A Hymn for Father’s Day

Father_ChildI wrote this hymn eleven years ago in honour of my parents, Elizabeth and Bill Pearce.  My mom heard it sung in our church several times and I sang it at her funeral.  It expresses how much we need God and some of the  ways in which He touches our lives.

O  God, I Need You  

Words ©2002 Mollie Pearce McKibbon  (Music -Slane)

God, like a father, You take me by hand;                                                                                                                Lead me to follow the life You have planned,                                                                                                       Gently correct me when my way is wrong,                                                                                                                   God ,You are with me and You make me strong.

God, like a mother, You heard my first sigh;                                                                                                         Comfort and soothe me whenever I cry.                                                                                                                      God, You are with me in joy or in pain;                                                                                                                        Always you love me and call me by name.

God, like a brother, You walk by my side;                                                                                                             Share my delight in the world You provide.                                                                                                                 In all my struggles You take on the foe,                                                                                                                       Just as You did for me once long ago.

God, like a sister, You know the true me;                                                                                                                     Join in my laughter and my revelry.                                                                                                                               Loving, forgiving, whatever my part,                                                                                                                             My God You mend me and lift up my heart.

Thank You for family, thank You for breath.                                                                                                         Thank You, Dear Saviour, for life beyond death.                                                                                                                 The True Direction, my Ultimate Goal,                                                                                                                   My God, I need You, You nourish my soul.

 

P.S. Sorry for the extra indents everyone.  They are not intentional.  I have tried to align the lines but they just won’t behave for me.  M.P.M.

What Kind of King?

crown of thorns #2What Kind of King?

© 2013 Mollie Pearce McKibbon

What kind of king has a crown of thorns,

A borrowed robe and a court that scorns?

What kind of king has no retinue,

No army of might, no jeweled shoe?

What kind of king is so humble and meek

That he washed the dirt from other folks’ feet?

What kind of king heals the deaf and lame,

The sick and downtrodden with nothing to gain?

What kind of king claims no kingdom on earth,

But promises all a holy re-birth?

What kind of king is nailed to a cross

And loses his clothes when dice are tossed?

What kind of king dies in terrible pain,

Is buried, mourned and rises again?

What kind of king forgives and forgets

Even sins we haven’t committed yet?

What kind of king promises hope and love

And eternal life in a realm above?

The King that created all life from the start,

Is my Lord, Jesus Christ, the King of my heart.

Doggedly Doggerel

I enjoy writing poetry which most would call doggerel.  I write other poetry as well, but I like writing rhyming verse just for sheer fun.  Here is one I wrote for a magazine issue with a pirate theme.

pirate galleonBuried Treasure

©  2004 Mollie Pearce McKibbon

There was an old sailor who told the tale                                                                                                           Of a dark pirate ship without a sail.                                                                                                                     This ghostly vessel was ever at sea                                                                                                                   But not always seen by you or by me.                                                                                                         He said if I followed the moon at night                                                                                                                My eyes would see a mysterious sight.                                                                                                      A ship would appear, all battered and worn,                                                                                               With skeleton crew and captain forlorn.                                                                                                                        Forever they’d search the ocean wide,                                                                                                         Looking for treasure tossed over the side.                                                                                                        In the deepest part of the watery main                                                                                                         Where guppies play and octopus reign,                                                                                                             Is an iron chest locked with silver key,                                                                                                         Full of pretty jewels and gold money.                                                                                                                   The fish swim over it every day                                                                                                                     Where whales serenade and sea horses neigh.

pirate-parrrot-on-spy-glass  The old sailor winked when he told me his yarn,                                                                                               And showed me a map he had under his arm.                                                                                                “Here’s the very spot where it sank.                                                                                                                      It’s better than silver you’ve got in the bank.”                                                                                                   The sailor was smart, my he was clever!                                                                                                             Now, like the ship, I’m searching forever!

