Let earth and heaven combine
- Genesis 2:7
- Job 10:9
- Psalms 96:11
- Isaiah 65:20
- Habakkuk 2:20
- Zechariah 2:13
- John 1:14
- John 1:18
- John 14:8-9
- John 6:42
- Romans 11:33-34
- 1 Corinthians 1:21
- 1 Corinthians 2:7-8
- Ephesians 3:19
- Ephesians 3:8
- Ephesians 4:13
- Philippians 1:23
- Philippians 2:6-7
- Colossians 1:19
- Colossians 2:3
- 1 Timothy 3:16
- Hebrews 10:14
- 1 Peter 1:12
- 1 Peter 1:20
- 1 John 2:5
- 1 John 3:2-3
- 1 John 4:12
- 1 John 4:18-19
- 1 John 4:2
- 1 John 5:19
- 2 John 7
- Revelation 8:1-2
- 364
Let earth and heaven combine,
angels and men agree
to praise in songs divine
the incarnate Deity;
our God contracted to a span,
incomprehensibly made man.
2. He laid his glory by,
took form in mortal clay;
unseen by human eye
the hidden Godhead lay;
infant of days he here became,
and bore the meek Immanuel’s name.
3. See in that infant’s face
the depths of Deity;
endeavour, while you gaze,
to probe the mystery;
let even angels gaze no more,
but bow and silently adore.
4. Unsearchable the love
that has our Saviour brought;
his grace is far above
the reach of human thought:
it is enough that God, we know,
our God, is manifest below.
5. He deigns in flesh to appear,
widest extremes to join;
to bring our vileness near,
and make us all divine:
and we the life of God shall know,
for God is manifest below.
6. Made perfect by his love
and sanctified by grace,
we shall from earth remove
and see his glorious face:
then shall his love be fully showed
and we shall be complete in God.
© In this version Praise Trust
Charles Wesley 1707-88
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Tunes
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Millennium Metre: - 66 66 88
Composer: - Anonymous
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Adoration Metre: - 66 66 88
Composer: - Havergal, William Henry
The story behind the hymn
Three times within the space of 8 items we find Charles Wesley at his most magnificent, setting forth our Lord Jesus Christ in his Incarnation in flowing lyrics of the most demanding theology which yet remain congregationally accessible. To quote Bernard L Manning again, Wesley shows ‘the full-orbed and conscious orthodoxy of a scholar trained and humbled as he contemplates the holy, catholic and evangelical faith in its historic glory and strength. The hymns are charged with dogma. They set forth, not the amiable generalisations of natural religion in which Wesley’s contemporaries delighted, but the peculiar and pungent doctrines of uncompromising Christianity’. In this extraordinary hymn, the first stz’s ‘incomprehensibly’ is a conscious tribute to the Athanasian Creed, still prescribed for Anglican use and the butt of some modern ridicule from Jehovah’s Witnesses and 1960s liberals. Its 5th line echoes Richard Crashaw’s Christmas verses (c1640) ‘Gloomy night embraced the place…/ Welcome all wonders in one sight!/ eternity shut in a span!’; a little earlier, Geo Herbert (in ‘The Pulley’) had ‘Let the world’s riches, which dispersed lie,/ contract into a span.’ ‘Contract’, for Wesley at least, has more than one meaning. The Methodist Companion to Hymns and Psalms pays tribute to the Gadsby tradition of Strict Baptists for helping them to keep the hymn in use.
Like 357 the text was published in Hymns for the Nativity of our Lord, 1744. 20th-c Methodist books, as well as CH and GH, strangely omit stz 3; PHRW also leaves out the last. Changed words include ‘hidden’ for Aquinas’ ‘latent’ (stz 2), ‘bow’ for ‘fall’ (3), and ‘complete’ for ‘lost’ (6). 4.4 originally read ‘or man or angel’s thought’. The Scriptures centrally in view are Luke 2, John 1, and 1 John 4; as ever, many more are alluded to. But other lines show a debt, conscious no doubt, to Jeremy Taylor (Holy Living), George Herbert (The Pulley), and to the author’s father Samuel Wesley in his Hymn to God the Son.
For the anonymous tune MILLENNIUM (as used for the hymn in GH), see 145A. The alternative ADORATION (502, one of several also known as ST JOHN) is that in use among Methodists at least since their 1904 book.
A look at the author
Wesley, Charles
b Epworth, Lincolnshire 1707, d London 1788. The youngest of 17 children born to Samuel and Susanna, he scarcely survived birth. Somehow he also survived a hugely talented but chronically poor and often dysfunctional family, taught and held together by his mother through multiple disasters. At Westminster Sch he was nurtured by his gifted elder brother Samuel; at Christ Ch Oxford, supported by John W and others in 1728–29, he founded the ‘Holy Club’ which earned the nickname of ‘Methodists’. A fellow-student John Gambold described him as ‘a man made for friendship’; he certainly befriended and encouraged the younger and poorer student George Whitefield. Under pressure from his brother John, Charles was ordained in 1735 (delighting later to call himself ‘Presbyter of the Church of England’) in order to travel with him on a neardisastrous visit to the young colony of Georgia, which however brought the brothers into contact with Moravian missionaries. While putting a positive public spin on his adventures, but partly driven by the Moravian sense of assurance, he experienced an evangelical conversion on 21 May 1738, shortly before John’s more celebrated ‘heart-warming’. Charles’s journal is shorter, rather more transparent and less contrived than his brother’s; he was never a self-propagandist. But in 1964 the historian F C Gill called him ‘the first Methodist’ (from his Oxford initiatives) and ‘the apostle of the north’ (from his labours around Newcastle).
