The Cold and Painful Visit
The
phone call finally came one day,
A
call
that was expected;
My
younger brother was calling me,
With
pain and grief detected.
Our father
finally died, he said,
After
a long battle of pain;
But when
the end finally arrived,
I
grieved, but could not explain….
Within
a day I arrived in town
And asked
the driver to leave.
I entered
the familiar funeral home
Where
I alone could grieve.
The snow
and ice pierced my body through,
When
outside was deepest cold.
But I
was now alone in this quiet place,
A
place where I could behold…
I found
the room where dear Dad lay,
And approached
the sacred spot;
Could
this really be my father dear,
Could
this have been his lot?
I gazed
into the face of this one
Whom
I loved since I was born;
I lifted
my heart to God above,
In this
place where I could mourn.
Tears
filled my eyes when I pondered
Of days
and years now gone;
I thought
of sunset years and then
I thought
of earliest dawn.
I knew
this dear and rare man
When
I was a little child;
He loved
me and protected me,
This
man so gentle and mild.
Everyone
seemed to love my dad,
And for
my mother he tenderly cared;
He
was sincere, kind and considerate—
This
man, so frail and silver-haired.
The
body was still, no movement made—
I studied
him in my grief;
How could
my dear dad now be dead,
I thought
in disbelief.
Those
happy years of childhood came,
Those
turbulent times of youth. . .
My dad
sought to instill in me
Lessons
of love and truth.
I felt
so empty now inside,
He could
never laugh and talk;
We could
never again have companionship
And could
never take a walk.
I felt
so wretched deep within,
For this
my father was dead.
We never
could have fellowship,
This
earthly road to tread.
A long,
long time I lingered there,
Deep
in sorrow and pain;
For
this my own flesh now was gone—
My tears
I could not refrain.
Outside
the weather was deepest cold—
Winter
prevailed that day.
And coldness
seemed to fill that room
And would
not go away.
I lifted
my heart to my loving God,
For He
alone could understand;
He would
take me home one day
And receive
me in a Better Land.
This
heavenly home knows no death,
For life
and joy and peace
Are things
that fill that blessed place,
But pain
and sorrow will cease.
The raw
and bitter cold continued
And we
barely could drive our car;
Yet the
family gathered for the day
Traveling
from afar.
The burial
day came and went
And I
left my family there.
I traveled
south to a warmer place
And skies
so blue and clear.
I am
now reminded of this time
Of
death, of cold, of tear…
And then
I think of present times
Without
my father near.
Just
as I left the cold and death
And found
a warm place,
So I
will leave this world of death
By
God’s
redeeming grace.
I one
day will find a Home
Where
God’s own warmth and love
Surround
His children eternally
In that
kingdom from above.
The things
I learned when dear Dad died
Linger
within my heart,
For
God in wisdom taught me much—
A wisdom
that death can impart.
Richard Hollerman