And can it be that I should gain

B175 C234 CB296 E296 F54 G296 K234 LSM62 P157 R58 S141 T296
1
And can it be that I should gain
An int’rest in the Savior’s blood?
Died He for me, who caused His pain?
For me, who Him to death pursued?
Amazing love! how can it be
That Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?
Amazing love! how can it be
That Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?
2
’Tis mystery all! The Immortal dies!
Who can explore His strange design?
In vain the firstborn seraph tries
To sound the depths of love Divine!
’Tis mercy all! let earth adore,
Let angel minds inquire no more.
’Tis mercy all! let earth adore,
Let angel minds inquire no more.
3
He left His Father’s throne above,
So free, so infinite His grace;
Emptied Himself of all but love,
And bled for Adam’s helpless race:
’Tis mercy all, immense and free;
For, O my God, it found out me.
’Tis mercy all, immense and free;
For, O my God, it found out me.
4
Long my imprisoned spirit lay
Fast bound in sin and nature’s night;
Thine eye diffused a quickening ray,
I woke, the dungeon flamed with light;
My chains fell off, my heart was free,
I rose, went forth, and followed Thee.
My chains fell off, my heart was free,
I rose, went forth, and followed Thee.
5
No condemnation now I dread;
Jesus, and all in Him, is mine!
Alive in Him, my living Head,
And clothed in righteousness Divine,
Bold I approach the eternal throne,
And claim the crown, through Christ my own.
Bold I approach the eternal throne,
And claim the crown, through Christ my own.
217
Atilep

This is a very good hymn and the full contents of this hymn has 6 stanzas. Including this verse :

Still the small inward voice I hear,

That whispers all my sins forgiven;

Still the atoning blood is near,

That quenched the wrath of hostile Heaven.

I feel the life His wounds impart;

I feel the Savior in my heart.

I feel the life His wounds impart;

I feel the Savior in my heart.


Joshua Kim

Newport, United Kingdom

"No condemnation now I dread." Amen and Amen!!


Sumin

United Kingdom

Charles Wesley is indeed a blessed person of God. I sang this song at Bilborough Baptist Church and it just touched me. It's a wonderful song and every time I hear it I feel Jesus' love, the joy and peace! God bless you all!


Sean McDivitt

This is my FAVORITE hymn of all time! In a way, it is my testimony because for a long time, my heart had been harboring deep, unconfessed sin and yesterday I, through God's infinite grace, confessed it and am repented of it.


Chris Kennedy

Missouri, U.S.A.

Growing up in the Salvation Army as the son of Officer (minister) parents, I can remember many times when my father led congregations in this stately hymn. His favoite verse was verse 4...."My chains fell off..." I played in the band and it was always a spirit rousing experience to play this hymn. It brings back many fond memories of my childhood......


Paul Kerslake

Australia

Would to God that my heart and life was the same as Charles Wesley's.


Eunice

New York, U.S.A.

What can I say but "my chains fell, off my heart was free, I rose went forth and followed Thee!"

Whenever I sing this hymn with all the saints, it reminds me of the first time that I touched the Lord's recovery. While a dear sister held her hymn book to my face I could not help the tears of thankfulness roll down my cheecks. Coming especially to stanza 4, I get deeply touched. My story goes like this, I am one of four who was born in the Recovery(the youngest). As a new born babe, I, along with all of my siblings, were consecrated to Christ and the Church. Actually I, by the Lord's mercy, am the third generation in His recovery. However, when I was only around two yrs. old both of my parents left the Lord's Recovery and eventually got a divorce. Because of this I basically grew up in the world knowing close to nothing about our Great God and Savior the Lord Jesus Christ. BUT because of the consecration and my grandmother who was meeting with the saints in Puerto Rico, the Lord arranged for me to spend two months with her for summer vacation. I was only about 12 yrs. old and while I was there I called on the Lord's name and got baptized. Praise the Lord for His faithfulness. Although my parents forgot the Lord never forgot.

