Monday, February 16, 2004

Dare to Live Your Dream.

Before me was a vast inviting Universe
Encompassing a vision greater than the eye could see.
So filled with all I longed to know, do or possess-
With things of beauty, facets of a fuller life;
Some objects worldly, some divine,
Then danger-fraught, now steeped with languid solace too-
With joy through sorrow, comfort easing pain.
All this I boldly dared to dream

Dare to live your dream.
Open up your clouded eyes,
Listen to the music of a richer life
Stop to smell the flowers while you may,
And boldly dare to live your dream.

I struggled up a rough uneven stony track
And each step hurt my aching feet and tore my bleeding soul,
Until I reach the pinnacle and sat alone.
And then my ears began to hear, my eyes to see.
I looked down from the top and smiled
Into the glorious firmament of blue
And walked back down until I reached the common path
I’d  never noticed was so smooth.

Dare to live your dream.
Open up your clouded eyes,
Listen to the music of a richer life
Stop to smell the flowers while you may,
And boldly dare to live your dream.

Mark Humber 

There is a story to this one too...
One day, I was feeling rather depressed about my failed marriage.  All of my good intentions had come to nothing, and here I was - on my own again.  I decided to go down to the Cataract Gorge near where I lived in Tasmania on my own and walk around to try to clear my head. It is a most beautiful place. It was the middle of summer, and I was dressed in shorts and tank-top with no shoes on my feet and I was in self-punishment mode - the further I walked, the more rough the track became as the poem depicts, until eventually there was no track at all.  I climbed to the top of the tall hill and sat amongst the trees and bushes to nurse my hurt and pain alone.  But as I sat there, I reached a deeper or heightened consciousness.  I became aware of the beautiful view so far below me as I had never seen it before.  I started to hear the sound of every insect around me, every movement of the bushes.  Then I noticed peacock feathers around me.  I had come to their secret roost and they were sitting in the trees around me.  They sat quietly and seemed to empathise with the rest of nature with my personal agony.  It was a magic experience.  I gathered up the feathers and keep them on my wall wherever I go – a reminder of this experience.

Monday, July 21, 2003

Little Baby

 Two tiny feet wrapped up against the cold in Bethlehem,

That knew no weight or felt no pain, as they would later do.

The weariness of walking miles to find some poor, lost soul,

The feet that walked on water and climbed the mountains too.

 

Chorus

Little Baby, did You know, was it in Your mind?

Did you know what lay before You, did You know You lived to die?

And did You know then that You’d live again,

To reign as Prince of Life- little Baby, did You know?

 

Those little hands that clutch the air, as every baby’s do,

Would someday touch the leprous man that no one would go near.

The gentle hands that washed men’s feet in such a lowly way,

And flinched with pain when clumsy Roman nails pierced them through.

 

The chubby arms Your mother swaddles close up to Your chest,

Will grow to hold another child with gentle tenderness.

Those mighty arms that rose in all the might of majesty,

To quell the raging, violent storm and soothe the surging sea.

 

The tiny One His parents had to hide to save His life,

Amidst the cruel Herod’s slaughter of the innocents.

And as a Man He did not try to save Himself from death,

And yet He’ll stand as Lord and King of all the Universe.

 

Mark Humber 21st July 2003

Saturday, March 1, 2003

The Father Watched

 

Father, You watched as He walked by,

Helping and healing on this earth.

You watched Him suffer, heard His cry

And yet, You could not intervene-

But only watch.

You saw Him bear His cross’s load

To go to die at Calvary,

On that so long and painful road,

When nails were driven through His hands

You saw His pain.

But when that dreadful hour was come,

Our Jesus had to bear our sins.

The Father blackened out the sun,

So none could see the Crucified

Give up His life.

The Father waits and watches us,

And sees each sorrow, every pain.

He looks to see in each loved face

The likeness of His firstborn Son

Shine out for Him.

Mark Humber 1/3/2003

 From impressions gained from a preaching by Steve Keating at Punchbowl Christian Centre, Launceston

Saturday, April 7, 2001

The Trombone Tutor

He leaned back in the carver chair
His eyes were almost closed
With hair that flowed out everywhere
Like sound waves frozen in mid-air
As he listened to my tune.

But he could no longer then sit tight
As I struggled through my piece
I wanted to pitch the notes so right
And make the sound more full and bright
Though it worsened line by line.

“Picture a sunset in the sky
An artist’s palette taken up
And strewn about by God on high.
The colours whirl and seem to fly,
Oh, try to play that tune!”

“Ever sat by a mountain stream
As it trickled on its endless way
Round the rocks of time its waters gleam
Then open up your soul and try to dream
That your song warbles down the walls.”

