A symbolic poem about Jesus, the Carpenter |
THE CARPENTER By Mark D. McCallister My heart felt like a house In so much need of repair Damaged by the weather of life Falling apart everywhere The walls were in need of new paint The roof was starting to leak The rain of sorrow dripped in And it’s frame grew ever more weak I didn’t know how long it would stand I couldn’t keep up with repairs I wept in it’s lonely hallway As I sat on it’s broken stairs Now, I heard a knock at the door And I opened the door to see A stranger, yet so familiar Was kindly looking at me Though I tried to hide them, I know he acknowledged my tears He said “I used to be a carpenter And I heard you’re in need of repairs. I let him into that broken place Embarrassed by what he would find. But he had my trust through leaks and rust In this place that he redesigned Now everything he did replace. Every leak and crack diminished And he held three nails in his hand And said “With these it is finished.” I could almost touch his kindness His presence, I just embraced it He took every broken thing that he found And with his touch replaced it. “Stable are the floors below you,” he said “Solid is the roof above you, I did this of my own free will, I did this because I love you.” As he was going, he left me these words, “For now this place will do, But when I return and you see me again, I will have a new home for you.” |