me!
The Father’s co-eternal Son

Bore all my sins upon the tree;
Th’ immortal God for me hath died!
My Lord, my love is crucified!

Verse 2
Behold him all ye that pass by,
The bleeding Prince of life and peace,
Come see, ye worms, your Maker die,

And say, was ever grief like his!
Come feel with me his blood applied:
My Lord, my love is crucified!

Verse 3
Is crucified for me and you,
To bring us rebels near to God;
Believe, believe the record true,

We all are bought with Jesu’s blood;
Pardon for all flows from his side:
My Lord, my love is crucified.

Verse 4
Then let us sit beneath his cross,
And gladly catch the healing stream,
All things for him account but loss,

And give up all our hearts to him;
Of nothing think, or speak[1] beside:
My Lord, my love is crucified!

[1] Wesley changed “think, or speak” to “speak or think” in 1745.

Hymnal/Album: Introduced in Hymns and Sacred Poems (1742), published by John and Charles Wesley (London: William Strahan, 1742). Published in The Poetical Works of John and Charles Wesley, Collected and Arranged by G. Osborn, Vol. 2 (London: Wesleyan-Methodist Conference Office, 1869), page 74.
Publishing: Public Domain