Cabin Fever Lunches

johnny_automatic_salad

As I mentioned in a former blog, about thirty years ago I decided to call up some friends and invite them for lunch.  I told them to feed their toddlers and then we could eat while they played.  I thought we could play a little Trivial Pursuit after dessert and chat.  Well, the Trivial Pursuit box was never opened.  We ate, gabbed and laughed all afternoon.  We enjoyed our get-together so much we decided to do it every month and so we have (except for July and August) for the last twenty-nine years.  We no longer come with children.  Instead we all bring pictures of our married children and grandchildren to pass around.  We set up a schedule in the spring; each of us takes a month to host and we are all slotted in for turns to bring appetizers or dessert.   We have a great time and it has led to fast friendships and some funny experiences.

This month is my month to host and I am bustling around like a whirling dervish, as my mom would say.  I have planned my menu and now its just clean up time.  Well, I’m not the best housekeeper.  I tend to lean more towards comfort than pristine, if you know what I mean.  When you come to visit me, just don’t open any closets or look under the bed.  You will either be avalanched by hidden flotsam and jetsam or grabbed by the ankle by dust bunnies.  I do enjoy company, but I get a bit flustered on the day or so before no matter how many times I have hosted.  You see, no matter how much I prepare there are always surprises.

I remember one particular year when our garden was very productive.  We had tomatoes, potatoes, peppers, broccoli and cucumbers up to our armpits.  We were very proud of the garden and I was extremely pleased as I realized that I wouldn’t have to spend a lot to feed my guests.  I’m not too sure what the main dish was, maybe ham and scalloped potatoes, but I do know that one of the dishes was steamed broccoli.  I soaked the broccoli ahead of time in slightly salted water.

Everything was ready.  The table was set, the mood music was playing, and the punch was in the bowl.  Then my guests arrived and we sat down to eat.  Well, they sat down.  I had a few extra things to do in the kitchen.  Suddenly, I heard giggles coming from the dining room.  It became even more uproarious as I went to find out what I had missed.  Had someone told a funny story?  No.  It seemed there was an uninvited guest at the table, well, on one of my guest’s side plate.  She pointed and I looked.  There was a still- wriggling green caterpillar that had crawled out of her broccoli.  Embarrassing!

On another memorable occasion, I was attempting to whip cream in the kitchen when my dishtowel got caught in the electric mixer and sprayed the topping all over the back of my friend’s little black dress.  Very embarrassing!

Well, to be fair, not everything has happened at my house.  At one lunch, we were having a meat fondu, when the table cloth caught fire.  Another time, lightning hit the house of one hostess and the power went off.  At another home, some of the children decided to play with the coloured sand that you can make pretty pictures with all over the white shag carpet.  In spite of all these things (and more) we are all still friends and we look forward to many more Cabin Fever lunches in the future, even if someday we have to park our walkers at the door of a restaurant.

Hmm… guess I’ve procrastinated long enough.  Time for some vacuuming, just in case someone decides to look up at the cob webs on my chandelier.

Running Away

I first ran away from home when I was two years old.  I was playing in the front yard with my mother and she needed to run down to the washing machine in the basement to get the wet laundry.  She tied my walking harness to the tree in the front yard so I wouldn’t wander off.  Unknown to her, an older girl (probably all of three or four) was watching me from next door and thought I needed rescuing.  She untied me and wandered off to play.  Suddenly, Mom had a “bad feeling”  and rushed outside in time to see me toddling down the block.

Wharncliffe was, and still is, a very busy street and so you can imagine how quickly she ran down the block to catch me before I thought of crossing it.

“Where on earth are you going, Mollie,” she asked.

“I’m going to Newsie (Newfoundland)”, I answered.  My mother’s parents lived in Newfoundland and we had gone to visit them for a few weeks that summer.  Needless to say, I didn’t get there that day.

