Fire and Ice: Puritan and Reformed Writings [Table of Contents] [Fast Index] [Site Map] |
by Anne Bradstreet
Edited by Jeannine Hensley
Lord, why should I doubt any more when Thou hast given me such
assured pledges of Thy love? First, Thou art my Creator, I Thy
creature, Thou my master, I Thy servant. But hence arises not
my comfort, Thou art my Father, I Thy child; "Ye shall be
My sons and daughters," saith the Lord Almighty. Christ is
my brother, I ascend unto my Father, and your Father, unto my
God and your God; but lest this should not be enough, thy maker
is thy husband. Nay more, I am a member of His body, He my head.
Such privileges had not the Word of Truth made them known, who
or where is the man that durst in his heart have presumed to have
thought it? So wonderful are these thoughts that my spirit fails
in me at the consideration thereof. and I am confounded to think
that God, who hath done so much for me, should have so little
from me. But this is my comfort, when I come to Heaven, I shall
understand perfectly what He hath done for me, and then shall
I be able to praise Him as I ought. Lord, having this hope, let
me purify myself as Thou art pure, and let me be no more afraid
of death, but even desire to be dissolved and be with Thee, which
is best of all.
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