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This book contains a collection of poems and sketches inspired by various events and observations in life and the environment. The timespan of the work is around thirty to forty years. The poems have been chronologically arranged.
Come Sit Awhile is a collection of inspirational and perhaps self-help poetry. The poetry explores the metaphysical depths of existence through the author's life experience.
The MINISTRY OF WHOLENESS This is a true story of how God took a little girl on a painful journey to womanhood. It tells of the struggle of a young woman forced to leave school at sixteen to help support the family and after five years of this she finds herself expecting a baby, told to leave the family home and left alone to work and raise the child on her own. It tells of a marriage to a much older man who had two heart attacks and was healed; he didnt have to have surgery. After suffering a broken marriage, two job losses and her home, she returns to her parents place for a while until she gets on her feet again. She returns to her old place of employment and finds a new place to live with her child; she also finds a new relationship with someone she thought she knew God! It was with Jesus His Son and her life goes on a complete spin around toward Him. She speaks openly about continuing her education, entering Bible school and trusting God for the wellbeing of her child and herself, making mistakes along the way. She tells of the people who took time to educate her in the Ministry and show her that her being here on earth was not by chance; it was by Divine appointment, and that all that had happened and would happen would be handled by the Grace of God. It tells of her marriage to an old friend that came with much heartache and pain through which God held her hand as He guided her over and around mountains of all sizes- from problem adult step-children to family and divorce- of forgiveness and remarriage and finally, wholeness in mind and spirit. It tells of her daughter, who at 20, had married and experienced domestic violence for eleven years that was so intense, it ended with a stabbing and her daughter being moved to a safe house; and of a mother who stepped in against the abuse that went on, but not against the family she loved. After a few days of silence she gets the call that resulted in her being landed on the doorstep of the safe house where her daughter had been taken and where God chose to show her suffering; the likes of which she had never seen in her life; the kind that caused little ones to walk around with a look of despair in their eyes and listen to an authority they did not know nor were equipped to handle; the kind that made the woman hate the man who caused this brokenness; the kind of suffering which changed her life forever. It tells of The Lords intervening Power in all the legal issues that followed that could have resulted in her daughter being put into prison and having her children taken away from her; of how He, The Lord, systematically orchestrated things so that she could get to where He required her to be- in His service in this area that breaks His heart every day, and His heart is in pain as He watches one family after another crumble under the various weights that have been hurled at them. She is passionate about Family and firmly believes that although there are so many fractures and breakdowns in the family structures, the One who instituted family in the first place is more than able to attend to all the problems and restore the Family to wholeness in Him- as she is proof of that. She firmly believes that with a few institutions coming on board, husbands, wives and children can come through debilitating circumstances and be made whole. People can be in the same workforce for twenty, thirty, forty years and still work side by side in spite of differences, why cant the family? The workplace has disciplinary hearings and people take heed to warnings; why not in the family? What drives men and women to behave so disgustingly when it comes to the home? Power and control- thats what. Something about the workplace plays itself out in the home causing the unhealthiest of situations; God wants families to be well in body, mind and spirit and each member to fulfil his or her God-given role. Many of the institutions that have been entrusted to attend to the development of people ar
Open your heart to hear God’s voice. God’s mercy is new each morning and gives us a fresh opportunity to find rest and stillness in his presence. Hope Speaks, a 365-day devotional, will stir your hunger to hear God’s voice and experience a deeper, more intimate relationship with him. Written from the perspective of God, each day includes an encouraging devotion, a related Scripture, and a heartening prayer. Meditate on God’s love as he rescues, redeems, and restores your heart, breathing hope into each day.
Pat Harris is a thirty-something postgraduate, unmarried woman at loggerheads with her mother, Phyllis Harris. When Lew Harris, father and husband, dies suddenly. Jealously nurtured venom harbored by both women explodes. The story shows how Pat and Phyllis learn to understand and appreciate each other—the love was always there. Along the way, Pat gives birth to Sasha, sired by an old platonic friend, Clem. They eventually marry when the child is twelve-years-old. Annette, Phyllis' older sister living in Rhode Island, had raised Phyllis since their mother died when they were ages thirteen and nine, respectively. Annette comes to console Phyllis after Lew's death; she leaves abruptly and insulted. Bertie is a good friend of Pat's, a generation older. Other characters that become entwined in the story are Petra and Ruth, who are a lesbian couple, neighbors and friends of Pat and Sasha; Old Arthur, Bertie's seldom-seen ex-huzzband; Bertie's adult children, and Andrew, Phyllis' much-younger boyfriend. [Author bio]Madeline Moore is a third generation Rhode Island woman, a black writer who cannot write “black”. Her point of view has little to do with race. Moore has a forty-year-old daughter, with a Ph.D. Her daughter gives her great pleasure and satisfaction. Madeline Moore has been amicably divorced for more than 20 years. Writing is her passion.