Showing posts with label Love Never Dies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Love Never Dies. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2013

Monday's Mourning Ministry - Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel) ~Billy Joel







Monday's Mourning Ministry

Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel)

~Billy Joel










Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel)

~Billy Joel




Goodnight my angel, 
Time to close your eyes
And save these questions for another day
I think I know what you've been asking me
I think you know what I've been trying to say
I promised I would never leave you
And you should always know
Wherever you may go,
No matter where you are
I never will be far away

Goodnight my angel, 
Now it's time to sleep
And still so many things I want to say
Remember all the songs you sang for me
When we went sailing on an emerald bay
And like a boat out on the ocean
I'm rocking you to sleep
The water's dark
And deep inside this ancient heart
You'll always be a part of me

Goodnight my angel, 
Now it's time to dream
And dream how wonderful your life will be
Someday your child may cry, 
And if you sing this lullaby
Then in your heart 
There will always be a part of me

Someday we'll all be gone
But lullabyes go on and on…
They never die
That's how you 
And I
Will be...

















Pictures, thanks to 
~I Miss Those Close To Me Who Are Now In Heaven As Beautiful Angels 
~My Angel Friends
Video: http://youtu.be/8ZMGDgI3We0

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Tuesday's Trust - Hold Onto Your Love for Your Child...







Tuesday's Trust

Hold Onto Your Love for Your Child...







Three things will last forever--faith, hope, and love--and the greatest of these is love.

~1 Corinthians 13:13, NLT




What things last Forever? Faith, Hope, and Love, but "the greatest of these is Love…"


Hold onto your love for each of your children, no matter where they are! Don't let anyone put your love for your child who is now deceased down. God values our love more than anything; after all, He even proclaims He IS love! 


God implanted that love for our child in our hearts, and there is Nothing wrong with it, no matter how many people get uncomfortable with it, and want you to shut it down… 


Love lasts forever, and will go with you to greet your child. 


Let YOUR LOVE grow as much as it will, for it is the One thing that you can take with you into Heaven and it will never leave you, nor will it ever leave your child! 


Three things last forever---Faith, Hope, and Love---but the greatest of these is Love...









 Prophecy and speaking in unknown languages and special knowledge will become useless. But love will last forever! 

~1 Corinthians 13:8 NLT











Pictures, thanks to ~Hers To Treasure and ~Followers of Christ
Scriptures, NLT = New Living Translation

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Monday's Mourning Ministry - Life Without You ~Stevie Ray Vaughan






Monday's Mourning Ministry

Life Without You

~Stevie Ray Vaughan






Life Without You

~Stevie Ray Vaughan


Oo oo now baby.... 
Tell me how have you been 
We all have missed you.... 
And the way you grin 
The day is necessary.... 
Every now and then 
For souls to move on.... 
Givin' life back again, and again 
Fly on fly on.... 
Fly on my friend 
Go on.... 
Live again.... 
Love again

Day after day.... 
Night after night 
Sittin' here singin' every minute.... 
As the years go passing by.... 
By, by, by 
Long look in the mirror.... 
We've come face to face 
Wishin' all the love we took for granted.... 
Love we have today 

Life without you.... 
All the love you passed my way 
The angels have waited for so long.... 
Now they have their way 
Take your place....










Grief Picture: ~The Compassionate Friends of Atlanta Siblings Group via ~Grieving Mothers~B.J. Karrer

Grief Song: http://youtu.be/X7PQNvRZ10w

The research from one of Stevie Ray's fans seems to indicate that this version of "Living Without You" was played at the concert of 29 November 1989 at McNichols Sports Arena, Denver, Colorado, less than nine months before Stevie Ray Vaughan's untimely death at age 35 on a helicopter heading from a concert he had played in Wisconsin that was attempting to fly through the dense fog to Chicago on August 26, 1990.