“Do you know the thrill of the touch of a girl?
As she lifts her sweet face to yours
To whisper, “I love you”, the heart’s cymbals whirl
Filling the night with the mighty burl
Of the everlasting ode of love.”

“Take up your instrument of gleaming gold
And blow through its still cold form
Your heart and mind, your deepest soul
To reverberate with a sound so whole
With the colours of your life’s song.”

Mark Humber 7/04/01

Inspired by my wonderful trombone teacher, Monte Mumford.

Monday, June 19, 2000

The Morning of My Day.

Oh, that I were again
In the morning of my day,
When the sun's first rays
Had kissed the poignant air,
Full of the hope of brilliant noon.

For I remember well
On the morning of my day,
How the pretty wrens
So quickly turned their heads
When I did pipe to them my tune.

Yes, it was glorious then
On the morning of my day,
As refracted light
From every drop of due
Sent forth its glistening rainbow hues.

Now it may well be noon
On the morning of my day.
But lo, I hear
A voice, it calls to me-
"Go forth, be bold, and seize the day".

And if I e’er should find,
On the morning of my day,
Some open heart
That I could fill with love,
I’d shine my brightest love-light in.

Oh, that I might discern,
On the morning of my day,
That there was one,
Who could call forth a tune
To which I’d ever harmonise.

And so, I'll seek to stay,
On the morning of my day.
For though I know
The night will surely come-
I'll live each moment to the full!

Mark J. Humber 19th June 2000

Quite amusing that this was written more than 10 years ago.  I still hate getting old... :D

Tuesday, November 30, 1999

Ruth

 

She came from a country of famine,

And her gleaning was more than the most,

Yet "she sat in the house but a little,"

Were the words of the mighty man's boast.

 

Not only much hunger, but sorrow,

Had marked out the way that she came,

Left alone by the death of her husband;

Of a race that could only mean shame.

 

She found that those great wings of refuge,

Would comfort, support and provide,

That her lonely heart's aching was answered

As he counselled her there to reside.

 

Go not to another field, gleaning,

For there's plenty of work to be done.

And the fields, they are white for the harvest:

The first‑fruits made ripe by the sun.

 

She lay at his feet till the morning,

To give him her heart was her wish.

He appealed to a nearer relation,

For the right of redemption was his.

 

He owned that he could not redeem her.

So that lover the matter must meet,

By a token of humiliation -

He must stoop and un-sandal his feet.

 

And such was the love that has claimed us,

Magnanimous heart bore the loss,

For the feet that had led Him to Calvary,

Were the ones they did nail to the cross.

 

So we gladly may loosen the sandal,

In respect of this holiest ground,

And give it up too for our David,

Give it up, give it all in His hand.

 

For religious ideals of reforming,

Would ne'er bring a Moabite in,

But bearing His humiliation,

Be renewed, full of Christ, freed from sin.

Mark Humber 1999

Tuesday, February 16, 1999

The Good Samaritan

On  a well-travelled route, the old Jericho Way,
So well known to many of us,
Went a man out alone on the ill-fated day
To a palm-treed old city of lust.
But afflicted by robbers, and wounded and stripped,
Left dying by merciless hands.
A spectacle sad for any who tripped
Down the road through the Palestine sands.

          So, will anyone stop for a soul in distress,
          And what could you possibly do?
          As you ponder your choice, you are put to the test-
What if Jesus had not stopped for you?

The clergy came up with his robes and his book,
And looked on the pitiful sight.
But his flock was at home, with no one to look,
So he passed by the opposite side.
The Levite, he likewise came strutting along
To observe with disinterested eye.
If only he had there that most august throng-
But no one was there to descry.

So, will anyone stop for a soul in distress,
          And what could you possibly do?
          As you ponder your choice, you are put to the test-
What if Jesus had not stopped for you?

Next, a stranger came up to the place where he lay-
An outcast Samaritan, he.
Rejected, he has no desire for display,
But was moved by a deep sympathy.
He bound up his wounds, poured in oil and wine-
Laid him on his beast that was there.
Took him to a place where they’re caring and kind
And promised all cost he would bear.

So, will anyone stop for a soul in distress,
          And what could you possibly do?
          As you ponder your choice, you are put to the test-
What if Jesus had not stopped for you?

Now, you’ve known this old story in Luke well indeed,
And enjoyed its great Gospel appeal,
But, have you got the point of the neighbour in need-
Poor lawyer, yet cynical still?
When you passed by that young soul so cocky (for sure),
Did you greet him with friendship so rare?
Or speak to the sullen to bring him some cheer-
Did you stop, just a moment to spare?

So, will anyone stop for a soul in distress,
          And what could you possibly do?
          As you ponder your choice, you are put to the test-
            What if Jesus had not stopped for you?              


Mark Humber 1999

My disgust with religious pretence.