So when I went back home to be with mom, I had no one to care for me, no church life, no saints around. I got lost again. BUT after about 10 yrs. (very long yrs.) The Lord called me back to Himself-O Lord thank you for not leaving me in Egypt! I began to have a desire to go to church and please God. Slowly but surely the Lord brought me back(He actually put it in my heart to go to the place I went to when I was a baby, which is the Church in New York City). So I was actually 22 yrs. old when my "chains fell off". I am the only one in my family who came back, BUT I Believe the Lord, on His timing, will bring them back one by one. Praise the Lord. What can we say but praise Him!

Please continue with me in prayer. Hallelujah!

We also need to turn to the Lord often because we need to be refreshed by Him. We should have no trust in ourselves. Apart from the Lord we can do nothing. Madame Guyon often renewed her vows to the Lord, which were her consecration. It is good to determine and vow to love the Lord for our whole life, but it will not be us who fulfill this vow. It is the Lord who accomplishes everything. Charles Wesley, an excellent hymn writer, in Hymns, #296, says, "Tis mystery all!... "Tis mercy all!" We need to realize that we do not fully understand anything and that everything is the Lord's mercy. It is altogether up to Him. The Lord grants particular mercy and compassion to certain persons (Rom. 9:15-16). We cannot know the reason; we can only enjoy Him.

The death of Christ was the death of a God-man (cf. 1 John 1:7; Acts 20:28). Hence, when Christ was hanging on the cross, God was with Him (cf. John 8:29, 16; 16:32). In one of his hymns Charles Wesley says, "How can it be / That Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?" (Hymns, #296). Because Christ died on the cross as a God-man, God was in Christ when Christ was crucified and hung on the cross for us. On the cross Christ bore our sins and was made sin on our behalf (1 Pet. 2:24; Heb. 9:28; 2 Cor. 5:21). He also died in the likeness of the flesh of sin (Rom. 8: 3). In the flesh there are sin and Satan. When the Lord went to the cross to die for our redemption, He did not hang there alone. The old creation, the old man, the flesh, sin, and Satan were on Him, and they were crucified with Him (6: 6; Gal. 5:24; John 1:29; Heb. 2:14). Thus, the death of Christ terminated the old creation, the old man, the flesh, sin, and Satan.

Whenever I recall my years with the Lord, I am filled with gratitude. For more than fifty years, I have been the object of His mercy and grace. Throughout the course of these years, I have been carried by the wings of a great eagle. Many things which have taken place have been not at all according to my expectation. I thank the Lord that so many things did not work out according to my way, but according to His way. He always knows what I need. I never expected to come to this country, but the Lord has brought me here. Have You ever dreamed that You would be where You are today? In the words of a hymn written by Charles Wesley,

'Tis mercy all, immense and free;

For, O my God, it found out me.

What a mercy to be carried on the wings of a great eagle! At the mountain of God, the children of Israel could say, 'Lord, we are not here of ourselves. Your strong wings have brought us out of Egypt and carried us through the wilderness to this place, where we are here with You.'

When we preach the gospel, we should also be familiar with hymns on the assurance of salvation, such as Hymns, #309. It is not difficult for young people to sing hymns, because many of them have a good foundation in music. It is especially not difficult for the sisters to sing hymns, because God created them in this way. In Ecclesiastes 12:4 Solomon is referring to the vocal chords when he mentions "the daughters of song." When young people sing, there truly is music.

Among the hymns on the assurance of salvation, Hymns, #322, which is about "the Fountain that never runs dry," is a good hymn. Another good hymn is #296, which was written by Charles Wesley. This is not an emotional hymn; it is very elegant. The first stanza says, "And can it be that I should gain / An int'rest in the Savior's blood? / Died He for me, who caused His pain? / For me, who Him to death pursued? / Amazing love! how can it be / That Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?" The fourth stanza is also very good. When the young saints invite their professors to a meeting, it is good to sing hymns with them. We can choose a stanza that we like and lead our professors to sing with us. This will help them to receive the Lord Jesus. When we sing a hymn, others should be touched. We should then sing with them according to how they are touched. Hymns, #499 is also a good hymn to sing. If we are always singing these hymns, it will be difficult for our gospel friends not to be touched and to believe in the Lord.

We should not say directly and initially that the crucifixion was God's crucifixion. Instead, we should say that this was Christ's crucifixion. When we are sharing the truth concerning the crucifixion, we need to take steps like that of a stairway. We should not jump from the top of a building to the ground floor. This is to commit suicide. Instead, we must have a stairway.

