Thursday, November 28, 2019

Hit The Bullseye!

Description of Illustration: illustration from 1881?, French, hit the bullseye, cherubim, ladies no longer in waiting, text "Contract Marriage", contract of marriage, target practice, bow and arrow, full color illustration, cartoon

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"Joy To The World!"

 
Description of Clip Art: black and white retro illustration, cherubim, halos, text "Joy To The World!" music, singing

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Vintage Photo of a Celtic Cross

 
Description of Photograph: black and white vintage photo, grave, graveyard, Celtic cross tombstone, The Irish remember their dead, cemetary

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Sketch of William Shakespeare

Description of the illustration: pen rendering of William Shakespeare, black and white sketch

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Old Photo of Vintage Brass

 
Description of Photograph: black and white vintage photo, brass instrument and musician

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Thursday, November 7, 2019

All Is Not Lost...

All Is Not Lost...
by Susan Coolidge.

In early dawning had come the guest,
And whether from East or whether from West,
The knew not, nor asked, as he stood and bent
At the entrance of the lowly tent:
He had dipped his hand in the bowl of pod,
He had thanked and praised and called it good;
And now between his hosts he sat,
And talked of matters so deep and wise
That Eve looked up from her braiding mat
With wonderment in her beautiful eyes.
"All is not lost," the stranger said,
"Though the garden of God be forfeited;
Still is there hope for the life of man,
Still can be struggle and will and plan,
Still can be strain toward the shining goal
Which trump and becomes his sinewy soul;
Still there is work to brace his thews,
And love to sweeten the hard won way,
And the power to give, and the right to choose,
And-- " he paused; and the rest he did not say.
 

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Black Cat Clip Art


Description of Clip Art: line drawing of black cat, by kathy grimm, text, "God made little black cats. We aren't bad luck and we don't prefer the company of witches, unless they feed us tuna. So please be kind this Halloween! Meow, Meow, Meow, Meow, etc...

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The Snar of Man

 
Description of Clip Art: text, "The Fear of Man Brings A Snar, But he who trusts in the LORD, will be exalted." Proverbs 29:25, shadow on the wall, fearful look, woman terrified, crocked fingers

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The Upper Room...

Description of Illustration: stained glass, Pentecost, descending dove, Holy Spirit, flames, apostles, Mary mother of Jesus

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Quite in The Theater Please!


Description of Clip Art: mother holds a crying infant in a theater seat, disapproving looks, noisy theater, small boy eating loudly in the theater, black and white cartoons
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Monday, October 28, 2019

Shall We Dance?

Description of Clip Art: black and white drawing, couple on the dance floor, illustrate a reminder for a school dance, church evening social etc... in your newsletters and email

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Send a Vintage Salute for A Soldier's Birthday!

Description of Clip Art: vintage salute! puppies dressed in human clothes, puppy parade, drum, flag text "Wishing you the Happiest Birthday of all time!"

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Frame for Fat Tuesday


Description of Clip Art: black and white, small frame, girl with a mask, Mardi Gras, Fat Tuesday, announcements, party, parade, dinner, fill in your own information

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Violin with a small frame

Violin with a small frame for your local event.
Description of Clip Art: greyscale, musical instrument, violin, insert your own text, sample given below, concert or practice announcement online, in a bulletin, newsletter

Sample of how to use the graphic. text "Sunday Night at 7:30"

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Camera rolling...

Description of Clip Art: camera man, old film, making movies, movie night announcements, black and white drawing

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Saturday, October 26, 2019

God Goes With You

 
Description of Clip Art: dark scary house, text "Be strong and courageous. Do not fear or be in dread of them, for it is the LORD your God who goes with you." Deuteronomy 31:6 (ESV)

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God Owns Both Night and Day

 
Description of Clip Art: dark scary house, text "I form the light and create darkness, I bring prosperity and create disaster, I the LORD do all these things." Isaiah 45:7, superimposed pattern

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A bench inside the cemetery...