Thursday, October 18, 2012

Wednesday's Woe - Stabbing Set Backs ~Tommy Prince






Wednesday's Woe

Stabbing Set Backs


~Tommy Prince





In my attempts at reaching a level of being a "functional griever" (since we Child-Loss Grievers know there really is no such thing as a full recovery from our grief) in trying to deal with this severe grief and trauma over the loss of my baby girl, it's almost impossible in the midst of being constantly stabbed and pricked in my heart in my own home ~ walking by a bookshelf, and seeing a picture of Jody, one of her best guy-friends, with Merry Katherine at a church retreat,  and BAM! ~ it just stabs me in the heart! Or I'll see a possession of hers, like her favorite earrings in her bedroom, and immediately I'll feel the stab in my heart ~ Then seeing a picture of her on the refrigerator ~even though it's there every day for me to see ~ sometimes catches me off guard and stabs my heart. 


All of these events take me back to the days of normalcy, when she was right here with us ~ live and in person, in all the dimensions of her delightful personality...









With this journey we're on of trying to walk forward, little by little, I do seem to stumble along. Yet, it seems I keep getting set back with these stabbings that just stop me in my tracks. What am I to do? 


It would be even worse for me to remove from the house any and all reminders of my daughter. 
She will always be very much a part of my life, whether here or in Heaven! 


Adding to the pain, anniversaries, birthdays, and holidays go beyond stabbings, to hammer blows that impede the progress further, and some of these are just around the corner...















Pictures, thanks to "Grieving Mothers"

Sunday, September 2, 2012

Saturday's Sayings - In the End, Life is Stronger than Death






Saturday's Sayings

In the End, Life is Stronger than Death








I heard your voice in the wind today and I turned to see your face;
The warmth of the wind caressed me as I stood silently in place.
I felt your touch in the sun today as its warmth filled the sky;
I closed my eyes for your embrace and my spirit soared high.
I saw your eyes in the window pane as I watched the falling rain;
It seemed as each raindrop fell it quietly said your name.
I held you close in my heart today; it made me feel complete;
You may have died...but you are not gone - you will always be a part of me.
As long as the sun shines ... the wind blows ... the rain falls ...
You will live on inside of me forever ….
for that is all my heart knows.
In moments of silence, I find you. 
In this quiet, I speak to you. 
It is only then that I feel once again, 
the greatest love that I ever knew. 

-Author Unknown

~Narelle

~Angels of the Heart, via Grieving Mother Jill C.




~~~~~~






Parents who have lost children wish others wouldn’t think if they have a good day they are “over it” .... or if they have a bad day they are being unreasonable because they SHOULD be over it. The truth is there is NO “normal” way for them to act. Each person handles grief in their own unique way, and THAT is 'normal' for them.

~Narelle

~Angels of the Heart



~~~~~~





It doesn't matter how long you cry, a mother’s love will never die....Nothing can take this bond away.

~Angels of the Heart



~~~~~~






If you've been putting on a brave face for quite a while now, perhaps you need to give yourself permission to have 'a day off' ... Allow yourself to let your guard down today so your suppressed emotions can come up from the depths of your heart.

~Narelle

~Angels of the Heart




~~~~~~




A Gift From Heaven

I am with you always
I live in your heart
I speak to your soul
We are not far apart

When you feel a light breeze
Hear the songs the birds sing
Know that I see every smile
Your kindness can bring

I see you building your dreams
With wisdom and grace
And asking His guidance
With each challenge you face

I am more than a memory
You will feel our love grow
I am forever your angel
Some things you just know

Please tell me your thoughts
Your hopes and your fears
And know that through faith
He will heal all your tears

For today, I can sahre
That in Heaven above
God has taken my hand
I am complete, I am love


~Kristan Dean
2009 copyright Mooney, TunCo, Inc.


~~~~~~






~~~~~~






~~~~~~ 




I'm Still Here

I may be gone but please don't cry
Death is not the last goodbye
Death releases me of my pain
There will come a day we will meet again
Don't be blue and don't be sad
Think back to the fun we had
I am always here I hear you speak
In time of trouble it's me you seek
You don't see me but I see you
I will do my best to pull you through
Speak to me and I will hear
Never far I am always near
Be brave my love do not cry
See you again it's not goodbye

~John F. Connor








Pictures, thanks to ~Angels of the Hearts as labeled, all others, thanks to ~Missing Loved Ones

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Saturday's Sayings - Grief... Is About Loving Our Child





Saturday's Sayings

Grief... Is About Loving Our Child









Please allow me to grieve...in my own time, in my own way.



I HAVE LEARNED:

Tragedy does not come knocking on your door three days in advance to let you know when to expect him. So that you will know to be waiting on him. He comes within the very blink of an eye. In an instant; and he is never gentle about it.

Grief is the constellation of internal thoughts and feelings we have when someone loved dies. Grief is the weight in the chest, the churning in the gut, the physical pain in your heart and soul, and the unspeakable thoughts and feelings.

Mourning is the outward expression of grief. Mourning is crying, journaling, creating artwork, talking to others about the death, telling the story, speaking the unspeakable.

Everyone grieves when someone loved dies, but if we are to heal, we must also mourn.

Time does NOT heal all wounds. This is not a wound....it is an amputation. "Loose an arm or a leg, and let me know how long it takes for it to grow back!" It won't!! TIME only allows you the space needed to get used to living WITHOUT. It does not heal.


~thanks to Grieving Mother, Jill Compton




