| 1 | | There is a certain sense of life |
| | | | With life of every kind; |
| | | And in th eternal life in us |
| | | | It is a sense divine. |
| 2 | | The higher any life may be, |
| | | | The better is its sense; |
| | | The life divine the highest is |
| | | | And has the highest sense. |
| 3 | | It is the sense of life in us, |
| | | | It is the sense of God; |
| | | Tis in our spirit made alive, |
| | | | And more than sense of good. |
| 4 | | It is the inner sense in us, |
| | | | The inmost consciousness, |
| | | Discerning matters inwardly, |
| | | | Gods will to thus express. |
| 5 | | Tis by this sense that God we know, |
| | | | The sense of inner life; |
| | | Tis powrful and spontaneous, |
| | | | And not of any strife. |
| 6 | | The greater is our growth in life, |
| | | | The keener is this sense; |
| | | The more we walk and act in life, |
| | | | The more it is intense. |
| 7 | | The sense of life when exercised |
| | | | Will make our spirit bold, |
| | | And by this inner sense of God |
| | | | True fellowship we hold. |