 
Description of Photograph: text, "When I die, bury me in the grave in which the man of God is buried; lay my bones beside his bones." 1 Kings 13:31, bench in a cemetery, graves, tombstones
 
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Drama Club Clip Art

Description of Clip Art: drama masks, text "Drama Club" and "Libris" and "Art & Literature", use as logo for church or private school Drama Club newsletters, logo, web announcements etc...

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The Burial Procession

Description of Illustration:  black and white illustration of a cemetery, graveyard, tomb stone, mourning crowd, church graves, pick and shovel, carry the coffin, minister, bible, church steeple, greyscale etching
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Friday, October 25, 2019

The Flower Girl

 
Description of Photograph: restored antique photo, flower girl, wedding photograph, large silk rose, eyelet lace dress, old sepia print

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All Saint's Day

All Saint's Day
from Hickes' Devotions

Wake, all my hopes, lift up your eyes
And crown your heads with mirth:
See how they shine beyond the skies,
Who once dwelt on our earth.

Peace, busy thoughts; away, vain cares,
That cloy us here below:
Let us go up above the spheres,
And to each order bow.

Hail, glorious Angels, heirs of light,
The high born sons of fire;
Whose heats burn chaste, whose flames shine bright,
All joy, yet all desire.

Hail, holy Saints, who long in hope,
Long in the shadow sate;
Till our victorious Lord set ope
Heaven's everlasting gate.

Hail, great Apostles of the Lamb,
Who brought that early ray,
Which from our Sun reflected came,
And made our first fair day.

Hail, generous Martyrs, whose strong hearts
Bravely rejoiced to prove,
How weak, pale Death, are all thy darts
Compared to those of Love.  

Hail, blessed Confessors, who died
A death too, love did give;
While your own flesh you crucified,
To make your Spirit live.

Hail, beauteous Virgins, whose chaste love
Renounced all fond desires;
Who wisely fixed your hearts above;
And burnt with heavenly fires.

Hail, all you happy Spirits above,
Who make that glorious ring,
About the sparkling throne of Love,
And there for ever sing.

Hail, and among your crowns of praise,
Present this little wreath,
Which, while your lofty notes you raise,
We humbly sing beneath.

All glory to the sacred Three,
One everliving Lord,
As at the first still may He be
Belov'd, obey'd, adored.

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

An angel on his knees...

 
Description of Illustration: wings, pray, angel, halo, loyal to Christ, black and white line drawing

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Monday, October 21, 2019

Comedy and Tragedy Frieze

Description of Illustration: theater masks, theatre masks, tragedy and comedy masks, greyscale clip art for drama, performance, hand drawn, cherubim, wings

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Sunday, October 6, 2019

At Harvest-Time

"Then He said to His disciples,"The harvest is plentiful,
but the workers are few." Matthew 9:37
       One of the Savior's most solemn parables is concerning the harvest-time of life, of which he says plainly, " The harvest is the end of the world." Throughout the realm of nature this is a cheery, joyous season. On every side the fair earth is yielding her most precious and life-preserving products. The sound of the gleaners cutting, cradling, stacking, and binding the golden grain, the threshers separating wheat and chaff, the sweet breath of garnered hay and corn - the combined gifts of field, orchard, and garden - bring welcome promise of abundance and good cheer for the coming months, when neither sign of leaf nor verdure will show above the frozen and snow-clad earth. So much, ah, so much depends upon the harvest- time ! If the corn-field, the vineyard, and the orchard show but a meager supply as the result of the kind of seed sown in the spring; if meadow and garden yield but indifferently, only partially filling the high lofts and wide bins which should be filled to repletion, how serious the outlook for man and beast! It was for the future - the long, barren months to come - that the farmer plowed, sowed, and planted when the year was young; and if at the end - at harvest-time - an insufficient showing proves lack of care on his part he will share the blame and shame of an unprofitable servant indeed.
       In language so clear that the unlearned and the young can understand, the Savior, in the parable of the wheat and the tares, shows that all along the journey of life mankind are sowing seed of some kind, which at the end of life is going to produce a harvest, the sure outcome of the kind of seed sown. Nature is inflexible in certain results, founded and fixed by the great Creator of nature and her laws. What the farmer sows he will be sure to reap. Never yet since the world began have men gathered grapes from a bush of thorn, or figs from a tuft of thistles. And every one throughout Christendom who is old enough and intelligent enough to read the Bible must know and understand that he occupies the place of a sower who will ultimately reap whatever is sown in the heart as to religious or irreligious belief, as to faith in Christ as a Redeemer, or as to indifference concerning the final condition of the soul. Christian at Work.

