Saturday, 2 April 2016

Alphabet Soup


A is for Aphids
I'll take them some tea
Dad says if you get them
you treat them, you see

B is for Bin
bottomless and black
if you throw me in there
I shall never come back

C is for Cabbage
its colour is green
but it's not ozone friendly
and smells quite obscene

G is for God
who lives up in the sky
He'll tell you He loves you
but He won't tell you why

M is for memory
And mine is quite bad



Photo by Nick Harris on Flickr


Creative Commons License
Alphabet Soup by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Tuesday, 26 January 2016

If God was a woman

If God was a woman, just what would he be?
Would he vainly go shopping for perfumery?
Would he think of his waistline while making the tea?
And spend all his hours watching daytime TV?

If God was a man, would he stay in his bed?
Would he claim he was sick, that he had a sore head?
Would he grouch in the evenings until he'd been fed?
Would he argue, and fight you, whatever you said?

If God was a child, just what would he lack?
Would he throw childish tantrums and turn the skies black?
And what if you sinned? Would he get his own back?
Would he stand there defiant and give you a smack?


If God was a boss, would he earn a huge stack?
If you asked for a raise, would he feign heart attack?
If his angels were late, would he give them the sack?
Would he play on the golf course, be late coming back?

No, God's not like a child, or a woman or man.
He understands all of us more than we can,
In spite of our faults he loves us the same,
That's the reason he sent Jesus to take all our blame.


Photo by Charles Clegg on Flickr

Steve Wheeler © 26 January, 2016 

Tuesday, 19 January 2016

Touched by a song

It was one of those balmy, late summer evenings, and several of us had made the trip up by minibus to the final day of the Bromyard Folk Festival. I had made the short journey from the Royal Air Force base at Credenhill (now the SAS headquarters) near Hereford, accompanied by half a dozen RAF apprentices who were all about the same age as me.  I had just left school, and had recently celebrated my 16th birthday, and it was early September 1973. I wans't in the RAF myself, but my father was, and we had just arrived back in the UK from a two year posting in Maastricht, Holland. I hadn't had more than a few weeks to acclimatise myself to my new surroundings, and was adjusting to life back in England.

My parents, both strong Christians, had always encouraged me - but never forced me - to attend their church services. I had reluctantly tagged along, as often as I had to, in order to lead a quiet life at home. Church was tedious to me, and I hadn't really thought about God as a friend, or a Father. Instead, I thought of him as 'something to believe in if you need a name to call out to when you get into trouble, or when you face problems you can't handle yourself.'

As I sat on the grass in the corner of the marquee along with dozens of other young people, we watched a small procession of bands and artistes perform on the primitive stage. The final act, a hairy three piece acid-folk rock band, walked onto the stage and I began to take a little more notice. They were different. They were called Parchment, and the song that hit me straight between the eyes was a song that, although I was unaware of it at the time, had already enjoyed some recent British chart success. The song that touched me was Light up the Fire.



As Sue MacLelland, John Pac and Keith Rycroft belted out the anthem, the words caused me to reflect on my life, and the direction I had chosen to take. When the words 'Open the door, let Jesus return', sank in, I began to realise that if Jesus did return at that moment, I would definitely not be ready for Him. Due to my Christian upbringing, I knew what the Bible had to say about Heaven and Hell, sin and forgiveness. But I wasn't sure whether I belonged to God or not. Who was I? What was my purpose in life? In fact, I'd never really examined my life in those terms before. I suddenly wanted to be certain, wanted to know that I belonged, but I didn't really know how or understand why. A wave of quiet panic began to wash over me, and I began to fall under the conviction of the Holy Spirit. For the remaining hour or so of the concert, I can recollect very little, except a distinct feeling of uncertainty and confusion in my life.

Driving back after the event, I sat in the front of the minibus, alongside the driver, a mature Christian man called Hugh Gascoyne, who also happened to be one of the trainers of the group of RAF apprentices who were sat in the back seats. As they larked about, singing noisily and telling off-colour stories and jokes behind me, Hugh started talking to me about the events of the night. At one point he remarked to me that it was good to belong to God. I nodded my sheepish agreement, but began to realise that perhaps I didn't belong to God after all. I had been born into a Christian family, but that didn't make me a Christian, anymore than walking into a garage would make me a car. God doesn't have any grandchildren, I knew.

That very night, I walked up to my room, knelt down by my bedside, and asked God to change my life, and to make sure that I belonged to him. That was the night it all changed for me. From that moment on, I began to embark on a new course in life, and started playing music that was aimed at spreading the Good News of Jesus Christ. I became a music evangelist. This blog will document the years that followed.

Creative Commons License
Touched by a song by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Monday, 15 May 1995

No surprise

Photo from Wikimedia Commons

He hangs
He dies,
You live
Your lies.
He speaks
The truth,
You ask
For proof.
He bleeds,
He cries,
You compromise.
He knocks
Your door, 
And you
Ignore.
He pays 
The price,
You throw
The dice.
No surprise...

Snake eyes.



Steve Wheeler © 15 May, 1995

Wednesday, 15 May 1991

When He Returns


When He returns
goalkeepers will be saved
and rugby players
will be converted
cricketers will be bowled over
boxers will be knocked out
and golfers will be made (w)hole.

When He comes back
judges will be convicted
juries will make decisions
policemen will see the evidence
and prisoners will be released.

When He comes in
doctors will be healed
and midwives will be delivered
teachers will learn the truth
and politicians will speak it.

When He returns
Gardeners will turn over a new leaf 
and dustmen will be cleansed
shopkeepers will ring the changes
and cleaners will be ... cleaner.

All this will come to pass
when He returns.


Photo by Alan Wu on Flickr

Sunday, 13 May 1984

Insomnia



Midnight
but the sleep won't come.

Static
between the channels
on the bedside radio
as in some far off place
announcers tell us
what's on 
their late night minds

The city never sleeps,
they say.
Perhaps that's why
it looks so tired
most of the time.
Perhaps that's why
the urban weariness
stretches to touch me
on every 
street corner.

Red tail-lights
sketch their progress
through the neon jungle
and paint kaleidoscopes
upon my bedroom wall

and the night shift
begins.

Still the heart
but the mind fights on
with a million thoughts
cascading, colliding
as they roll,
rock and roll.

When
finally
sleep comes
I am
at last
alone.


Photo by Wonderlane on Flickr


Creative Commons License
Insomnia by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

Wednesday, 1 February 1984

Mountains


I am told
that without love
I am a sounding brass
making noise
but no sense.

But without you
there is no brass
to sound upon.

I am told 
that if I move mountains
but have no love
I am nothing.

But the mountain of your love
has moved me

and I am something.



Photo by Empathictrust on Wikimedia Commons

Creative Commons License
Mountains by Steve Wheeler was written in Plymouth, England and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.