Whether the word be preached or read

Verse 1
Whether the word be preach’d or read,
No saving benefit I gain
From empty sounds, or letters dead,
Unprofitable all and vain,
Unless by faith thy word I hear,
And see its heavenly character.

Verse 2
Unmixt with faith, the scripture gives
No comfort, life, or light to me,
But darker still the dark it leaves,
Implung’d in deeper misery,
Or’ewhelm’d with nature’s sorest ills:
The Spirit saves, the letter kills.

Verse 3
Most wretched comforters are they
Who bid “On the bare word rely!”
Physicians of no price, they say
I must the promises apply,
And, destitute of inward sense,
Draw all my consolations thence.

Verse 4
Their counsels aggravate my grief,
(But never move the heart of stone)
Insult my helpless unbelief,
Who cannot find a God unknown,
While without eyes they bid me look
And read the seal’d, unfolded book.

Verse 5
If God inlighten thro’ his word,
I shall my kind Inlightener bless:
But void, and naked of my Lord
What are all verbal promises?
Nothing to me, till faith divine
Inspire, inspeak, and make them mine.

Verse 6
Jesus, th’ appropriating grace
Tis thine on sinners to bestow:
Open mine eyes to see thy face,
Open my heart Thyself to know,
And then I thro’ thy word obtain
Sure, present, and eternal gain.

Hymnal/Album: Originally titled: “‘The word preached did not profit them, not being mixt with faith in them that heard it.’—Heb. 4:2. II.” 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. 13 (London: Wesleyan-Methodist Conference Office, 1872), page 123.
Publishing: Public Domain