~~~~~




The stronger the love the deeper the grief
Our life here is oh so brief.
Your heart aches for just a touch
Anything of his, just to clutch.
His body is gone, but not his soul
That is the part that keeps you whole.
I wish your pain I could release
So you could know a moment's peace.
But know we all, send our love your way
To help you through another day.

~Scott Moreland



~~~~~





Dear You,
You say that I should be over this by now. 

How can that be it has only been four month(s) and three days that they officially declared him gone. You were not there when it happened, you did not find him. He did not leave you when you were only steps way and did not know. I should have know(n) I am his Mom. You are not the one that panicked trying to get him dressed to take him to the hospital, looking for a mirror to see if he was breathing, all the time knowing that it was really bad. You didn’t lay your head on his chest praying to hear his heart beat. You are not the one that didn’t call 911 for almost 10 minutes because you thought that he was breathing and his heart was beating and it wasn’t. You were not there.

You say I should be over this by now. 

You are not the one who birthed him, had him grow in your body. You are not the one who nursed him, held him for the first time. You are not the one.

You say I should be over this by now. 

You are not the one, who only wanted to have everyone leave when he was in the coma, just so you could read him the book he talked about. You are not the one who knew he was gone, and pleaded with him to go back into his body. You are not the one he said, “No, Mama it’s too cool here.” to.

You say I should be over this by now. 
You were not the one who heard, if his condition doesn’t change we will be declaring him dead in 6 hours. You were not the one who they asked to donate his organ. You were not the one they called saying that you couldn’t so now not even a little piece of him survived. 

You say I should be over this by now. 

You were not the one that went back to the hospital when they disconnected him. You did not crawl into that hospital bed with your head to his chest until his heart stopped beating. You were not there. You were not the one who held him until it was over. You were not the one to cover his face with the sheet after it was all over. You were not the one who could not see that and snatched it back down to look at him one more time. 

You were not there.

Me

~contributed by Grieving Mothers



~~~~~




You can try to hide me
You can pretend that you're okay
You can push away your friends and family
It will only make me STAY

Alcohol and drugs won't help either
It'll create a false relief. Tomorrow I will be here...
Stronger beyond belief

The only way is to go through me
"Grief"




~~~~~




Don't try to figure out a grieving family;
It's impossible unless you are one,
"Just love us";
No one will ever know
The loss we live with everyday!



~~~~~




Sometimes, when one person is missing,
the whole world feels depopulated.