My grandparents and me in their backyard in St. John’s

Faddie, Muddie and I in their backyard

I tried to run away from home again when I was five years old.  I had a temper tantrum and Dad sent me to my room.  After pounding on the floor to no avail, I got a paper bag and put all my “valuables” in it.  I grabbed Mary, my rag doll who went everywhere with me, and stomped out to the front door.  My father met me there and asked where I was going.

“I’m running away,” I said.

I thought he would be worried or upset, but instead he said,” Okay” and opened the front door for me. That hadn’t gone exactly the way I’d thought it would.  I went out the door and then paused on the front porch to look up and down the street.  Where on earth would I go?  I could go to my friend, Susan’s house, but I knew that her mother would just bring me home and I was still angry.  I sat down on the step for awhile to think.  What would I do for food?  My tummy was already growling and I knew that they were sitting down for supper inside.  Where would I sleep?  The ground was kind of hard and had bugs crawling around on it.  My bed, on the other hand, was warm and safe.  Hmmm…maybe I should delay this running away for a day or so, I decided.  Quietly, I opened the door and went back inside.

During my teen years there were many times when things got very tense around the dinner table.  I had strong opinions (probably some wrong opinions as well) and my father and I didn’t always agree.  Many times I went storming out of the house to walk furiously around the block or two until my anger subsided.  After a few minutes, I would calm down , but my pride wouldn’t let me return until  I thought my mom would begin to worry about me.  Dad and I were like oil and water, but our relationship improved greatly after I went away to college and later when I got married.

I was still very opinionated and passionate about many topics when I first got married.  So was my husband.  I tended to slam cupboard doors a lot when I got angry.   The most infuriating thing that he would do was fall asleep when I still wanted to argue.  You just can’t have a satisfactory argument when the only person responding is yourself.  Most annoying.

Eventually, we had children and when I finally fell into bed at night I was exhausted.  I remember one time thinking that it would be so great if I could just go into the hospital with some minor thing, like an infected toe or something, so I could be off my feet and just sleep a truly relaxing sleep.  There I was, again wanting to run away,temporarily at least, from home.

Now, I treasure all those moments when our family is all together around a table.  It only happens at weddings and funerals now.  Everyone is so busy and our children are living in different cities.  When it does happen, I am blissfully happy, even if the gathering is boisterous.  Now I long to run home or to home the way it was when the children were here.   And I also longingly reminisce about my childhood home.

Human beings are strange.  We pull so hard to get loose from those parental apron strings and when we finally succeed we look back with nostalgia.  Isn’t our relationship with our heavenly Father somewhat the same?  Human beings try so hard to be self-sufficient and we can really be ungrateful for all God has given us and yet, where do we run when we are all out of alternatives?  If we are believers we return, like the prodigal children we are, right back to God’s waiting arms.  What a comfort it is to know that no matter what foolishness or mess we get ourselves into, God will always welcome us back home!  Just like most earthly parents, God is longing for the day when we are all sitting at his table, boisterously happy and gratefully praising Him.

Woman Vs. Machine

Woman caveI always thought that machines were made to lighten a person’s work load and free up time for leisure.  No one explained to us in Home Economics classes that a piece of machinery has a mind of its own.  Of course, I didn’t know then that I would eventually have four children, a dog (or two), live in the country and have to deal with country plumbing.  When I speak of country plumbing, I mean the sort that relies on well water and electricity to work.  Urban plumbing simply requires a water supply that works on gravity and usually comes from a central pumping station.  Country living depends on a well and a pump that rumbles and gyrates on a cinder block base in the cellar.  Everything is just fine as long as the pump is working and the pump works as long as the power supply keeps coming which is a moot point if the machine in question is in top shape.

My first bone of contention upon moving to the country was the fact that gravity was no operating in my favour.  Our washing machine was down in our brand new basement along with something called a sump pump.  The sump pump moves the excess water (rain or snow melt or just ground water) out from under the house and into the ditch.  I was supposed to keep an ear cocked for excessive pump action which could mean that our basement was flooding and the pump was being over-worked.

