Look on thy God, Christ hidden in our flesh,
A bitter word, the cross, and bitter sight:
Yet sweet it is; for God upon that tree
Did offer up His life: upon that rood
My Life hung, that my life might stand in God.
Christ, what am I to give Thee for my life?
Unless take from Thy hands the cup they hold,
To cleanse me with the precious draught of death.
What shall I do? My body to be burned?
Make myself vile? The debt’s not paid out yet.
Whate’er I do, it is but I and Thou,
And still do I Come short, still must Thou pay
My debts, O Christ; for debts Thyself hadst none.
What love may balance Thine? My Lord was found
In fashion like a slave, that so His slave
Might find himself in fashion like his Lord.
Think you the bargain’s hard, to have exchanged
The transient for the eternal, to have sold
Earth to buy Heaven? More dearly God bought me.
Paulinus of Nola [Pontius Meropius Anicius Paulinus] (354 - 431) Italy (born in France)
Translated by Helen Waddell
Source: Mediaeval Latin lyrics, Helen Waddell, Henry Holt and Company, 1938
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