~Lamartine



~~~~~




Love is divine..never-ending, 
always forming, 
grows intensively, and 
surrounds us.










Pictures and Quotes, thanks to Grieving Mother~Jill Compton, "Death of a Loved One," and "Grieving Mothers"

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Wednesday's Woe - Missing My Mom and My Daughter





Wednesday's Woe

Missing My Mom and My Daughter






Today has been such a sad day for me, missing both my mother and my daughter. 


My mother, also a child-loss mom, having lost my oldest brother to cancer when he was only 38 years old, was so adept at understanding my painful grief over Merry Katherine. I was so blessed to have her live to the age of 97 years old, able to live in her own home (the home I grew up in), sleeping in her own bed until her death. We had such sweet times together on my visits home, whether we were crying together over grief, or laughing together over one another's antics, it was all so precious. And to be able to be nurtured by her so sweetly even as I was getting the privilege of nurturing her creates such warm places in my heart even today.

Just a few months before her death, on one visit home, she taught me a prayer I had never heard in all my years with her. In and out of her dementia, one night she just rattled off this beautifully sweet prayer that just captures the gentle love of Jesus for us, His tender lambs. I was stunned to hear her so articulately remembering every word of this very poignant prayer. 

When I later looked it up on the internet, I saw that it was a very old Methodist prayer and realized she was just a little girl when she first learned this prayer she had kept in her heart for a lifetime. One internet site showed that between the years of 1893 and 1923, there was a song with the words of this prayer that was found in 2 % of the hymnals in those days! (My grandmother, "MaMa" was 6 years old when the prayer first appeared in hymnals; she was born in 1887---100 years before Merry Katherine was born. MaMa lived long enough to see Merry Katherine, then died just four months later. My mother was born in 1913, so the prayer/song was available in hymnals for the first ten years of her life!) Evidently, Mother's special prayer was included in a collection of songs prepared especially for the primary and infant departments of the Sunday School, starting in 1893.


And in all my years with her, to think I had never even heard her speak of this wonderful little prayer! I am the youngest of six children; evidently she taught it to the first four children, then taught my brother and me a completely different prayer in our early days of childhood. She took great joy in teaching it to me in her latter days (at the age of 97!), repeating it word for word until I got it down accurately on paper. It was amazing to me. 

When she first said the prayer, her helper and I were holding hands with her as we prayed, and when I heard the words, I cried. (Her words could be understood in two ways, the way she had been taught it as a child, but also as words that would be looking to God's Ultimate Morning Light where she would soon be headed, and I, of course, was wanting to hold onto her here for as long as I could, so the tears just poured.) Here is the prayer that she said that night, and you will see it again, incorporated into the prayers I wrote early this morning...

Jesus, Gentle Shepherd, hear me;
Bless Thy little lamb tonight.
Thro' the darkness be Thou near me;
Keep me safe till morning light.





Thinking of Mother...


Jesus, Gentle Shepherd, hear me;
Bless Thy little lamb tonight.
Thro' the darkness be Thou near me;
Keep me safe till morning light.

Treasured moments with Mom I had,
Treasured moments kept out the bad...
Now my Father, she's in Your arms,
Kept safe in You with no alarms.
Will You both hold me in Your arms?
World's greatest Love, all Darkness disarms.





Thinking of Merry Katherine...


6 years now, you've been with Jesus;
Can you tell me what that's like?
Here on earth, we know He's with us,
Replacing Darkness with His Light.

6 years now, you've been with Love,
No sin nor sadness hanging on;
Lightness surrounds like clouds above,
Yielding peace like Heaven's Dawn.

I too long to be with Jesus,
Held in His arms, He gently greets us...
All is sweet, our sadness gone...

Jesus, Gentle Shepherd, hear me;
Bless Thy little lamb tonight.
Thro' the darkness be Thou near me;
Keep me safe till morning light.

Jesus, Gentle Shepherd, hear me:
Hold my little lamb tonight.
In my heart please keep her near me;
Hold us close till Morning's Light!






Thinking of Mother, Merry Katherine, and me...

Jesus, Gentle Shepherd, hear me:
Bless Thy little lambs tonight...
Thro' the darkness be Thou near us;
Keep us close till Morning's Light!












Artwork: Jesus and the lamb, thanks to Katherine Brown, artist
3 Poems - Thinking of Mother, Merry Katherine, and Me - Angie Bennett Prince - 8/21/2012

Friday, March 23, 2012

Saturday's Sayings - Grief May Ebb, But Never Ends...





Saturday's Sayings

Grief May Ebb, But Never Ends...




Grief ebbs but grief never ends.
Death ends a life but death does not end a relationship.
If we allow ourselves to be still
and if we take responsibility for our grief,