At first I assumed the sudsy water would just go into the drain and end up in the ditch.  O no, no, no!  Things were not that simple.  Washing water, flushed water, bath water, and dish water were destined to take a downward journey from the upstairs floor and an upward journey from the cellar out to a tank buried in the ground.  This tank got pumped out at least every two years, a smelly operation carried out by a large pumper truck.  Getting water to flow down is no problem, but getting water pumped up from my washing machine required a third pump, one that sat beside my washer.  That pump became the bane of my existence and was called some very colourful names and threatened regularly with bodily harm.

Hearing became an important sense for country survival.  Not only was I listening for the particular telephone ring that was our party-line sequence, I was also listening for the for the sound of pumps.  The regular operation of the sump pump and the well pump were essential, and even more necessary was the sound of the washing machine because, should I not hear the change i in it’s tone indicating the beginning of the rinse cycle, I wouldn’t get to the the pump switch before the deep washing sink overflowed onto the basement floor.  Then I would have to spend some time in my rubber boots, sweeping water down to the floor drain.  Because of four noisy children, a barking dog (or two) and my forgetfulness, our basement floor got washed on a regular basis.  I spent a great deal of time in my rubber boots.

Washing machines come in all sizes.  Ours was a commercial size with room enough, according to the advertisement to do the muddy laundry of a football team in the spring.  I beg to differ.  If I loaded towels and a couple of sheets into the tub, our washing machine set up a racket that would rival a cement mixer.  It would dance a jig a leprechaun would envy and twist better than Chubby Checker ever did.  Again, I would run down to the basement to placate the angry beast by opening it up and trying to level the load.  It usually took me three tries to end its temper tantrum.  I began to think living in a nudist colony had great attraction.

I remember being taught how to fold laundry properly in Home Ec and I used to love ironing clothes when I lived at home with my parents. I would make neat piles and hang all the shirts up on hangers so that the newly pressed collars and sleeves wouldn’t get crushed.  Now, I just rushed down to the washing machine and flung everything into the drier that wasn’t going out on the line.  Then, if I timed it just right, I could run down to the drier as soon as it stopped and not have to iron at all.  I did a lot of running up and down stairs in those days.  On the days I won the race, my husband didn’t have to wear wrinkled shirts.

Three stellar laundry days stand out in my memory.  The first was the day we got a water sensitive drain that tripped the pump switch as soon as the water drained.  That was real freedom.  The second, was the day when our upstairs laundry room was completed and our machines came upstairs for good.  No longer did I have to carry the laundry baskets up and down.  The third day was the day our teenage children complained about the lack of clean clothes in their drawers.  The light bulb went on over my head and a beatific smile spread over my face.

“Come with me ,” I beckoned them one by one. ” It’s time I introduced you to the washing machine and dryer.”

As they backed gingerly away from the manic gleam in my eyes, I closed the laundry room door and launched into the basics of Student Laundry 101.

Cottage Daze

Cottage Kitchen
The Cottage Kitchen with Electricity Installed

While our children were growing up, we had the use of the my husband’s parents’ cottage in the Gatineau Hills.  Those days at the lake are my idea of heaven.  Getting there, however, was a major undertaking.  In the early days, we had a compact car into which we had to load four children, one furry dog, all our luggage, plus food and water for two weeks.  It was not the most comfortable of rides. It certainly illustrated what made a compact car compact.

After packing everyone’s swimsuits, toothbrushes, towels and shorts and baking up a storm, not to forget cleaning the household to impress the mice while we were away, I would roll into bed exhausted so I could drag myself out of bed a few hours later for the car loading.  We never got out of our laneway when planned.  Something always needed more attention or we’d get on the road and half-way down, remember that we’d forgotten to drop off the key at the neighbour’s or we’d left something vital at home.  Our neighbours must have been amused at how many times we’d return.

