Augustus Toplady was an eighteenth century Anglican preacher and poet,
best known for his famous hymn “Rock of Ages.” J. C. Ryle called him a man "strangely compounded, peculiarly constituted, and oddly framed," but also a man of
rare grace and gifts and one who left his mark very deeply on his own generation. For soundness in the faith, singleness of eye, and devotedness of life, he deserves to be ranked with Whitefield, or Grimshaw, or Romaine. Yet with all this, he was a man in whom there was a most extraordinary mixture of grace and infirmity. (J. C. Ryle, Christian Leaders of the 18th Century)While not as prolific as Charles Wesley or original as George Herbert, Toplady in his short life of just thirty-eight years nevertheless composed a number of poems and hymns of profound theological depth and rich devotional expression.
I recently dived more deeply into Toplady's poetry after realizing how
several of his hymns had become regular sources of recurring encouragement.
Like a desert nomad who knows, marks, and returns to locations of scarce, but
refreshing water, there is a reason I keep coming back to Toplady in times of
discouragement. So, I purchased his Complete Works and started reading the poetry. As I read, several themes emerged. I
hope this introduction to Toplady’s hymns and poetry will persuade other
thirsty travelers to search out and drink from this deep well.
1. His poetry expresses
the feelings of angst believers sometimes experience under the weight of sin
and guilt.
Toplady embraced what has sometimes been called "experimental Calvinism." This means that he was not only committed to the theological system
of Calvinistic doctrine, but that the doctrines of grace coursed through the
whole of his religious experience, increasing and informing his self-awareness,
prompting and molding his meditations and prayers, and infusing his worship
with the double notes of humility and joy.
This is especially evident in his prayerful poetry about his own
sinfulness. It is rare to find hymns that reflect this kind of self-awareness
and honesty. Toplady’s poems are refreshing, because they give expression to
the anguish believers sometimes feel under the weight of their sins. Here are
three examples.
From Poem XIX:
Ah! Give me, Lord,
myself to see,
Against myself to watch
and pray,
Howe weak am I, when
left by thee,
How frail, how apt to
fall away!
If but a moment thou
withdraw,
That moment sees me
break thy law.
Jesus, the sinner’s only
trust,
Let me now feel thy
grace infus’d!
Ah! raise a captive from
the dust,
Nor break a reed already
bruis’d!
Visit me, Lord, in peace
again,
Nor let me seek thy face
in vain.
(Poem XIX, Works, p. 889-890)
From Poem XXXIX:
My sins how slowly do I
leave,
To earthly things
inclined;
But wean me, Lord, and
let me have
Thy self-denying mind.
(Poem XXXIX. For all the mind of
Christ. Works, p. 894)
And from Hymn VI:
Astonish’d and
distress’d,
I turn my eyes within;
My heart with loads of
guilt opprest,
The seat of every sin.
What crowds of evil
thoughts,
What vile affections
there!
Distrust, presumption,
artful guile,
Pride, envy, slavish
fear.
Almighty King of saints,
These tyrant lusts
subdue;
Expel the darkness of my
mind,
And all my powers renew.
(Hymn VI. The evil Heart. Works, p.
909)
2. His poetry revels in
the sin-bearing, justice-satisfying, wrath-removing, atoning work of
Christ.
Don’t think that consciousness of sin crowded joyful hope out his
worship. To the contrary, like the sinful woman in Luke 7, Toplady’s worship of
the Savior was proportional to his awareness of his sin. Being forgiven much, he loved much. But his
expressions of love for Jesus are not the vague sentiments so common in
contemporary “Jesus-is-my-boyfriend” worship songs. They are, instead, tethered
tightly to the sin-bearing, justice-satisfying, wrath-removing,
salvation-securing cross-work of Jesus Christ.
All my sins imputed were
To my dear, incarnate
God;
Bury’d in his grave they
are,
Drown’d in his atoning
blood;
Me thou wilt not now
condemn,
Righteous and complete
in him.
In the Saviour’s right I
claim
All the blessings he
hath bought;
For my soul the dying
Lamb
Hath a full redemption
wrought;
Heaven through his
desert is mine;
Christ’s I am, and
Christ is mine. (Poem V. For the Evening. Works, p.
887)
Another example:
From Justice’s consuming
flame,
Saviour, I fly to thee;
O look not on me as I
am,
But as I fain would be.