Like John’s inward transformation, Charles’s suffered many setbacks, but his hymnwriting began immediately (see 751, note) and for the next decade he shared in countrywide itinerant evangelism, often opening the way for his brother and composing much verse while on horseback. ‘His sermons and his hymns informed each other’ – David Chapman. In 1749 he married Sarah (Sally) Gwynne, settled in Bristol and unlike John became less relentlessly mobile and more firmly Anglican. But at least until 1757 he still continued to travel, attract audiences in their tens of thousands and oversee the growing army of lay preachers and (like Whitefield) labour for harmony between the movement’s leaders. In that year, however, his journal-keeping ended, and his lifestyle was redirected by concern for his wife (who had contracted smallpox), by his own health problems, and by the widening gap between John and himself. The differences arose from John’s elusive ‘perfectionism’ (from 1760), his increasing willingness to distance himself from the CofE, and his autocratic leadership-style.
By common consent, CW is the greatest of all English hymnwriters and certainly the most prolific, completing more than 6000 over 50 years; the exact number depends on whether some poems or single-stanza texts are included. Some self-contained 4-line items are very powerful, and we may regret their neglect today; many are found in his 2000 [sic] Short Hymns on Select Passages of the Holy Scriptures (1760), where even among such jewels the original of our no.862 shines with special brilliance. (The numerous OT ‘enemies’ are often transformed here into inbred or indwelling personal sins; sometimes the distinctive doctrines of freewill or perfectionism show up, and CW uses some bold language about circumcision: ‘cut off the foreskin of my heart’, etc.) Among many other collections, the later 1760s produced many hymns rooted in practical needs, from childbirth and school to family problems and retirement. In 1768 he moved from Bristol to Marylebone in London, mainly for the sake of his family; here he became the main preacher at the City Road Chapel; the classic Collection of Hymns for the Use of the People called Methodists was compiled by John for publication in 1780; at least 480 of its 525 hymns were by Charles—even though his elder brother thought that he spent too much time writing them. He also played the flute and organ, but the family’s musical talents were to bear greater fruit in his children and (notably) his grandson; see under S S Wesley in the Composers’ index.
J R Watson calls Charles ‘The William Shakespeare of hymnody’; many have dubbed him the poet of the heart—like ‘love’, a frequent climactic word in his verse. The concluding lines of his hymns are just one of many features which mark out his instinctive sureness of touch from the work of lesser contemporaries. While John’s heart (see below) was famously ‘strangely warmed’ in 1738, Charles’s was characteristically ‘set free’. He used an immense variety of metres, many of them original; some of his verse is anti-Calvinist polemic (the innocent-sounding word ‘all’ often flags up his Arminianism, and a general or universal atonement) and he was a master of comic and satirical rhymes. Like Bunyan in the previous century with ‘Giant Pope’ and ‘Giant Pagan’, Wesley consistently shows almost equal scorn for Romanism and Islam—‘superstition’s papal chain…that papal beast’, ‘Mahomet’s imposture…that Arab-thief’. His communion hymns, totalling 166 and leaning on the high-church theology of Daniel Brevint, are rarely found in the same hymnals as his more famous writing on gospel assurance. He loved and used his BCP (drawing richly on its Litany, for example, in Full of trembling expectation) and was clearly a reader of Matthew Henry’s Commentary on the whole Bible (1700) which he frequently versified. His masterly use and application of Scripture, if highly typological, is unparalleled in English hymnwriting. Perhaps his greatest work is the much-anthologised ‘Wrestling Jacob’ (Come, O thou traveller unknown) but the difficulty of finding a tune able to sustain the developing moods of its long narrative and reflection have kept this out of many hymnals including Praise! Far less known is the equally Christ-centred hymn on ‘Dreaming Jacob’, What doth the ladder mean? More often than not, Wesley is the best-represented author in UK hymn-books, as he is also in The New Oxford Book of Christian Verse (1981) with 11 entries from a total of 269 texts, 5 of which are hymns in general use. Of 980 hymns in the 1904 Methodist Hymn Book, 440 are by CW; its 1933 equivalent gives him 243 out of 984. In c1941, Edward Shillito quoted an anonymous Headmaster who said, ‘I hope you will let me advise all would-be hymn-writers to hold their pens until they have carefully studied Charles Wesley’. Like his brother, C Wesley has generated a large volume of other writing; among minor classics are The Evangelical Doctrines of Charles Wesley’s Hymns (J Ernest Rattenbury, 1941), The Hymns of Wesley and Watts (Bernard L Manning, 1942), recent biographies by Arnold Dallimore and Gary Best (respectively A Heart Set Free, 1988, and Charles Wesley: a biography, 2006), and The Handmaid of Piety by Edward Houghton (1992). It is Best’s book which serves as a corrective to much Wesleyan folklore, and most effectively brings Charles out from John’s shadow by giving credit where it is due. See also Carlton R Young’s 1995 anthology Music of the Heart: John and Charles Wesley on Music and Musicians. Meanwhile facsimile edns have been published of his hymns on the Nativity (1st edn 1745), the Lord’s Supper (with John W, also 1745), the Resurrection (1746), Ascension and Whitsuntide (1746) and the Trinity (1767). And while brother John’s career has been the basis of stage plays and musicals, inevitably involving Charles’s story, it is the younger and greater hymnwriter who uniquely prompted David Wright in 2006 to compose The Hymnical, a 2-part musical drama exploring CW’s life, hymns and contemporary relevance. Nos. 142*, 150, 160, 216, 227, 282, 324, 342, 344, 357, 359, 364, 438, 452, 458, 482, 495, 502, 511*, 523, 527, 529, 542, 555, 571, 583, 593, 595, 606, 625, 649, 682, 714, 718, 734, 742, 751, 776, 800, 808, 809, 812, 813, 822, 827, 828, 830, 837, 851, 862, 878*, 889, 940, 966.