Inside the car, we’d have three children in the back seat, one in between my husband and I, as well as the dog at my feet.  Our trip into the hills from the country took us two hours.  That is two hours of children complaining about elbows in their ribs and feet on their side of the car.  Then, just to make things even more comfy, we’d stop half-way to buy groceries.  We squeeze back into our car, but now with the added weight of a grocery bag on each lap, because the trunk was already full.  The unfortunate person who got the milk bags had to endure freezing legs (usually in shorts) all the way up to the cottage.

The road to the cottage was accessed through a farmers yard and so the gate had to be opened before we could continue. This meant that someone had to get out of the car to do the deed and there were always lots of volunteers.  The road in was a gravel one with many twists, turns and dips with the children getting more excited at every landmark.  Once at the cottage, we didn’t so much step out of the car as launch from it.  The car doors would explode open and the children would shed their grocery burdens to rush down to the dock.  At this point, their father would issue a sharp,”Hold it!  No one goes anywhere until we carry in our bags.”   Reluctantly, our troops would return to the car so they could hustle the groceries and luggage inside.  The dog, oblivious to all the ado, would trot down to the lake to check out the frogs and fish.  He never caught any, but he spent days staring into the water, fascinated by their movements.

Now, this cottage was functional, not palatial.  The cottages on either side boasted running water and electric lights.  Not so ours.  Well, electricity did come later, but for awhile it was strictly gas lamps or kerosene.  The only water we got for washing hands and dishes, came up from the lake carried by child labour (when they were old enough to carry the buckets).  We had no television there, no radio and all our entertainment was found in the book case where there were stacks of board games for rainy days or books to be read aloud.  Otherwise, we were in the lake, on the lake, by the lake or in the deep piney woods.  Oh, yes, there was also a huge sand pile behind the cottage where to this day a number of rusted Hot Wheels may still be buried.

The heat for the cottage was supplied by a pot bellied Quebec heater stove into which we shoved logs from the woodpile beside the cottage.  There were three bedrooms off the main kitchen/living room.  The walls of these rooms did not go to the ceiling, so when the heater was stoked the warmth spread throughout the cottage.  At night we snuggled down into our sheets under a couple of blankets and some quilts.  In the morning, my husband got up and started the fire, while we all stayed under the covers, waiting until the air warmed up enough to brave the cold linoleum floor.  Most mornings, father and kids got into their swimsuits and went dashing off the end of the dock, headfirst into the cool water.

After breakfast, the children would disappear out the door to explore the wilds of Quebec within a whistle’s distance from the cottage.  When we eventually got a truck that could hold bicycles, the distance of their travels increased, and occasionally included a steep hill they nicknamed “Suicide hill”.    A ride down this hill sometimes resulted in a few bruises sustained in a crash landing.  The children also had a favourite rock they named “The Rock of Giboulder” where they would play knights or outer space.  It was a wonderful playground for children.

Fishing was a great activity.  The children took turns going fishing with their father, while I curled up in one of the adirondack chairs to read.  My summer reading never got very ambitious beyond romance novels, of which there was an abundance.   Otherwise, I would wander down to the dock and dangle my feet in the water or go in swimming with whatever children hadn’t made the rowboat.  When the rowboat returned, we were all very excited to see the catch which was afloat in a bucket of water.  The anglers were anxious for applause, but leery of my motives, as I am a lover of fish as a food.  Unfortunately, my children did not share my epicurean enthusiasm, and most of the fish would be named and duly returned to the deeps of the lake with a sore mouth.

Rainy days at the cottage were spent with cards in our hands or around the Monopoly board.  Our games tended to be loudly hilarious with the dog curled up under the table on the screened-in porch while the rain made polka dot splashes on the lake and drummed on the cottage roof.  Our meals were whenever we got hungry.  We had stopped looking at our watches two days into our holiday.  I made simple meals; I knew a hundred different ways to cook ground beef.  Clean-up meant boiling the lake water on the stove, so it was best to keep the dishes to a minimum.  When we finished eating, we all returned to whatever activity we’d been doing before.