Sunday, September 29, 2019

"Harvest-Home"

" HARVEST-HOME" 
by J. Byington Smith

The " harvest-home " we sing with cheer,
Now that abundance crowns the year;
The God of harvests now we praise,
To him our thanks a tribute raise ;
For he our anxious care relieves
While reapers home come bringing sheaves,
Till filled are cellars, barns, and bin,
With harvests which are gathered in.

The seeds, which were by handfuls sown,
Were into richest harvests grown;
And reapers reaped the golden grain
While binders followed in their train,
And wagons each with heavy load
Were seen along the homeward road.

Of old, the reapers of the grain
Over the fields went not again,
But what was left the gleaners had,
So gleaners were with reapers glad;
And reapers, too, must corners leave,
For gleaners also these receive.

This was not something very rare
Of Boaz' field when Ruth was there,
For reapers oft let handfuls fall,
Nor greedy they to gather all;
And well were still this law in force,
And elsewhere in the reapers' course
The handfuls now were lying round
On purpose that they might be found,
Or other reapers be inclined
E'en sheaves of grain to leave behind.

Then all these fruits and ripened grain,
Which often leaves and chaff remain,
Remind that we should let appear
Not leaves alone, but fruit, each year,
And store the soul and heart and brain
Not just with chaff, but ripened grain.

And as by fruits we each are known,
Sow seeds from which the fruits are grown;
And if not known by dress we wear,
But rather by the sheaves we bear,
Should gather up some sheaves each day,
And waste not precious lives away ;
And be prepared, like shocks of corn,
To hail the resurrection mom,
That when for us the reapers come,
Angels shall shout the " harvest-home."

Harvest Home Service

HARVEST-HOME SERVICE. 
Historical.

       The early history of the Hellenic races often brings out the fact that, though professing descent from the gods, they are found in possession of customs belonging to an older civilization. Our veneration for the fathers of New England must not allow us to suppose that they created an institution wholly new. The Mayflower had for its passengers liberty-loving Englishmen, separated only so far as conscience commanded from their native land. The seed of many an organism, ecclesiastical, civil, and social, often thought to have been original, they brought with them, to be planted in a new soil and developed in its environment as a new variety. While we forget not the seed, those new conditions had a force, rarely enough considered, in determining their action in church and state, in which opinions and practices, which some professed to love still as they left old England, seem to have been lost at sea.
       It is an undisputed fact that the thanksgiving day which the English colonists brought with them to Plymouth, Salem, Boston, and Hartford was a religious day, not of annual recurrence, but proclaimed, as occasion arose, for victories, rains, harvests, and all providential deliverances. This thanksgiving day they had observed in England. The Puritans, when forced to give up the keeping of Christmas, Easter, and saints' days on account of the sacrilege attending them, chose fast and thanksgiving days in their stead, and consecrated them entirely to holy uses. They spent the time in their churches. It was a Sabbath. There was no feasting, nor any family gathering. So if you think the Pilgrims were altogether a "solemn folk," remember that they developed our Thanksgiving day out of this strictly religious day of their fathers. It is our purpose briefly to show how this transformation came about.
       In the autumn of 1621 the Pilgrims had their first holiday season. The occasion is so important that the passage from Mourt's "Relation" is given in full:

       "Our harvest being gotten in, our Governor sent four men on fowling, that so we might after a more special manner rejoice together, after we had gathered the fruit of our labors, they four in one day killed as much fowl, as with a little help beside, served the Company almost a week, at which time amongst other Recreations, we exercised our Arms, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and amongst the rest their greatest King Massasoyt, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed fine Deer, which they brought to the Plantation and bestowed on our Governor, and upon the Captain and others. And although it be not always so plentiful, as it was at this time with us, yet by the goodness of God, we are so far from want, that we often wish you partakers of our plenty."