Without His Divine Trinity, God could not have moved in the crucifixion. Who can crucify God? Yet Charles Wesley said in one of his hymns: "Amazing love! how can it be/That Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?" and "'Tis mystery all! The Immortal dies!" (Hymns, #296). Charles Wesley said that God died for him and that the Immortal One died. This means that He who cannot die, died for us. No one could crucify God if He remained in His divinity, but Christ as the manifestation of God in the flesh was crucified. The Divine Trinity is involved here. The crucifixion of Christ was the death in which God moved in man. God moved in another's crucifixion, but this other One is the embodiment of God. The first One moved in the second One's death, and the second One is the embodiment of the first One. This is the stairway we need to understand the crucifixion.

All proper Christians admit that they were redeemed by Christ's paying the price for them. Christ died and shed His blood for us. He died on the cross as our replacement. The Bible tells us that God decided to crucify Christ (Isa. 53:10). If Christ had not died as our replacement, then God would have become unrighteous in crucifying Christ, because Christ is the only person who is absolutely righteous and just. One of Charles Wesley's hymns says, "Amazing love! how can it be/That Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?" (Hymns, #296). The just God-man died for the unjust sinners (1 Pet. 3:18), so His death is called the vicarious death. One just God-man died for many unjust sinners. Such a vicarious death is judicial. God redeemed us judicially by the blood of Christ. To redeem, in a sense, is to purchase. When you purchase something, you have to pay the price. God's redemption is a kind of purchase. God purchased us sinners judicially by paying Christ's blood as the price on the cross.

Also, Christ was crucified on the cross for us, and He was on the cross for six hours. In the first three hours, Christ was persecuted by men for doing God's will; in the last three hours, He was judged by God for the accomplishment of our redemption. It was during this time that God counted Him as our suffering substitute for sin (Isa. 53:10). Hence, darkness came over all the land (Matt. 27:45), because our sin and sins and all negative things were dealt with there. Near the end of these six hours Jesus cried out, "My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?" (Matt. 27:46). God forsook Him because of our sin. Economically, God was judging Him as a sinner and the judging God left Him economically. Essentially, however, He was dying on the cross as the Triune God-man. This is why Charles Wesley in one of his hymns (Hymns, #296) says, "Amazing love! how can it be that Thou, my God, shouldst die for me?" Economically, God cannot die for us, but essentially, God within Jesus died for us. Actually, however, that was not God dying, but God passing through death.

More than two centuries ago, Charles Wesley wrote a hymn that speaks of God dying for us. In this hymn Wesley says:

Amazing love! How can it be

That thou, my God, shouldst die for me?

In this hymn Wesley goes on to say, "'Tis mystery all! The Immortal dies!" Here Wesley declares that God died for us. Charles Wesley saw the vision concerning this and declared in his hymn that God died for us.

The God who died for us is not the God before incarnation. Prior to incarnation, God certainly did not have blood, and He could not have died for us. It was after the incarnation, in which God was mingled with humanity, that He died for us. Through incarnation, our God, the Creator, the eternal One, Jehovah, became mingled with man. As a result, He was no longer only God—He became a God-man. As the God-man, He surely had blood and was able to die for us.

Paul said in Acts 20:28 that the blood that Christ shed on the cross was God's own blood. God bought, purchased, the church with His own blood, so the church is so dear, so beloved, in the feeling of God and in the eyes of God. This was the word spoken by Paul to the elders of Ephesus. He was impressing the elders from Ephesus that they should love the church, considering the church very dear and beloved as God does. The church is so dear and beloved to God in His feeling, so He purchased the church with His own blood. The Bible in Acts 20:28 says that the divine God has human blood.

As we have pointed out, Charles Wesley wrote a very good hymn with a good melody, in which he spoke of the crucifixion of Christ. This is hymn #296 in our hymnal. A number of years ago, I translated this hymn into Chinese. Charles Wesley had the boldness to say in this hymn that the immortal God died for us. I am so glad that he declared this truth and that it is printed in the hymnal.

Piano Hymns