Sung during the Sunday worship at the Metropolitan Tabernacle, London (Spurgeon’s).
Hymn 387 from our hymn book, Psalms & Hymns of Reformed Worship.
“BENEATH the cross of Jesus
I fain would take my stand—
The shadow of a mighty Rock,
Within a weary land:
A home within the wilderness,
A rest upon the way,
From the burning of the noontide heat,
And the burden of the day.
O safe and happy shelter,
O refuge tried and sweet,
O trysting-place—where Heaven’s love
And Heaven’s justice meet!
As to the holy patriarch
That wondrous dream was given,
So seems my Saviour’s cross to me,
A ladder up to Heaven.
There lies beneath its shadow,
But on the farther side,
The darkness of an awful grave
That gapes both deep and wide;
And there between us stands the cross,
Two arms outstretched to save,
Like a watchman set to guard the way
From that eternal grave.
Upon the cross of Jesus
Mine eyes at times can see
The very dying form of One
Who suffered there for me;
And from my smitten heart with tears
Two wonders I confess—
The wonders of His glorious love,
And my own worthlessness.
I take, O cross, thy shadow,
For my abiding place;
I ask no other sunshine than
The sunshine of His face;
Content to let the world go by,
To know no gain nor loss—
My sinful self my only shame,
My glory all the Cross.
Author: Elizabeth Cecilia Clephane (1830-69)
Tune: St Christopher
Composer: Frederick Charles Maker (1844-1927)