       This has been generally termed the "first autumnal Thanksgiving day " in New England -- the inauguration of the harvest festival. That it was a harvest festival cannot be disputed, but the passage itself shows that it was not a day of religious thanksgiving to God, such as they observed at other times. It was not a day set apart for worship, but a whole week of festivity. No religious service is spoken of, and it is doubtful if any was held, other than their customary morning devotions. The Sabbath exercises which bounded the week might have been specially permeated with a thanksgiving spirit, but this season was not ordered as were thanksgiving days. The Pilgrims had come to Plymouth as a church, and as such they followed the practices of separatist congregations in England. They named thanksgiving days by a vote of the church. There the authority was originally vested in all the New England colonies, though at an early date it was, for convenience, transferred to the State - first to the General Court and afterward to the governor and council; in Connecticut to the court in 1639 and to the governor and magistrates as well in 1655. Prior to 1639, in Connecticut Colony, the Hartford and Windsor churches appointed their own days. In 1638 Windsor kept Wednesday, October 3d, Hartford, Thursday, October 4th. Until the time of Governor Andros it was the prerogative of the churches through their ministers to move the civil authorities for the appointment of a Thanksgiving day; but the royal governor took the matter into his own hands, and royal governors since have followed his example. We cannot imagine the church of John Robinson moving for the keeping of Plymouth's festival week as a religious service. They would surely have been shocked at recreations during a religious season. Bradford relates how, on the Christmas day following, most of the new-comers excused themselves from going to work from conscientious scruples, whom the governor found at noontime "pitching ye bare" and "playing at stoole-ball." He thereupon confiscated their "implements" and bade them keep their houses if they made the keeping of the day "a matter of devotion," in which action he mirthfully justified himself by the claim that it "was against his conscience that they should play and others work." It was this very mingling of sports with religious services that they had condemned in England. They would not have tolerated ball-playing on one of their religions thanksgiving days; but we have no doubt the governor himself and the doughty captain, after having been satisfied with goodly venison, watched approvingly the victors in games of stoole-ball during that festival week. Those who say this was the "first autumnal Thanksgiving day" need not be so hard on those who prefer foot-ball to stoole-ball. The Pilgrims did not keep it as such, but they were unconsciously inaugurating influences which would eventually transform the character of their ecclesiastical thanksgiving day.
       The theory has been advanced by some that this festival week was suggested by the " Feast of Ingathering" known in Jewish history. All harvest festivals, whether among Christians or heathens, must be the same in essence. Only in respect to its intent and duration could this of Plymouth be compared to that in which worship and sacrifice were the burden of its ritual. John Robinson makes an extended reference to the Jewish feast as kept by Ezra, and finds only a solemn religious character attaching to it. The Pilgrims would not have patterned a festival after that and omitted its essential religious features. They were not cutting their cloth after any ancient fashion-plate.
       It is more probable that this festival week had a kinship to the harvest-home of England. The gathering in of the harvest was the main thought in the celebration; so it had been in England. It corresponded in point of duration. Richard Carew, in his "Survey of Cornwall," says of the English harvest festival, "Neither doth the good cheer wholly expire (though it somewhat decrease) but with the end of the week." There was no bringing home, with much ceremony, from the field, of the last shock of corn, fantastically arrayed in brilliant finery; no "blessing of the cart" or "kissing of the sheaves"; no harvest-song so familiar in the fatherland. 

Here's a health to the barley-mow ;
Here's a health to the man
Who very well can
Both harrow and plow and sow.

