God spoke, from the beginning (Poetry Monthly)
By Rhiannonw
- 1773 reads
[another Sunday hymn, this time using the March Poetry Monthly repetition theme]
For fellowship no longer fit –
see how they tried to hide,
but in that perfect place they now
could not, must not abide.
God spoke - his words were stern, but showed
that he would one day bring
a way of mercy so they could
approach the holy King.
God spoke when Cain, in jealousy
his brother Abel killed;
and when with violent godlessness
and evil, earth was filled,
God spoke to Noah of his grief –
he’d send a world-wide flood,
but told him how to build a vast
safe vessel out of wood.
God spoke to Abram, so that he
might pass the teaching on
to his descendants, who’d expect,
await the Christ to come.
God spoke through prophets to rebuke
unkindness, pride and greed,
and taught them to turn back, and pray
for mercy, grace in need.
God spoke how he would come one day,
to teach, redeem and save,
foretold Messiah’s birth and death,
and then the empty grave.
And so God spoke by his own Son,
the Priest, the living Word
– himself revealing: will his words
be scorned, repressed, ignored?
DCM eg Noel tune of ‘It came upon a midnight clear’
''In the past God spoke … at many times and in various ways, but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son …" Hebrews 1:1,2
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Hello there, Rhiannon. I
Hello there, Rhiannon. I apologise for missing this earlier on in the week, which is not all bad, not as far as I'm concernerd, anyway. Could do with a bit of inpsiration today, and this is just the ticket. The tune you have chosen is one of my favourites from way back when I used to attend a little Methodist chapel (and was in fact in the choir at the tender age of seven). The chapel itself used to be on West Green Road in Tottenham (north London) but goodness knows what stands there now.
Tina
- Log in to post comments
Hi Rhiannon
Hi Rhiannon
I'm going back over your work that I missed out a few weeks ago. This is a good story-poem and gets the message across.
Jean
- Log in to post comments