the grief becomes as polished and luminous
and mysterious as death itself.
When it does,
we learn to love anew,
not only the one who has died.
We learn to love anew those who yet live.

~Julius Lester



*****






To shirk pain, bearable pain, altogether
is not only to be less real than one might have been;
it is to isolate oneself from the common lot of pain,
from the pain of humanity and the world.
It is to blunt or cut off or withdraw one's antennae;
it is to play only such notes
as one chooses in the universal symphony,
which is a symphony of suffering as well as joy.

~Victor Gollancz



*****






I have a confession to make.
I hate the word closure
when connected with the loss of a loved one.
You know what I mean --
a spouse, a sibling, a friend dies.
Weeks later there are those who want to know
when the bereaved will find closure.
The dictionary defines closure as
'. . . to be imperious to . . . to choke off . . .
to constrict . . . to bolt . . . to bar . . . to end.'
For survivors, the word closure often connotes
that the bereaved are underachievers
who flunked a grief course.
Though the intention is meant to be sympathetic,
there is evoked a note of chastisement
for failing to end the mourning process.
In the eloquent words of Dr. Jimmy Holland
at New York's Sloan-Kettering Hospital:
'We create a sense of failure
as if the bereaved is not doing it fast enough.'
For grief work takes more time and effort
than most people ever anticipate.
And even after weeks, months, and years later,
grief may ebb, but never ends . . .
The Song of Songs has an insightful perspective on the death of a beloved.
Instead of a word like closure ('to end'),
are the thoughts of never forgetting, always remembering.
The final day of Passover . . . is a Service of Yizkor ('Remembrance')
for those whose memories will never die.
In the synagogue is a 'wall of remembrance'
of past members who are recalled
with lights lit by their names.
There is no closure.
The beauty of their lives never ends.
The life of the dead is now placed
in the memory of the living.
For 'love is strong as death' (8:6).

~Rabbi Dr. Earl Grollman, in "Closure and the Song of Songs,"
Bereavement Magazine , March/April 2003



*****






While the experience of grief work
is difficult and slow and wearing,
it also is enriching and fulfilling.
The most beautiful people we have known
are those who have known defeat,
known suffering, known struggle, known loss,
and have found their way out of the depths.
These persons have an appreciation,
a sensitivity, and an understanding of life
that fills them with compassion, gentleness,
and a deep, loving concern.

~Roy and Jane Nichols, "Funerals: A Time for Grief and Growth"
in The Hope Line Newsletter, July 2001, Syracuse, NY
Hope for Bereaved, Inc.



*****






Grief is a strange phenomenon --
it's like going through a storm
with sheets of rain flowing from your heart
and stumbling to find your way out
only to realize that to heal
you have to go through it and not around it --
There is no escaping it;
it is part of living and acceptance of your grief.
There is a sacredness in tears.
They are not the mark of weakness,
but of power.
They speak more eloquently
than 10,000 tongues.
They are the messengers
of overwhelming grief,
of deep contrition,
and of unspeakable love.

~Washington Irving



*****






I would maintain the sanctity of human joy and human grief.
I bow in reverence before the emotions of every melted heart.
We have a human right to our sorrow.
To blame the deep grief which bereavement awakens,
is to censure all strong human attachments.
The more intense the delight in their presence,
the more poignant the impression of their absence;
and you cannot destroy the anguish unless you forbid the joy.
A morality which rebukes sorrow rebukes love.
When the tears of bereavement have had their natural flow,
they lead us again to life
and love's generous joy.

~James Martineau, Endeavors After the Christian Life
Music I Heard with You



*****






It is hard to sing of oneness
when our world is not complete,
when those who once brought wholeness
to our life have gone,
and naught but memory can fill
the emptiness their passing leaves behind.
But memory can tell us only what we were,
in company with those we loved;
it cannot help us find what each of us,
alone, must now become.
Yet no one is really alone;
those who live no more
echo still within our thoughts and words,
and what they did is part of what we have become.
We do best homage to our dead
when we live our lives more fully,
even in the shadow of our loss.

~Jewish Prayer for High Holydays
in A Broken Heart Still Beats: After Your Child Dies



*****






I still have two sons..........

I have two sons,
Forever in my thoughts.
And prayers
And tears and love
Anguish
Joy
Pride
Wonder
Sadness and gladness.

To hold you when you were born
Was the most amazing thing I have ever known,
To say goodbye the most profound
Deep
Dark
Grief.

Two brothers
Now one without the other
Scarred

But we remember
You


So, on Mothering Sunday, I will run the gauntlet of loss once more, thinking of that other mother for whom the day is named.


Then comes Easter!!!


~Grieving blogger, Teapot
posted 3/11/2010



