Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Mercy-flood




He reaches from His throne on high
To brush the night-time from the sky
The hand of love that never fails
Does not ignore us in our plight
But fans the deep with Morning Light

His love beholds earth’s troubled slope
He rends the dark with Living Hope
For when we were dead in our sin
He raised us up to live with Him
Rejoice; the Son pierces the gloom
And saves us from death’s darkest doom

He lavishes on sinful men
His grace and washes sinners clean
For mortal flesh could never save
The soul from death’s eternal grave
But oh, the love His mercy gives

He reaches from His throne on high
To soothe the tear-drop in our eye
As crimson floods washed guilt away
Now He pierces fear’s darkest night
Love bleeds across the earth in Light

© Janet Martin

Imagine if one day there was no Light, and one morning nothing to pierce the night…

Often, as the sun break through night’s dark bonds it reminds me of the Son breaking through our darkness flooding it with marvelous Light.

 But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—it is by grace you have been saved.  And God raised us up with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus,  in order that in the coming ages he might show the incomparable riches of his grace, expressed in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus.  For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— not by works, so that no one can boast. Eph. 2:4-9


I Write This Poem for...Us





I write this poem for you, my dear
For you are young and cannot hear
The rush of moments as they fly
Waning the gap twixt earth and sky

I write this poem for you, my love
To brush life’s gray with bits of mauve
Lest through it’s daily grind we pass
Like solemn shadows on the grass

I write this poem so we may see
Life’s Author and His poetry
Lest blindly we traverse this stage
And never pause to read the page

© Janet Martin 

Heaven's poetry spills from an infinite page...

The heavens declare the glory of God;
    the skies proclaim the work of his hands.Ps.19:1

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Heart-matters



 

Man looks upon the face, the hair
Our stature and the clothes we wear
We cannot see the hidden part
For only God looks on the heart

We judge a man by what we see
Of pride or of humility
And we may fool with careful art
The eyes that cannot see the heart

But fools will trust a fool’s disguise
Forgetting that the true man lies
Not in appearance’s vain part
But in the measure of the heart

We look upon the face, the hair
Our stature and the clothes we wear
But God sees far beyond the skin
For He beholds the heart within

© Janet Martin


The LORD does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart." 1 Sam. 16:7

Ink-travel

 



Where will we travel today, my dear friend
Before dusk-blue shadows are cast?
Will we push toward life’s elusive ‘next-bend?’
Or return by your touch, to the past?

Will we, by the vexing persuasion of ink
Ponder the cold facts that exist?
Or will we succumb and slip over the brink
To arms of loved ones, dearly missed?

Will we probe the oracles shaping our want?
Or want nothing but what we hold?
Will we by the power of word-whispered jaunt
Revel where the moon blazes cold?

Darling, I love you for I cannot tell
Wherever or how we might go
And thought is an ocean that no hand can quell
Nor tether its free-falling flow

We are capable my love, of the worst
Just as we are of life’s best
Ah poet, ah pen, are we graciously cursed
Or dearly and divinely blessed?

A pen is a vehicle we all can afford
What blessing it then surely must be
That we traverse fathoms with nothing but word
Spilling into poetry

© Janet Martin

Of Home-makers, Mamas and Glory-days






We do not tip the glamor Richter-scale
Of fashion, fortune or front-page applause
Yet we embrace, like heaven’s Holy Grail
Each humble task of love’s domestic cause

There are no halls of fame or monuments
To honor dish-soap hands of mama-smiles
No recognition for the hours spent
Of washed and folded, scrubbed and polished miles

We do not labor for crass platitude
Or trophies to acknowledge our pain
But oh, the childish grin of gratitude
Endears to us what some view as mundane

There are no banners waving in the air
For she who, for the thousandth time has served
Supper at six and no one really cares
Yet she toils not for recompense deserved

She toils to see her happy children smile
To nurture tenderly her patch of sod
Not for the wealth of fortune’s fleeting guile
But to make home a little glimpse of God

© Janet Martin

The inspiration for this poem; 
Both of my daughters work at Long-term care facilities. Yesterday while exchanging stories, they agreed it is so touching to see some of the ladies with dementia rocking and patting dolls or folding and re-folding tea-towels or aprons; re-living their glory-days…

We watched the movie The Help yesterday.Wow! That's all I will say.

