Oh woman, I see the strain in your face.
The little that you had, you have given.
At the table, you took no place,
That the souls of your children might not be driven
From the face of the earth.
So your diminutive frame is withered and has no girth.
Muscle wastes from your body.
Your skin cleaves unto your bone.
Your dress is dirty, wrinkled, and shoddy.
You are one of millions and not alone.
Your hands reach out showing open palms
Laced with scrawny fingers asking alms.
You hear your children’s stomachs growling,
As baby birds chirping in their nest.
The sound has sent you prowling
For food; you have found no rest.
You have been sacrificing your share and ignoring your need
Having concerns for your children, while letting your insides bleed.
If I let you starve, you die by my hand
As if I placed a gun to your head,
And my obdurate heart did not understand
That it pulled the trigger and let you fall dead
Before my feet.
When all you wanted was some food to eat.
May I participate in your murder?
Could it be my soul's destiny to kill,
Or is it my destiny to girder?
Should I be led by my will
To amass riches unto myself
And be consumed by my wants, my desires and my wealth?
Certainly, starvation has killed more
Than any weapon made.
Its devastation has tore
Through every commonwealth and glade.
Though it never declared a war
Surely its path has been laid
With streets full of gore
And the hurting and wounded seeking aid.
The question remains, which side am I on?
Am I Starvation’s enemy, or am I simply its pawn?
I have and you do not.
Am I justified to close my eyes to your suffering?
Has Fate determined your lot?
Is it wrong if I close my ears to your imploring?
Should I be looked upon with disdain
Because I close my heart to your pain?
Because I close my fists without restrain?
Is my provision merely a test
To see if I’m able
To make room at my table
And have you as my guest?
Yes,
I can spare a dime; and if it should take
A dime out of every dollar I make,
I give it for my own conscience’s sake.
Starvation is my enemy and I will not partake
In its scheme to cause mankind to forsake
That within us which is good:
Hearts of compassion and thoughts of brotherhood.
Your image has been impressed on my mind.
I garner my strength and every resource I find
To provide food to the hungry, that they may sup.
For all of mankind drinks from the very same cup.
This blog contains simple, thought provoking and deeply reflective poetry written by American poet, Doris Trueheart. Here is a large expanse of her poems covering a myriad of topics reflecting her heart.
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Rich Man
There has always been plenty available for you to eat.
So it’s hard for you to understand the plight of the man lying
in the street.
Your table is spread with the choicest of food, so you
pile up your plate
And do not see the starving man standing at your gate.
You let his daily pleas for a crumb fall deafly at your ear.
You never questioned what he did succumb once he did
disappear.
Starvation caused his death but you partook in his demise.
Your heart of stone forsook his needs and his condition you
did despise.
His blood is now upon your hands for the help you did deny.
At Judgment’s Seat soon you will stand, what then will you
reply?
Friday, September 12, 2014
Hunger
Haggard eyes and hallow pit,
Unremitting pain!
Needing nourishment but can't find it, a
Gauntly life has found its bane.
Emptiness is now complete:
Rapacious insatiable appetite has brought defeat.
Reprinted from "I Do: Becoming the Wife of God", By Doris Trueheart,
Unremitting pain!
Needing nourishment but can't find it, a
Gauntly life has found its bane.
Emptiness is now complete:
Rapacious insatiable appetite has brought defeat.
Reprinted from "I Do: Becoming the Wife of God", By Doris Trueheart,
Monday, September 1, 2014
Verily, Verily
Very truly, the words I have
spoken are launched as a mirv.
Every word I have spoken shall be.
Reliably steadfast, my word does moor.
I have spoken; receive a priori.
Lawful and truthful, my word is the gospel.
Yes, I say, most definitely.
Every word I have spoken shall be.
Reliably steadfast, my word does moor.
I have spoken; receive a priori.
Lawful and truthful, my word is the gospel.
Yes, I say, most definitely.
Sunday, June 1, 2014
Rome Swooned
Rome swooned.
The reason why I couldn't sleep,
The reason why I couldn't eat
Was standing there in front of me.
He was having a jovial conversation,
Then he raised one brow,
And I took refuge beneath this umbrella
As though my life had been spent standing in the rain.
His eyes said to me, “Come; have a seat.”
He laughed a little chuckle,
And I heard my name being echoed through the mountains
Causing a flock of birds to lift at once from their nests
And take flight across the sky.
As they did, they shook the trees
And their wings sounded the percussion of a melody of love.
And so I laughed to release the joy that had bubbled up inside of me.
As though I had inhaled the aroma of fresh baked bread,
My appetite was whet.Galilee
Matt. 4:12 “Now when Jesus had heard that
John was cast into prison, he departed into Galilee”.
In the third chapter we see John in the
wilderness of Judea (praise). There Jesus
went to Jordon to be baptized. There the
Holy Spirit descended upon Him and a voice from heaven declared, “This is my
son in whom I am well pleased.” (Matt. 3:17) Afterwards Jesus was led by the Holy Spirit into the wilderness to be
tempted by the devil. There he was tried
and tested. He was now ready for
ministry.