*****






When we travel the journey of grief,
the familiar can become unfamiliar, even unrecognizable.
Relationships can be put on hold
(though sometimes because we don't recognize the love that surrounds us),
our bodies respond differently than before
(energy levels, appetite, sleep, general health)
and our emotions often become, at best,
a wild ride through some very dark and gloomy waters.
Even God (our beliefs, values and sources of strength) is different.
For some, even the ability to believe in anyone or anything
is stretched to impossibility, for a long time, maybe even forever.
Sorrow can be a very deep hole,
deepened by our perceived loss of that sense of connection.
For many it is about despair, fear and hopelessness.
For others, a sense of sadness and futility.
It may be less severe for many, but it is still there.
For all of us still wrestle with the essential questions of life and meaning.
Why did this happen?
Why did this happen now?
What will happen to me?
How will I live now?
Do I want to go on living?
What do I need to do now?
These are the questions of life and grief,
as old as the ancient psalms
and as fresh as this morning's first cup of coffee.
What does all of this mean for you and me?
The answer (and it isn't really an answer, but a choice,
a hunch, a moving through the journeys of grief and of faith
all twisted and turned together)
is in connecting to myself, my story and my God . . .
it is faith,
our ability to believe and trust
in the outcomes or blessings of even one's suffering,
that brings us through our sorrow to a renewed sense of hope.
My beliefs help me identify where I am,
who I am, where I am going, and how I will get there.
Healthy spirituality never dodges the tough bullets of grief.
It never diminishes my worth and never dismisses my feelings.
My relationship with God
leaves me plenty of time and space
to wander and to ponder.
There is room to be angry, with the encouragement to receive anger's gift
rather than be seduced by its rage.
I can connect with my guilt,
yet welcome forgiveness that restores.
My loneliness is embraced through religious community or context,
ritual, sacrament and prayer (or whatever fits with your traditions).
Grief's anonymity ("Doesn't anyone understand?")
is embraced by a God
sometimes perceived to be distant and inaccessible,
who still knows me by name!

-- Reverend Richard Gilbert, M.Div. in "Like Connecting with an Old Friend"
Bereavement Magazine, January/February 2002








Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Wednesday's Woe - The Great Grief Brings The Great Battle








Wednesday's Woe


The Great Grief Brings The Great Battle



I am blown away by the pain of another

Grieving Mother.

Pain interred, pain incurred,

Pain endured, pain insured,

becomes pain inured.

Facing death all day long,

not just death, death of our child,

our precious one.


How do we deal with pain 24/7/365,

year in year out,

not just pain,

the worst pain...

A pain that is "flesh-eating," as it

eats at your heart, always gnawing,

ever tearing, breaking, wrenching,

until it feels you must have no heart left,

except that... it is...

for it still hurts.


Its flesh cannot be destroyed

because this parent's heart ever loves,

even when the child isn't here to love,

it goes on loving.


And yet the pain continues to

masticate, crunch, grip, rip, tear,

no matter how masticated, pulverized,

decimated, ripped, torn, beaten, shorn,

the heart will not stop,

the heart will not give up the loving...

No matter the pain, no matter the hurt,

no matter the pulverization,

no matter the debilitation,

no matter the exhaustion,

no matter the brokenness,

no matter the dysfunctional life,

no matter others' expectations,

no matter...

Love goes on, the heart keeps loving.


Yet the pain is unrelenting...

until it has to stop...

but not here...never here...

not until...

Heaven...

when the Great Physician says,


"Stop.

There will be no more death,

or dying, or grief, or tears...or pain."


And on that final day,

the heart will know,

Love Wins.




*****



Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea. I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifully dressed for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying,


“Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and He will dwell with them. They will be His people, and God Himself will be with them and be their God. He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death, or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.”

He who was seated on the throne said,

“I am making everything new!”

Then He said,

“Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true.”

He said to me:

“It is done. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End. To the thirsty I will give water without cost from the spring of the water of life. Those who are victorious will inherit all this, and I will be their God and they will be my children..."


~Revelation 21:1-7 (capitalizations mine)










Picture - Thanks to http://HoangNguyen.cgsociety.org/gallery/464305/
Poem - The Great Grief Brings The Great Battle - Angie Bennett Prince - 9/17/10
Scripture from New International Version, 2010