On the week-end one of my daughters commented on how I seem so happy and content just doing laundry and stuff...ah, if she only knew:) and I pray someday she may, Lord-willing:) It's not the laundry, the dishes, the cleaning, the 'stuff'; it's the LOVE!

The other evening after supper had been over  for a while suddenly 'sonny' mentions while passing through the kitchen, 'oh, by the way mom, thanks for supper. It was really good'.'

I dedicate this song to all mamas and daddies.








Vexation-proof





Sometimes a vast, vexatious void
Torments the foibles of our thought
Not with life’s precious proofs of joy
But with the tears of what is not

The vaunt of what is not can drain
The laughter from life’s cup we hold
And what we have we hold in vain
If we ignore its splash of gold

For what is not may never be
And what fills our cup today
Does not come with a guarantee
That it will never slip away

So, when that vast, vexatious vaunt
Threatens to drive us to despair
We ought to fold its tortured taunt
Between our fingers in a prayer

© Janet Martin

Yesterday, was Family Day in Ontario. A provincial holiday for families to focus on spending time together. We had a great day, minus 'daddy' who needed to leave so he could be back for plans next week-end. I needed to keep re-filling my 'cup' with reminders of what we have, and not what is not...folding the rest between my fingers.

Of Moment-tears





Oh, I am not impatient now
To see the snow slip from the trees
For soon time’s fixed, tenacious flow
Will claim it to my memories
And I no longer beg the hour
To leap into fair middle-June
For I have seen its virgin-flower
Garnish the sweep of autumn’s swoon
And I have heard the echo of
A balled writ of things I love
In sanguine swell a tender tune
Tinctures the knell of harvest-moon

And I no longer fret the day
Or love’s moment-metered pretext
For who am I to dare to say
‘Tis worse or better than the next
For like the snowflake decks the ground
In myriads of gathered gasp
They melt away without a sound
Sand-sparkles slipping through our grasp
Leaving no timeless, tangent proof
And soon the hour that stood aloof
Descends; joy precedent to grief
Winter, the bud of spring’s relief

No, I no longer cling or clutch
To hour-rendered offerings
But treasure, while they grace my touch
Life’s trial-and-triumph sufferings
For who can tell what waits beyond
Raw gale or golden-gilded sweep?
The lily drifting on the pond
Does not divulge its murky deep
And we cannot expunge the wrought
Nor form the future in our thought
But it is ours to smile or weep
Time’s moment-tears we cannot keep

© Janet Martin

'I'm sick of this weather', said Matt, as he trudged out to wait for the bus this morning (the cold more bitter because his sister's bus was cancelled due to the rain-snow duet:) I don't care for this weather either but I no longer desire to rush moments; transparent tick-tocks ever nudging the fledgling nearer to the edge of the nest...


Unrivaled Beauty





I know nothing
Of those things they write
Of Boston or Venice
But oh, I have known
The same sky-night
Warm to a mid-summer
Dew-dawning
And I’ve known the same sun
Spill its gold
Into the hollow
Of last remnant snow
Or danced with the zephyr
That tosses the sea
Rich with the pigment
Of eve’s garnet glow

And I’ve known the same thrill
Of wonder-drenched hurt
As those who have traveled
Earth’s most-lauded shores
Extolling grand visions
Of turquoise-green surf
Of white sandy beach
And reef-studded sea-floors
For I’ve seen the smile
Of a little porch light
Reaching to me
Through dusk’s blue-shadow dome
And I’ve borne the rush
Of joy’s perfect delight
In the unrivaled beauty
Of coming home


© Janet Martin

I'm also discovering it's kindred beauty...two gold circles through blowing snow as I watch at the window
for loved ones to come home.