英文赞美诗5首
下面网小编为大家整理了关于英文的赞美诗,欢迎大家阅读与借鉴。
一、ANGELS
By Sally Meyer (c) 1997 all rights reserved
It didn't begin in a stable and not in Bethlehem.
It started with an angel in Mary's native land.
'Twas in a town called Nazareth Gabriel came to the virgin fair.
Saying, "Blessed art thou among women," Our Father's Son you'll bear.
Then the angel visited the carpenter who Mary intended to wed.
He came to Joseph in a dream as he lay upon his bed.
"Fear not thou son of David," to take Mary for your wife.
The child of God will need you to tend him in this life.
The big day came, Jesus was born In a manger on a pad of hay.
The angels sang to herald the King on the very first Christmas day.
Then off to spread the happy news to shepherds attending their lambs.
The angel chimed, "Glad tidings I bring" and goodwill to all the land.
The frightened shepherds found comfort in the angelic heavenly chorus.
They sang of peace and joy and a babe who would someday come before us.
Herod sent his wisest men to find the infant King.
So off from the east they followed the star, and precious gifts did bring.
As they departed, an angel told of Herod's wicked plan.
He didn't want to worship the child, but destroy the Son of Man.
Joseph heeded the angel's words, and to Egypt they did flee.
Then listened again when Herod died, and returned to Galilee.
Many years before Christ's birth another prophet was told.
An angel talked to Samuel, a Lamanite of old.
Who were these herald angels chosen by God above?
What valiant servants they must have been to bring us his message of love.
二、MOTHER MARY
By Sally Meyer (c) 1997 all rights reserved
Who am I, what am I? That He should think of me,
To bring His Son into the World and teach Him at my knee?
As there they sat with hay all strewn about them on the ground,
She pondered all that lie ahead when they'd leave fair David's town.
By candle light she held her son, and nursed him at her breast.
Then lay him on the golden hay so they could get some rest.
With stalwart Joseph at her side and cattle softly lowing,
She welcomed all, shepherd to king who came by starlight glowing.
In harmony the angels sang reverent hymns of glory.
Mary listened as they told her little one's sacred story.
The bleating of the fleecy lambs was His first lullaby.
A straw filled manger for a crib with animals standing by.
But Mary filled that nursery as only a mother could,
With love and hope and promise, as Father knew she would.
THE MAN JOSEPH
By Sally Meyer (c) 1997 all rights reserved
With sturdy frame and callused hands, how overlooked, this gentle man.
With hammer and peg and saw and plane, he cut the wood and smoothed the grain.
Trusted by the Father of all to raise His Son, an awesome call.
He never doubted Mary's word, though others claimed it was absurd.
We know he loved the Lord his God, as on to Bethlehem they trod.
With stars so dim his only guide, he walked along by Mary's side.
A crowded town forced them to stay in a tiny stable filled with hay.
He held her close as she winced with pain and squeezed her hand with every strain.
I'm sure he wept a father's tear as the glorious birth grew ever near.
He wiped the drops from off her face, brought straw to soften the birthing place.
And when the infant came at length, he stayed right there to lend her strength.
He welcomed those who traveled far to see the babe beneath the star.
From lowly shepherds to mighty kings all knew they'd witnessed sacred things.
He stood aside, no want for fame, with callused hands and sturdy frame.
三、SHEPHERD
By Sally Meyer (c) 1997 all rights reserved
While shepherds careful vigil kept o'er lambs in fields of green.
The sky took on a brilliant glow and lit the grassy scene.
In dread they looked upon the star that rose anew that night.
Then angels came to calm their fears and tell of the heavenly light.
In word and song they shared the news of the babe who was their king.
They sang of peace and love and joy, and the good will he would bring.
The keepers of the flocks arose and followed the heavenly beam,
But not to gleaming palace walls as it would surely seem.
It led them to an earthen stall where cattle and goats were kept.
And in the manger soft and warm, the little Jesus slept.
Tears filled up their tired eyes and ran down wind burned cheeks.
They had found the promised one, for whom the world still seeks.
Though they were watchers of the flocks, tenders of lamb and ewe,
He was the keeper of God's flock, HE was the shepherd true.
四、ROOM IN THE INN
By Sally Meyer (c) 1997 all rights reserved
How much different would things have been,
If maybe there had been room at the inn?
No hay, no manger, no beasts, no stall.
Rather, plenty of beds and blankets for all.
Not a proprietor in his right mind
Would allow all those shepherds, the filthiest kind,
To enter the doors of his establishment,
Not even the ones, who by angels were sent!
And the star overhead, no matter the beam,
Through walls made of mud, would not have been seen.
No bleating of lamb, no cooing of bird.
Would songs of the angels have even been heard?
Maybe the kings would have been turned away.
Foreigners weren't welcome in that place or that day.
Don't blame the innkeepers doing their jobs.
How could they know it was the Son of God?
Like the rest of his life, it was part of the plan.
A humble birth, a humble man.
Yes, it happened as it should have been,
No place to stay. No room in the inn.
五、Those Hands
by Sally Meyer ?2000
2000 years have come and gone since that silent and holy night.
The eve of the birth of our Savior, a day that would bring new light.
There sat Mary in the quiet stable, caressing her newborn babe.
Hardly more than a child, herself, giving birth in a cold, dark cave.
Gently unwrapping the little boy, unwinding swaddling bands.
His tiny fingers encircled her own as she stroked his little hands.
She must have asked herself and smiled, "What will these hands do someday?"
"Will they farm the earth or build a house? Will they work with chisel or clay?"
How could she know as she tickled his fingers and counted them, one to ten.
The things they would do, in a few short years, to bless the lives of men?
The angel had told of His deity and His part in God's sacred plan.
But she couldn't know just where He would go or what He would do with those hands.
As a boy in Joseph's carpenter shop, they would use a hammer and saw.
Then on the shores of Galilee, break bread as He taught God's law.
How many times from cradle to cross would those hands change the lives of men.
As He healed from the bed and raised from the dead and forgave them, time and again.
He would use His grown up hands to pull a child to His knee.
Fingers would wipe a tear from an eye, apply mud so a man could see.
Those hands would be clasped in tearful prayer in Gethsemane's Garden, alone.
Then nailed to a cross on Calvary's Hill, His endless love to show.
To save us from death, He'd give His life. His innocent blood would spill.
He would cross the veil to His father's arms, His part in the plan fulfilled.
At Christmas time and all year through, remember who set us free.
With broken heart and outstretched hands, He bids us, "Come to me."
(Copied by permission)