Showing posts with label creative writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creative writing. Show all posts

Thursday, January 6, 2011

The Wise Mens' Visit

                  

Three friends were we, a trio of men who studied the constellations.
Little did we know that someday our studies would lead us to find the hope of every nation.

We came from afar, to follow the star, high above the earth.
And at that time we could have never known what our journey would be worth

So bright did it shine, we knew it must be a sign,
 a sign to all mankind.

So we watered our camels and packed our sacks and began our tedious quest.
We trekked over the land and the desert sand,  saying, "We'll find where the child rests!"

All of sudden, after weeks of traveling, the star stood over Bethlehem, a humble little town,
Our hearts seemed to soar within us, was this where He would be found?

We searched every inn, every house, every stable and every tiny space,
until one day we peeked through a doorway and were staring right into His face!

The King of Heaven, the Messiah! We each fell to our knees,
There He was before us, crawling around as he pleased!

His mother rushed into the room and scooped Him up in her lap,
She and her husband smiled at us, welcomed us in and said He had just woken up from His nap

We introduced ourselves one by one as we knelt before the babe,
His father caressed His soft pink face and tenderly told us His name.

We were filled with wonder, and filled with awe at this precious baby boy ,
His bouncy curls, His clear blue eyes, He looked so full of joy!

We opened our sacks and took out gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh,
And as we placed them before Him, tears of happiness turned our vision to a blur

We sat down and adored the savior for a time that felt like hours
and marveled as we held Him close the Almighty's wondrous powers

Finally, we had leave and return to our homes once more
But as we bid His family good-bye we all wished we could stay for just a second more



I will always remember that ever-so glorious night,
The night I held in my arms the son of God, Love's pure light

They call us wise men, but this I say,
The only wise man is Jesus, through Him, our debt is paid today.

This year, we celebrated the 3 Kings visit on Sunday, January 2nd, but today was the day the Epiphany was originally honored on.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

The Bridge

Recently, I wrote two pieces for this local literary publication which just came out yesterday. The first article, as you will see, is on the front page. My second piece, "Late On A Chilly Fall Day" is found under the "stories" section.
Both were featured in previous issues of the MT.
http://thebridge15009.wordpress.com/

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Oh How I Love Thanksgiving!

                       
                 

Waking up on Thanksgiving is almost as good as Christmas, for you know what good things the day will hold.

Colorful floats sail across the TV screen far, far away in New York City at the Macy’s Day Parade.

The whole house is bustling with chaos, everyone rushing here and there, mashing, mixing, stirring, adding, rolling, baking, tasting! Delicious smells waft from the kitchen as mother checks on the
turkey in the oven.

Relatives pour in from near and far, hugging and laughing, as the mound of coats on the couch piles up.

Finally, everyone is seated at the dining room table in eager silence. Then, coming through the doorway, seated on a shining silver platter, is the star of the show, the turkey! The room breaks into conversation but is soon silenced again as everyone bows their heads to pray.

Mountains of fluffy mashed potatoes with avalanches of flowing gravy; cranberry sauce with steam curling up towards the ceiling; turkey, both dark and white meat; green bean casserole, crunchy with fried onions; sweet pies of all kinds. The table has so many colors, it looks like a Autumn mural.

In the evening, after the meal, everyone is tired and lounges around in the living room, watching football, talking or playing games. Soon its time to go to bed, oh what a great day it’s been! Oh, what many things there are to be thankful for! Oh, how I love Thanksgiving!

Friday, November 5, 2010

Isaac and the Blessing

This year I have been learning about ancient history. One of the subjects I have been studying is Bible history. This was for one of my writing assignments. (see Genesis chapter 27 for the whole story)

                                 

Isaac was staring at the back of his eyelids.
He thought he had heard a noise.
The soft breeze blew through his long beard as he lay perfectly still, listening carefully.
But all he could hear was the faint braying of the sheep out in the pasture, the tent flap flapping in the wind and the hushed coo of a mourning dove.
    
     Isaac opened his eyes but all that he could see was an overwhelming blur of shapes and colors that made his head hurt. He clamped them shut again and rolled over to go back to sleep, the noise was nothing…..
     
     Wait, there it was again! He listened silently…. yes there it was! He could hear hushed whispers coming from outside.

“Esau must be home with my meal!” he thought “Now I can eat and give him my blessing so I may die in peace.”

Someone entered the tent.

“My Father” said a voice softly.

Isaac sat up. The voice was not the deep burly voice of Esau, his oldest son. Esau, who always brought him good meat from the fields and cooked it just the way he liked it. Esau, who was so strong and manly; Esau, though only by a few moments was nevertheless, his first born son who would receive his special blessing.
    
    No, this voice was soft and gentle. This voice was not Esau’s but Jacob’s. Jacob, Isaac’s scrawny young son. Jacob, who cared for the sheep and cattle. Jacob, who would rather sit with lambs than shoot a bow. Jacob, who would always be subject to his twin brother.

“Who art thou my son?” said Isaac

“I am Esau, thy first-born. I have done as thou commanded me. Arise, sit and eat of my hunt, that thy soul may bless me.”

Isaac’s mind raced.

He was sure this was Jacob, for it sounded nothing like Esau. But he was a very sick old man, were his senses just deceiving him?  “That must be the case” he thought, for Jacob never hunted game. When he was hungry he always cooked up a bowl of porridge for himself but never did he hunt! And besides, he had summoned Esau not Jacob. Jacob would never go against his father’s wishes, he knew that Esau was the oldest; he knew the blessing was rightfully his.
    
Surely this was Esau.

But how did he find, kill and cook the meal so quickly? It was a few mere minutes ago that Isaac had told him to go out and hunt.

“How did thou find it so quickly, my son?” asked Isaac.

“It was the will of God that what I sought came quickly my way” replied the voice that sounded so much like Jacob’s.

Isaac opened his eyes once more. The blurry picture came flooding back and all that he could make out of the crossing lines and colors was a fuzzy outline of a person that gave him no clue to which son this was. He shut his eyes and coughed.

“Come hither that I may feel thee, my son, and prove whether thou be my son Esau or not.” he said.

He heard the bowl of meat being placed on the ground and the shuffling of sandals in the dirt and all at once a head was thrust in his lap.

“Here I am Father” said his son.

Isaac felt him all over. He felt skin that was coarse and hairy just like Esau’s.

“The voice is indeed the voice of Jacob, but the hands are the hands of Esau.” he pondered out loud.

The voice told him it was Jacob, but the skin convinced him it was Esau. He could not get this wrong. This was the blessing he would give to his son before he died that would wish him good farming, land, success and victory. This was the blessing that would make him the head of the family and all others subject to him. He could not get this wrong.

“Art thou my son Esau?”

“I am”

Isaac sighed. It must be Esau.

“Come; bring me the meal that you have prepared so that I may bless you.”

Isaac ate his fill of the delicious meal that was cooked just the way he liked it. After he had he had eaten every morsel his son came near him and kissed him. Immediately the sweet smell of Esau’s clothes wafted into his nostrils.

“Surely my senses deceived me for this is certainly Esau, my oldest son.”

Then as Esau knelt before him Isaac blessed him:
“May God give you dew from heaven and make your fields fertile! May he give you plenty of grain and wine! May nations be your servants, and may peoples bow down before you. May you rule over all your relatives, and may your mother’s descendants bow down before you. May you those who curse you be cursed, and may those who bless you be blessed.”

And as Isaac murmured these words he was filled with contentment.

But little did he know that this really was Jacob and that the real Esau was on his way home and that he had been completely deceived