Was his first step to go leave the wilderness
and go immediately to the temple in the city of Jerusalem (peace) in the
providence of Judea and take his place as the high priest? No. Yet so many of us, once we are saved believe
that we are to take refuge in the four walls of the church. There we find a way to minister within the
church or warm our favorite seat. But
this is not the example of Jesus. To begin his ministry, he left the wilderness
of Judea and departed to Galilee. But
why to Galilee?
When the children of Israel entered the
Promised Land, they were all given a portion to occupy by their tribe. The northernmost area, was given to Naphtali (struggle,
wrestling) and to Zebulon (habitation).
Judges 1:33 states that Naphtali could not
drive out the former inhabitants. This
tribe lived among the Canaanites. This providence was referred to as the “land
of Galilee.” In 1 Ki 9:11, we learn that
King Solomon gave twenty cities in the land of Galilee to King Hiram, king of
Tyre, as payment for bringing timber from Lebanon to Jerusalem. King Hiram was displeased with this gift, and called
the land, “Cabul”. This name is taken to
mean, place of displeasure, or good for nothing. This land and its people held little value to
both the giver and receiver.
Giving these cities to the King of Tyre
opened this territory up to the transit of the peoples to and from Tyre. This allowed more settlements of gentiles
in the providence.
After the reign of King Solomon, Israel
became divided into a northern kingdom and a southern kingdom. Ten tribes to
the north retained the name, Israel. This northern kingdom was divided into two
providences, Galilee to the north and Samaria to the south. While the southern kingdom
was one providence, named Judea, the home of the two tribes of Judah and
Benjamin.
Judea is where the holy city Jerusalem lie
and therein where the temple of Solomon had been built. The northern kingdom then built its own
temple in Mt Gerizim in the providence of Samaria to keep its inhabitants from
making pilgrimages to Judea to worship. The providence of Galilee had no
temple. The Galileans took the attitude that they had a direct connection to
God and didn’t need a high priest nor temple.
The Assyrians conquered the northern
kingdom. Many Israelites were killed
or deported (2 Kings 17:6; 18:9-12). Assyrians
in Israel (2 Kings 17:24) created an idolatrous mixture of paganism
and worship of the Lord (2 Kings 17:26-33). Isaiah referred to the land of Zebulon and the
land of Naphtali, together known as Galilee, as the land of the nations, due to its
large population of gentiles and heavy gentile influence. (Is 9:1)
After the Assyrians, these people were again conquered by
the Babylonians, then by the Persians, then by the Greeks and now during the
time of Christ, also by the Romans. During these times of conquest, the remaining Israelites intermarried. Over time, they developed a different dialect
and different customs in the way they handled business, family and
religion. The Galileans were furthest away from Judea than the Samaritans in distance, in culture, and religion. The Jews in Judea had
disdain for the Samaritans but even more so for the Galileans.
The name Galilee means turning, or
revolt. Certainly rulership of the area
had turned hands again and again. These
people were oppressed and vexed. They found rulership by foreigners
difficult. This area became the hot bed
of political activity. It was known for
violent attacks by radicals. The people
were oppressed by taxation and bandits were commonplace. There was violent
resistance against the status quo.
Acceptance of status quo is sinful. It denies the power of God. When we read
concerning the works of Christ, we see how he saw the condition of men and was
moved with compassion to change that condition for the better. He caused the lame to walk, the blind to see,
the deaf to hear, and the captive were set free. Even the dead were brought again to
life. He established peace in the midst
of strife. We are called to revolt, to
turn and to shift, to be the force of opposition to evil, disease and death.
In Galilee, leaders would rise up and
gather a mob to cause an uprising. Gatherings were seen by the Romans as a threat. The people did not have the right of a
peaceful assembly as we know today. If a
crowd gathered, the Roman soldiers would quickly come and slaughter these
people as rebellious insurrectionist. (http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/portrait/galilee.html) These people hungered for a messiah to lead
them in revolt against the reigning nation. They wanted to overthrow the Roman authority.
The Galileans were not only found
contemptible by Judeans but also by the Roman authorities. To be called a “Galilean” was spoken as an
insult. This is why in later scriptures
Jesus was being questioned, he was asked, “Art thou also of Galilee? Out of
Galilee ariseth no prophet.” (Jo. 7:45) Their disdain for Galileans caused them to forget history, because
Jonah, and Elijah were from Galilee, perhaps Nahum and Hosea as well.
But Jesus went straightway to Galilee to
start his ministry. He went to a place where people were dissatisfied with the
way things were: to a people who were ready to turn the world upside down. There he found his apostles. He went to where it was darkest to shine
light: to a people distant, castaway, devalued, oppressed, diluted, weakened,
and disdained; yet seeking, yearning, and ready for the gospel.
Similarly, we are called to take the gospel
outside of the church and into the highways and byways, even to the end of the
earth. We are sent to call sinners to
repentance, to the sick to bring healing, to the captive to bring freedom, to
the poor to bring relief and to the dead to bring life.
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