       They had no taste for ceremonies, and their surroundings in the wilderness were not suitable for them. Still they exhibited the worthier and more sensible elements of their English harvest-home. The master and servant had the old-time fellowship at the feast, and the new-time guest, with his royal crown of eagle feathers, was a most fitting lord of such forest bounty. Their "hockey-cake" was of the proper sort, and the goose, if not of aristocratic lineage, was much to their liking. Surely if this occasion is to be judged by analogy it had affinities with old England. But it seems most likely that this harvest celebration - though it may have been suggested by harvest customs in their native land - arose naturally in the midst of their circumstances as the occasion demanded. It was an inspiration. Its significance is rather in its idea.
       Herein is the charm of that festivity: it displays the brighter side of our forefathers' characters. Religion had its place, but they were not averse to recreations and amusements. They looked with sad concern, no doubt, upon the mature faces of their children, and sought to cheer them by joining them at play. That festival week was the first time they had dared to take from their labors for merrymaking. The grand hunt of the four prime shots was an event. The muster of the military, before the admiring eyes of wives and sisters, was an appropriate laudation of soldierly duty. Hospitality to their Indian friends was a winsome lesson to those savage hearts. So the Pilgrims, because they believed in social pleasures, from their poverty of time kept that royal feast.
       There was something prophetic of the Thanksgiving dinner of their descendants in the occasion. The provisions must have been bountiful, for there were about one hundred and forty persons, including the ninety of Massasoit's company, who were entertained for three days. Rare opportunity was afforded the Pilgrim mothers of the households, into which the colonists were divided, for the arts of cooking. All had their share of the supplies. Various kinds of sea-food were at hand ; oysters the Indians brought them as desired. Ducks of the choicest varieties, highly prized by the epicures of the present day; geese that would have done honor to the Michaelmas feast of England; game of tempting flavor, from roasted venison to broiled partridge; and, above all - facile princeps of the New England feast -  the turkey, of which they found a great store in the forest, and which they thus early crowned queen of their bounty, to which their descendants have been loyal, if they have failed to imitate them in other respects - these all garnished their tables throughout the harvest week. Kettles, skillets, and spits were overworked, while thus their pewter plates, spoons, knives, and skewers, which were kindly assisted by their fingers, made merry. Nor were these meats without the company of the barley-loaf and the cakes of Indian meal more highly prized than wheat-fed millions can imagine. As to the abundance of their vegetables we have the poetic testimony of the governor himself - for his excellency wrote poetry, the lines of which were measured, not by dactylic or iambic feet, but by the twelve-inch rule;

"All sorts of grain which our own land doth yield
Was hither brought, and sown in every field;
As wheat and rye, barley, oats, beans and pease
Here all thrive, and they profit from them raise.
All sorts of roots and herbs in gardens grow -
Parsnips, carrots, turnips, or what you'll sow,
Onions, melons, cucumbers, radishes,
Skirrets, beets, cole worts, and fair cabbages."

       They had a taste, too, for what they called "sallet herbs," and the pumpkins climbed their cornstalks as they have ever since. Wild grapes they had, and we can almost detect the smack when we read their words "very sweete and strong," whose sweetness might have added strength on opportunity. The fact is that, though we know so little of the home life of the Pilgrims, we know enough to warrant that their harvest festival was worthy of its Indian guests, and altogether creditable to their descendants.
       The occasion was unique, and not in itself adapted to be perpetuated in such proportions. As the peach-tree puts forth its tinted bloom before its abiding foliage, so this harvest festival, which was not the Puritan thanksgiving day, was the bursting into life of a new institution, the promise of autumnal feasts to come.  by Rev. W. De Loss Love in Religious Herald.

Wednesday, June 26, 2019

"Son thy sins be forgiven thee..."

Description of Illustrated Stained Glass: text, "Son thy sins be forgiven thee . . ." Mark 2:5, Jesus speaks with the paralyzed man, friends, miracles of Jesus, stained glass design, transparent background

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Wishing You . . . for the holidays

Christmas bauble in black, "Wishing You . . . "
Description of Clip Art: text, "Wishing You . . . ", hanging Christmas ornament, pine branches, comes in multiple colors: blue, gold, green and red

Christmas bauble in blue, "Wishing You . . . "

Christmas bauble in gold, "Wishing You . . . "

Christmas bauble in green, "Wishing You . . . "

Christmas bauble in red, "Wishing You . . . "

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Advertise Your Corn Maze

Description of Clip Art: text, "Corn Maze" sheaf of wheat, stalks, transparent background, black and white silhouette, superimpose your own time, date, and place with white text

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Dinner and Dancing Event


Description of Clip Art: couple dancing, text "Dinner & Dancing" or without text, formal event, Anniversary, nostalgic, greyscale