Deserted in the way I
lie,
No cure for me is found:
Thou, good Samaritan
pass by,
And bind up my every
wound…
What though the fiery
serpent’s bite
Hath poisoned ev’ry
vein—
I’ll not despair, but
keep in sight
The wounds of Jesus
slain. (Poem
XVIII. Works, p. 889)
And another…
Slain in the guilty
sinner’s stead,
His spotless
righteousness plead,
And his availing blood:
Thy merit, Lord, my robe
shall be,
Thy merit shall atone
for me,
And bring me near to
God. (Poem
XXVIII. Works, p. 891)
Again…
The law was satisfy’d by
him
Who flesh for me was
made:
Its penalty he
underwent,
Its precepts he obey’d.
Desert and all self-righteousness
I utterly forego;
My robe of everlasting
bliss,
My wedding garment thou.
The spotless Saviour
liv’d for me,
And died upon the Mount;
Th’ obedience of his
life and death
Is placed to my account…
O love incomprehensible,
That made thee bleed for
me!
The Judge of all hath
suffer’d death
To set his prisoner
free! (Poem
XXXV. Refuge in the Righteousness of
Christ. Works, p. 893)
And yet again…
The gift of God to
fallen man,
The Lord of quick and
dead:
A well of life to
fainting souls,
And their sustaining
bread.
Foundation of thy
people’s joy,
Their pardon and their
rest:
On earth our sacrifice
for sin,
In heav’n our great High
Priest.
The Lord of life who
suffer’d death
That we might heav’n
regain;
The source of blessing,
who on earth,
Was made a curse for
man. (Paraphrases
on Select Parts of Holy Writ, Para. II. Names
of Christ, expressions of his Offices, taken from various parts of Scripture.
Works, p. 899)
And here is one of my favorites:
Thy anger, for what I
have done,
The gospel forbids me to
fear:
My sins thou hast
charg’d on thy Son:
Thy justice to him I
refer:
Be mindful of Jesus and
me!
My pardon he suffer’d to
buy;
And what he procur’d on
the three,
For me he demands in the
sky. (Hymn
VIII. The Propitiation. Works, p.
909-910)
3. His poetry pulsates
with prayerful longings for the presence and power of the Holy Spirit.
I found it very interesting to learn that in Toplady’s collection of Poems on Sacred Subjects, there is an
entire section entitled, “To the Holy Spirit.”
Here’s an example:
Spirit divine, thy pow’r
bring in,
O raise me from this
depth of sin,
Take off my guilty load:
Now let me live through
Jesu’s death,
And, being justified by
faith,
May I have peace with
God! (Poem
XIII. Works, p. 898)
In another poem, Toplady prays:
Come, Holy Ghost, our
souls inspire,
And warm with uncreated
fire!
Thou the anointing
Spirit art,
Who doth thy sevenfold
gift impart:
Thy blessed unction from
above
Is comfort, life, and
fire of love. (Hymn I. To the Holy Spirit,
&c. Works, p. 908)
And in yet another:
Holy Ghost, dispel our
sadness,
Pierce the clouds of
sinful night,
Come, thou source of
sweetest gladness,
Breathe thy life, and
spread thy light!
Loving Spirit, God of
peace,
Great distributor of
grace,
Rest upon this
congregation,
Hear, O hear our
supplication. (Hymn X. To the Blessed Spirit.
Works, p. 910)
In another example, Toplady asks to be baptized with the Holy Ghost, to
experience something of a personal Pentecost.
Baptize me with the Holy
Ghost;
Make this the day of Pentecost,
Wherein my soul may
prove
Thy spirit’s sweet
renewing power,
And shew me, in this
happy hour,
The riches of his love. (Poem XXXVI. For Pardon of Sin. Works, p. 893)
We do well to question whether this language is exegetically appropriate. But the prayer for “the Spirit’s sweet renewing power” is
certainly warranted by Scripture.
4. His poetry exudes the
confident assurance of a faith kept by the power of God for salvation.
One of Toplady’s most famous hymns celebrates God’s free and effective
grace, beginning with God’s covenant mercy revealed in the imputation of
Christ’s obedience and righteousness, but then moving in the second and third
verses to the believer’s security in God’s saving love and the assurance of
being preserved to the end.
A debtor to mercy alone,
Of covenant mercy I
sing;
Nor fear with thy
righteousness on,
My person and off’rings
to bring:
The terrors of law and
of God
With me can have nothing
to do;
My Saviour’s obedience
and blood
Hide all my
transgressions from view.
The work which his
goodness began,
The arm of his strength
will complete;
His promise is, Yea and
Amen,
And never was forfeited
yet:
Things future, nor
things that are now,
Nor all things below or
above
Can make him his purpose
forgo,
Or sever my soul from
his love.