As the sun went down, my husband would light the gaslights and get out the latest book he was reading aloud to the children.  He read fantasy books by Terry Brooks or by Robert Asprin , giving all the characters a voice or accent of their own.  We all enjoyed those times and went off to bed happily tired from laughing.

Then again, getting ready for bed, required a trip to the outhouse with a flashlight.  Not everyone’s best moment.  An outhouse during the day was scary enough, as there were huge spiders lurking or  maybe a wasp.  At night the trip to the outhouse was just plain unnerving.  It’s one thing to see and know what might lay in wait, it is quite another to imagine it.  Most of us would drag our feet out there as if going to the gallows, and return at a gallop.  No one ever lingered.

Oh yes, I love those memories: the cook outs, the marshmallow roasts, the long walks down shaded lanes, the serene swim at dawn on the silky smooth lake, the happy shouts of children as they splashed off the dock, paddling the canoe up behind a turtle or a loon,  the mist coming off the lake,  the crackling of the logs in the stove, and even the clean-up before heading home.  Yes, definitely heaven.  I don’t know why I’m thinking of this tonight, but I suppose the smell of spring in the air and the return of all the songbirds, makes me nostalgic for the coming of summer and summer used to mean a trip or two to the cottage.  Happy days indeed.

Two New Members for the Heavenly Choir

So much sadness has happened this week that it is difficult to know how to address it.  My heart goes out to Boston and West Texas, but I don’t want to try to express what other people who are personally involved in the tragedy, have much more right to do.  Instead, please note that my prayers are with them as are those of all caring Canadians.  However, I do wish to express my sense of loss on the news of the deaths of two wonderful “songbirds” who had their roots here north of the border.

George Beverly Shea

Imagine living for one hundred and four years!  George Beverly Shea was born in Winchester, Ontario, the town where my husband and I are lay pastors of the Baptist church.  When we first arrived there almost fourteen years ago, we were told this with great pride by members of our congregation.  Of course, anyone who listened to gospel music or attended one of Billy Graham’s incredible crusades would know that name immediately.  We had certainly heard his musical voice on the radio and television, but never would I have expected to hear the great man sing in person.  However, a few years after our service in the Winchester Baptist Church began, our choir, of which my husband and I were members, was asked to be part of a combined choir for a special tribute for Mr. Shea.  Of course, we were all excited, and practiced the pieces we were to sing wholeheartedly.  He was coming to Winchester because the town was going to erect a sign in honour of him.

Believe me , when the day arrived, the local arena was packed.  The combined choir was seated on especially arranged bleachers and we lifted our voices joyfully in his honour.  I was amazed at how robust George Beverly Shea appeared despite his ninety-some years but I thought perhaps his voice would betray his age.  How wrong I was!  He stood and sang “The Wonder of it All” (the hymn he had written) and I’m sure, even had he no microphone, his powerful voice would have been heard all over that arena.   We have sung “The Wonder of it All” in our church many times since that day and each time we all, I am sure, remember when that elderly man filled every corner of the arena with his melodic praise.  I am so glad that we were blessed with that opportunity, now that his voice has been silenced here on earth, but I know that one day we will hear it again in heaven.

Rita McNeil

Two years ago, my sister, Beverly, and I made ,what might be called, a pilgrimage to the Maritimes.  Our original intention was to visit St. John’s, Nfld.-Labrador, where our late mother had been born and grown up.  My sister left the planning up to me, which shows you how much she trusts me, and I immediately began looking for the best deal.  We had decided on a bus trip, because we wanted to see as much of Newfoundland as we could and, besides, I’m a white-knuckle flier.  Most of the bus trips seemed to spend only about a day in St. John’s which just wouldn’t suffice.  I found instead, a tour that not only visited Newfoundland, but also the other three Maritime provinces and, happy day, spent two and a half days in St. John’s.  I was thrilled.  I called my sister and asked her if she would be able to stretch her travel budget to go for three weeks and not ten days.  Bev hadn’t been to P.E. I. or Newfoundland so she consulted her purse and said yes.  We were so excited, even more so because the tour included a visit to Rita McNeil’s Teahouse in Cape Breton.