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"Books To Read" Banner

Description of Clip Art: text, "Books to Read" , illustrated books, banner, title, black and white

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Sunday, May 12, 2019

Hands Bound Plus Scriptures

"Then they came to the place of which God had told him;
 and Abraham built the altar there and arranged the wood,
 and bound his son Isaac and laid him on the altar,
on top of the wood." Genesis 22:9
Description of Clip Art: black and white drawing of hands bound with rope, Three scripture references 
"As for you, son of man, they will put ropes
 on you and bind you with them so that you cannot
 go among them." Ezekiel 3:25
"...and they bound Him, and led Him
 away and delivered Him to
Pilate the governor." Matthew 27:2
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Saturday, May 11, 2019

"The LORD is my Shepherd" Title

Description of Clip Art: illuminated letters, floral boarders Bible Reference "The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want." Psalm 23:1

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Sunday, March 3, 2019

Faith Demonstrated In Birds...

An English writer tells this incident and draws from it the lessons that follow:

       The other day I was passing through a London square, and noticed a little girl feeding some pigeons. Quite a number were fluttering around her, some getting more, some less, of what she had to give them. But one, bolder than the rest, had settled on her wrist, and was getting his supply direct from the basin she was holding in her hand. Needless to say, that pigeon got the most of all.
       Instinctively I thought of the verse: "Let us come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need" (Heb. 4:16). But there was something else besides boldness that the bird possessed; although only a pigeon, it certainly showed faith in the good will of the little girl. Whether she had been there on the same errand before I can not say, as I very seldom pass that way; but it was evident that it regarded her as a child to be trusted, and one who would not do a feathered friend any harm. Thus, while its companions got comparatively little, this one, by reason of its faith combined with boldness, received all it could appropriate in the time. It had no need to plead with the pathetic look of its eye; it simply realized its need, and recognizing the means of supplying it, gladly availed itself of it.

Life Purpose

       A story is told of Rubens that during his sojourn as ambassador to the Court of Philip in Spain, he was detected at work upon a painting by a courtier, who, not knowing much about his true fame, exclaimed in surprise, "What! does an ambassador to his Catholic Majesty amuse himself with painting pictures?" "No," replied Rubens, "the painter sometimes amuses himself with diplomacy."

"The serious business of life is the producing of a good character; all else is pastime."

These noble ambitions for a true life are put in verse by H. H. Barston:

To face each day of life
Nor flinch from any task;
To front the moment's strife
And only courage ask.
To be a man unawed
By aught but heaven's command;
Tho men revile or plaud.
To take a stand - and stand.

To fill my life with toil,
With God's free air and light;
To shun the things that spoil,
That hasten age and night;
To sweat beneath my hod,
Nor ask a better gift
From self or man or God
Than will and strength to lift.

To keep my spirit sweet
Tho head and hand be tired;
Each brother man to greet,
Nor leave him uninspired;
To keep my spirit fed
On God unceasingly,
That none may lack his bread
Who walk this way with me.

Grapes for Communion Themes

A greyscale cluster of grapes for communion themes.
Description of the Graphics: large cluster of grapes in purple and green colors, leaves and stems, greyscale, for communion themes

A purple cluster of grapes for communion themes.
A green cluster of grapes for communion themes.

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Sunday, February 24, 2019

Clip Art of Fate...

Description of Clip Art:  black and white clip art of "Fate", he stands with a sword, cloaked, his face is covered, hand-drawn, fists, white background

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Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Jesus, Second Coming Of...

       In Venice stands a very beautiful monument, a pyramid of marble, in which lie the mortal remains of a little child. By the door stands a sculptured angel resting one hand on the door-latch, and holding in the other hand a trumpet, and himself peering intently into the distant heaven; while carved upon the door is the inscription: "Till He Comes."

       Such a monument is the institution of the Lord's Supper. Such an expectancy is appropriate to the soul. Such a lesson of patient waiting is not amiss. Such a readiness to respond to the last call were becoming even to the busy.

"Til He Comes" sung by the Vocal Union at Otter Creek Church.
Words are here too.