By F. W. Pitt
The Maker of the
universe
As Man, for man was
made a curse.
The claims of Law
which He had made,
Unto the uttermost He
paid.
His holy fingers made
the bough
Which grew the thorns
that crowned His brow.
The nails that
pierced His hands were mined
In secret places He
designed.
He made the forest
whence there sprung
The tree on which His
body hung.
He died upon a cross
of wood,
Yet made the hill on
which it stood.
The sky that darkened
o’er His head
By Him above the
earth was spread.
The sun that hid from
Him its face
By His decree was
poised in space.
The spear which
spilled His precious blood
Was tempered in the
fires of God.
The grave in which
His form was laid,
Was hewn in rocks His
hands had made.
The throne on which
He now appears
Was His from
everlasting years,
But a new glory
crowns His brow,
And every knee to Him
shall bow.
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