Poetry Archive
Aberporth Bay, Wales

BIBLE WORDS TO THINK ABOUT
“I will pour water on him who is thirsty,
and floods on the dry ground.”

Isaiah 44:3 NKJV

Springwater Lakes, near Pumpsaint, Carmarthenshire, Wales

MORE POEMS
The Lull
After the Storm
Fishermen on Fire
The First Stone
The Searcher
Provision
Outside the Camp
God in the Valley

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“All that the Father gives Me will come to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will by no means cast out.”
John 6:37   NKJV

 

Pink Rose

 

“Then Jesus said, ‘Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.”
Matthew 11:28   NIV

 

 

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“But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners,
Christ died for us.”
Romans 5:8   NKJV

 

Ceanothus

 

“He forgave us all our sins, having cancelled the written code, with its regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us; he took it away, nailing it to the cross. ”
Colossians 2:13-14   NIV

 

 

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“He is like the light of morning at sunrise
on a cloudless morning,
like the brightness after rain
that brings the grass from the earth.”
2 Samuel 23:4   NIV

 

Blue Campanula

 

“You shall call His name Jesus, for He will save His people from their sins.”
Matthew 1:21  NKJV

 

 

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“As for God, his way is perfect;
the word of the Lord is flawless.
He is a shield for all who take refuge in him.”
2 Samuel 22:31   NIV

 

 

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Chives - allium schoenoprasum

 

“Those who look to him are radiant; their faces are never covered with shame.”
Psalm 34:5   NIV

 

 

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“The Lord is my strength and my song;he has become my salvation.
Psalm 118:14  NIV

 

 

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“Surely God is my salvation;
I will trust and not be afraid.
The Lord, the Lord, is my strength and my song;
he has become my salvation.”
Isaiah 12:2  NIV

 

 

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“I tell you, now is the time of God’s favour, now is the day of salvation.”
2 Corinthians 6:2   NIV

 

 

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CAN’T FIND WHAT YOU WANT? It’ probably here. Try doing a search – press CTRL + F and type your phrase in the ‘Find’ box. You can do the same on our other poetry page – MORE POEMS

The Lull

Strange quietness before the storm
as though the waiting air
breathed in to brace itself
against the coming blast.
Yet far above the deep-lulled earth
like furious remnants
of some elemental race,
cloud scraps, distorted,
curled, in brief illumination,
cross the moon.

A man looks up
and knows that earthly peace
at best is fragile, brief,
and often, dark beyond
the present settled calm
the storms of life
stride swiftly
on the winds of time.

What need my soul
to find your rest
in Him alone
whose name is Peace!
His heart-born calm
is not disturbed
by earthly tempests wild.
He rules the raging storm itself
and speaks superior power
to fear-filled hearts
“Be still.”

John Puckett

Have you ever stood and gazed at the night sky in a countryside winter, when an uncanny stillness breathes all around you in the mild and moist Atlantic air?

 

After the Storm

It’s good, Lord, just to meditate alone
and let your truth my restless mind subdue;
unchanged while worlds have ebbed and flowed,
your Word flows now in soft assurance to my soul.

Storm-echoes of the thunder fade to peace
and quiet blue the rain-clean sky controls,
and you again, Lord, demonstrate your power
through stormy wind, and fair, you rule.

Untroubled peace would soon breed man’s contempt
and all-sufficient seem his prospered way.
Your care commands the stormy cloud to rise
lest man unhindered, proud, his soul destroys.

The storms of life, Lord, come at your command.
At that same word in your good time they go.
You care for me, my Lord, in your great love.
I know that you’re in charge.

Be still, my soul.

John Puckett – after a thunder shower.

 

Fishermen on Fire

Unlearned and ignorant,
mere nobodies,
just fishermen,
inferior mortals,
far below
proud priest and Pharisee and Scribe.

For such to preach or teach
within those holy temple walls
was tantamount to blasphemy –
just like that other Man from Galilee.

No problem that
for two apostles bold,
fresh-fired by God
to minister his mighty word
and heal a cripple forty years from birth.

Unscared by priestly threats,
they blazed the scene
with resurrection life.

Unlearned and ignorant maybe,
but far above proud Priest
and Pharisee and Scribe
supreme they stood,
and spoke those holy words,
“There is no other name
by which we must be saved.”

And Rulers, Elders, Scribes and haughty Priests
compelled to marvel
and to note
“These men had been with Jesus.”

John Puckett    

Read the story in the Book of Acts, chapter 4.

 

The First Stone

No room for tears
within the eye
of Pharisee or Scribe.
No space
to feel the weakness
or the sadness
of another’s fears
or tragedies.
No place
for that infirmity
of mortal flesh and blood,
that frailty
of the human heart and mind
when helplessness
cries out for care.

Poor Scribe
poor Pharisee –
the careful dot
and comma of the word
must not
one moment
be ignored.
Your ‘god’ demands
perfection in your faith
before he gives.
Your ‘god’ denies
that great High Priest
who came
compassionate
with tender heart
to touch
the agitated weakness
of humanity.

