Not to love His Providence,
nor His Provision,
nor His Protection,
but to love His Person! – eab, 6/84
Posted in eabits, holy living, philosophy, tagged love His Person, Person, Protection, Providence, Provision on February 5, 2009| 2 Comments »
Not to love His Providence,
nor His Provision,
nor His Protection,
but to love His Person! – eab, 6/84
Posted in poem, worship, tagged can define, human pen, in this unworthy heart of mine, longest good inked line, Majestically huge, Precious Jesus on February 5, 2009| Leave a Comment »
You are more wonderful than human pen can define,
Beyond the description of the longest, good, inked line,
Majestically huge, yet in this unworthy heart of mine.
Jesus, Precious Jesus. – eab, 2/5/06
Posted in born today, holy living, poem, prayer, today in history, tagged 1904, 1976, Believing as saints do believe, born this date, Christmas Eve, circle broken of yore, clinched, Clyde D Bryan, days were hard and times were lean, gave the grate a log, gift received, God gloriously fair, graves under winter's sod, him the last of four, his prayer, last of four, leaving ere sun's first gleam, Murry City, Ohio, passed death's door, soul earth-bound there, talked at length to His God, THAT'S HOME, the ways of God with man, to bless the home, traded partridge for the dove, year's most prestigious event on February 5, 2009| Leave a Comment »
“HOME”
Christmas eve came and went,
The year’s most prestigious event,
Without one gift received or sent from home.
The place where once had been seen,
Things that build memory so keen,
When days were hard and times were lean, at home.[1]
A lonely man knelt by his bed,
Wrinkled hands held his graying head,
As slowly these sad words he said down home,
“Lord, I don’t understand
All the ways of God with man;
Why I, alone, of all the clan am home.”
Then rising deliberately,
His hands toward heaven in a plea,
With eyes tear-blurred, he could not see his home.
He talked at length to His God,
‘Bout the graves under winter’s sod,
Where loved ones lay who used to trod in home.
“Amen,” he said, and clinched his prayer,
Between God, so gloriously fair,
And his mortal soul, earth-bound there, to home.
Satisfied that God’s way is best,
He blew out the light of his nest,
And gave the grate a log to bless the home.
He went to sleep that Christmas Eve,
Believing as saints do believe,
Trusting God, he’d no longer grieve ’round home.
For the three who’d passed death’s door,
To walk familiar paths no more,
Making him the last of four, now home.
Little did the gentleman dream,
That the world which sad did seem,
He’d be leaving ere sun’s first gleam lit home.
The foursome would that Christmas morn.
No longer to be sad and torn,
Gone now would be the long forlorn of home.
The close circle, broken of yore,
Then met [2] inside the Pearly Door,
The old man made the last of four come home.
They now were there in perfect love,
They’d traded partridge for the dove,
Never to say “Good-bye” above. THAT’S HOME!
– eab, 12/76 (pre-23rd )