1 mins
‘I Was A Tree’
I am a retired Church of Scotland minister and 92 years of age.
Originally I had tried to make this a song to the tune of O Waly Waly but it ended up as nine verses and can only be regarded as a poem. I sung it at two churches and was surprised by the demand for words. Would Life and Work readers be interested in it? I appreciate it’s very simplistic, but it is from my heart.
I Was A Tree
I was a tree in Galilee,
My green leaves grew abundantly,
There birds did sing as they flew free,
And children laughed as they climbed on me.
Cartoon: Bill McArthur
Men cut me down and stripped me bare,
No sound of birdsong filled the air,
They made a rugged cross of me,
Carted me to a hill called Calvary.
Day by dày men died on me,
They cursed the air, they even cursed me,
It was a dreadful place to be,
That evil hill called Calvary.
Men took me down from Calvary,
There a blood-stained man awaited me,
With his touch I remembered I was a tree,
Together we stumbled towards Calvary.
They nailed that broken man to me,
A false Messiah they claimed was he,
A crown of thorns adorned his head.
‘Father forgive them’. were the words he said.
All day he hung there nailed to me,
A dying man for all to see,
He bowed his head and as he died,
A spear was thrust into his side.
They. took us down, this man and me,
Friends bore him away from Calvary,
They left me there, as his blood dried,
A dying thief on either side.
Some three days on, the word was spread,
That he had risen from the dead, I know it’s true, it’s plain to see,
Someone Divine was nailed to me.
I’m ashes now, no more a tree,
Men made a cruel cross of me,
But my Spirit cries to the heavens above,
‘I’m now the sign of the Saviour’s love’.
Hamish G Smith, Letham, Angus
This article appears in the January 2022 Issue of Life and Work
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This article appears in the January 2022 Issue of Life and Work