My name from the palms
of his hands
Eternity will not erase;
Eternity will not erase;
Impress’d on his heart
it remains
In marks of indelible
grace;
Yes, I to the end shall
endure,
As sure as the earnest
is giv’n;
More happy, but not more
secure,
The glorified spirits in
heav’n. (Hymn
IX. Assurance of Faith. Works, p.
910)
5. His poetry reflects a
profound awareness of and commitment to the doctrine of the Trinity and the
Trinitarian foundation of our salvation.
These trinitarian themes just course through Toplady’s poetry, lending
his hymns theological depth and infusing them with devotional warmth. Here is
just one example, a six stanza hymn called “The Method of Salvation.”
The Father we bless,
Whose distinguishing
grace,
Selected a people to
shew forth thy praise;
Nor is thy love known,
By election alone;
For O, thou hast added
the gift of thy Son.
The goodness in vain
We attempt to explain,
Which found and accepted
a ransom for men;
Great Surety of thine,
Thou didst not decline
To concur with the
Father’s most gracious design.
To Jesus our friend,
Our thanks shall ascend,
Who saves to the utmost,
and loves to the end;
Our ransom he paid;
In his merit array’d
We attain to the glory
for which we were made.
Sweet Spirit of grace,
Thy mercy we bless,
For thy eminent share in
the council of peace;
Great agent divine,
To restore us is thine,
And cause us afresh in
thy likeness to shine.
O God, ‘tis thy part,
To convince and convert,
To give a new life, and
create a new heart;
By the presence and
grace
We’re upheld in our
race,
And are kept in thy love
to the end of our days.
Father, Spirit, and Son,
Agree thus in One,
The salvation of those
he has mark’d for his own;
Let us too agree
To glorify thee,
Thou ineffable One, thou
adorable Three. (Hymn V. The Method of Salvation.
Works, p. 909)
6. His poetry reverberates with the heart rest and soul satisfaction found
in Christ alone.
One poem begins with a very Augustinian line, echoing Augustine’s famous
Confessions:
O may I never rest
Till I find rest in
thee;
‘Till of my pardon here
possess’d
I feel thy love to me! (Poem XVII, Works, p. 889)
And in another hymn, Toplady locates the true happiness of our souls in
Christ.
Happiness, thou lovely
name,
Where’s thy seat, O tell
me where?
Learning, pleasure,
wealth, and fame,
All cry out, “It is not
here:”
Not the wisdom of the
wise
Can inform me where it
lies
Not the grander of the
great
Can the bliss I seek
create.
Object of my first
desire,
Jesus crucify’d for me!
All to happiness aspire,
Only to be found in
thee:
Thee to praise, and thee
to know,
Constitute our bliss
below;
Thee to see, and thee to
love,
Constitute our bliss
above.
Lord, it is not life to
live,
If thy presence thou
deny;
Lord, if though thy
presence give,
‘Tis no longer death to
die;
Source and giver of
repose,
Singly from thy smile it
flows;
Peace and happiness are
thine;
Mine they are, if thou
art mine.
Whilst I feel thy love
to me,
Ev’ry object teems with
joy;
Here O may I walk with
thee,
Then into thy presence
die!
Let me but thyself
possess,
Total sum of happiness!
Real bliss I then shall
prove;
Heav’n below, and heav’n
above. (Hymn
III. Happiness found. Works, p. 909)
Conclusion
As I mentioned above, what we find
in Toplady’s poetry is “experimental Calvinism” or
“heart-warming Calvinism.” In experimental Calvinism, the doctrines of grace
are not merely the tenets of a theological system, but form rather the warp and
woof one’s heartfelt dependence on the effective love, unmerited mercy, and
saving grace of our Triune God. Toplady’s theology doesn't leave the heart cold,
but fires it with the blazing realities of God’s redemptive love, as planned by
the Father, secured in Christ, and personally applied to our hearts by the Holy
Spirit.
I saved my favorite
Toplady hymn for last. Originally titled “Faith Reviving,” this is a hymn I
return to over and over again.
From whence this fear and unbelief?
Hath not the Father put to grief
His spotless Son for me?
And will the righteous Judge of men
Condemn me for that debt of sin
Which, Lord, was charged on thee?
Complete atonement thou hast made,
And to the utmost farthing paid
Whate’er thy people owed;
How then can wrath on me take place
If sheltered in thy righteousness,
And sprinkled with thy blood?
If thou hast my discharge procured,
And freely in my room endured
The whole of wrath divine,
Payment God cannot twice demand—
First at my bleeding Surety’s hand,
And then again at mine.
Turn then, my soul, unto thy rest!
The merits of thy great High Priest
Have bought thy liberty;
Trust in his efficacious blood,
Nor fear thy banishment from God,
Since Jesus died for thee. (Diary and Selection of Hymns of Augustus Toplady, p. 193)
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