And always
always
always
there are plenty of stones.

John Puckett

“But Jesus went to the Mount of Olives. At dawn he appeared again in the temple courts, where all the people gathered round him, and he sat down to teach them.
The teachers of the law and the Pharisees brought in a woman caught in adultery. They made her stand before the group and said to Jesus, ‘Teacher, this woman was caught in the act of adultery. In the Law Moses commanded us to stone such women. Now what do you say?’ They were using this question as a trap, in order to have a basis for accusing him.
But Jesus bent down and started to write on the ground with his finger.
When they kept on questioning him, he straightened up and said to them, ‘If any one of you is without sin, let him be the first to throw a stone at her.’
Again he stooped down and wrote on the ground.
At this, those who heard began to go away one at a time, the older ones first, until only Jesus was left, with the woman still standing there.
Jesus straightened up and asked her, ‘Woman, where are they? Has no-one condemned you?’
‘No-one, sir,’ she said.
‘Then neither do I condemn you,’ Jesus declared. ‘Go now and leave your life of sin.’
John 8:1-11  NIV

Self-righteousness flourishes too easily in many of us.

 

The Searcher

Tis not for the ninety and nine he goes
on a dangerous midnight search.
’Tis not for the ninety and nine who sit
in security safe in the church,
whose paths are set in the well-fenced bounds
of conventional Sunday suits,
while the songs of their souls sound dreadfully cold
to the biker in leathers and boots.

Tis not for the ninety and nine good folk
who chapter and verse freely quote,
nor for those who appear so exactly sincere
as their Bible-text pencils take notes.
Tis not for the multitude stuck in the fold
that the Shepherd is mostly concerned  – 
but for wanderers lost in the soft ways of sin,
Jesus’ eye with compassion-light burns.

For the sinner perplexed by the pattern of life,
for the one from the hundred astray,
for the one who abandons the standards of God,
determined to go his own way,
for the one who has tasted the sweetness of sin,
and discovered how quick it decays  – 
’twas for him that the Shepherd went out in the night
of that sin-uttered “Crucify!” day.

What love! What compassion! What limitless care
in his seeking for one who is lost!
Oh, what infinite pity must quicken his heart,
to go out on that search at such cost!

And the organ plays softly,
the hymn board is fixed,
the offering taken for mortar and bricks,
and so few in the pew
in compassion can search,
for the Shepherd, like them,
we have shut in the church.

John Puckett

When a rather unconventional young man began coming to the morning service
of a traditional chapel some years ago, I was struck with how easy it is for us in our churches to become self-contained and self-content.

 

Provision

What hope if I alone must strive
commandments to obey?
Could all my self-constructed good
withstand the Judgement Day?

Supposing I could keep one day
completely free from sin,
would that be good enough from God
eternal life to win?

If I protest my innocence
before the accusing Word,
would that persuade the righteous Judge
to leave my case unheard?

Nothing that I articulate
can cancel out God’s Word.
Indelible his judgement stands –
with him I must concur.

No works of my poor righteousness,
no deeds that I think good,
can take away my total need
of Jesus’ precious blood.

Provision made beyond my dreams,
impossible to fail –
my Saviour dying in my place;
his righteousness avails!

John Puckett

 

Outside the Camp

Outside the camp
in mocking cruelty
they crucified
their King.

‘Away with him’
they cried,
and thus
religion triumphed
for another day,
the status quo
preserved for priests
impelled by hatred
to defend their faulted cause.

Too blind to see
the God-writ symbols
of their ancient rites,
the pointers
to the Prince of Life
they pierced
and pinned
outside the camp.

They saw their deed
a timely vindication
of their careful rule
to keep the Roman peace.

This self-appointed Christ
suits not their concepts
of Messiah come,
too mild to liberate
their Israel from this pagan yoke.

Dark prejudice saw not
this faultless Christ,
Messiah born to live
and die
deliverance
for the greater captives
chained in slavery to sin.

Outside the camp
his death-cry founds
a kingdom
mightier than a thousand Romes,
and crumbles all the edifice
of Judah’s temple fair.

Outside the camp
in death
he slew the greater foe –
and I go free!

          John Puckett

Written after reading in the Book of Hebrews, chapter 13 – ”Jesus also suffered outside the city gate to make the people holy through his own blood. Let us, then, go to him outside the camp,
bearing the disgrace he bore.“
Hebrews 13:12  NIV

 

God in the Valley

The Valley of Sorrow is lonely and dark,
And I entered with dread and with fears,
For the chasms below
Held sorrow and woe
Too deep for the comfort of tears.

But, lo, as the way led through lonely abyss,
Through canyons of doubt and despair,
The chasms of night
Became gardens of light,
For the God of all comfort was there.

I saw miracles done in the depths of the vale
By the God of an infinite love,
And a tenderness shown
That cannot be known
In the glare of the sunlight above.

By Betty Reusch

I came across this poem many years ago, and I would love to know who Betty Reusch was or is. My internet searching comes up with nothing useful. Can anyone help?

 

© John Puckett 2009
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