Our bus arrived in Big Pond, Cape Breton, in the rain, which cleared just before our arrival at the tea room at 4 p.m.  Our intrepid tour guide had called ahead to warn them of our arrival and inquired if Rita McNeil was by any chance in the neighbourhood.  The reply came, that yes she was in Big Pond, although not at the Tea Room.  As we disembarked from the tour bus, a buzz came back to us that Rita was, in fact, inside.  Both Bev and I thought it might be just a rumour, but the big surprise was that indeed she was there, sitting quietly at a table in another room.

Sometimes, meeting a heroine or hero can be disillusioning when she or he is discovered to be not as we imagined.  Sometimes our imaginations have built them up in our minds to fit their on-screen roles or on-stage presence.  Not so Rita.  There she sat at an ordinary tea table, only a few feet away from the room where all her honourary doctorates (there were quite a number), her Order of Nova Scotia and her Order of Canada plus numerous photos of her with other musical celebrities and yet she was as humble and gracious as she always appeared on stage.  I tend to be rather shy myself and yet I felt brave enough with Ms. McNeil to give her a loving hug and ask if it was tiring to meet so many people who wanted her autograph and a few words.  She smiled at me shyly and said that she just loved meeting new people, especially fans.  We later discovered that when our guide, Anne, had called ahead to tell the staff we were coming, they in turn called Rita and she came right over.

I had purchased one of her C.D.’s which she kindly signed and then I wandered around admiring her signature tea cups and various other souvenirs.  Rita met all the bus travellers , sweetly posed for photographs and was completely pleasant and patient.  When all the hubbub subsided and the travellers sat down for their tea, I lingered nearby and enjoyed a softly sung private concert as she quietly accompanied  her C.D. that was playing in the background.  Bev and I sat down for a delicious cinnamon bun and tea and we both agreed that  meeting Rita McNeil had been the highlight of our tour to that point.  And that is why, this week, when I heard that Rita had passed on to be with the Lord, I felt as if I’d lost a lovely friend.

I was listening to the CBC’s “All In A Day” radio show, when the commentator mentioned that Rita McNeil had been interviewed when she first arrived in Ottawa in the early 1970’s and then played a tape of another  interview that she had done just a year or two ago.  There was Rita’s soft spoken Cape Breton lilt as she discussed her career and then the announcer at the time played the first song she had ever written, called “Song of the Working Man” all about going down into the mines.  The powerful, melodic voice that harmonized with the choral group, Men of the Deeps” was such a contrast to the quiet humble woman, that it really was an amazing contrast.  Rita, you will be greatly missed, but fortunately for us, your songs will go on.

The Hymn I Wrote for Communion

05-holy-communionWriting hymns has become a great joy to me.  Music can convey so much.  I strive to write simple lyrics that anyone can understand and hopefully they will linger in the mind long after the music has ended.  Last Sunday when we had communion we sang this hymn that I wrote in 2008.  If you wish to use it, please contact me through this blog.

 

 

 

 

 

The Table of the Lord

© 2008  Mollie McKibbon

8  8  8  8

Our food is here; the table spread,

We poured the wine and broke the bread.

This costly meal none can afford,

Provided freely by our Lord.

 

 

Come drink the wine and eat the bread.

Come hear the words our Master said.

“This is my body and my blood,

Now love each other as you should.”

 

 

“I spend my life-blood for your sake,

And though my body they will break,

My friends, I promise you will be

One day in paradise with me.”

 

 

Our food is here; the table spread.

We poured the wine and broke the bread,

This costly meal none can afford,

Provided freely by our Lord.

Paisley Power

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