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Soul
Sculpture
taken from the book
Soul Sculpture
by E.F. & Lillian Harvey
Harvey Christian Publishers
3107 Hwy 321
Hampton, TN 37658
(423) 768-2297
No heart but that of a parent
can know the strange conflict of emotions–joy and awe–as the
new mother takes into her arms for the first time that little
bundle of life. As she gazes into the eyes of her babe, she
must, if at all serious-minded, feel a sense of grave responsibility
in that she has been entrusted with the greatest of tasks.
Jointly
with the father she is to shape this immortal soul into a
thing of beauty or baseness; into a force for good or evil;
and towards
a destiny in heaven or in hell. Every act of her life from
this moment is a chiseling influence upon that piece of living
marble.
She is the sculptress of a soul.
The thought is
by no means a new one. Many authors, both in poetry and prose have
used various pictures to convey the same sentiment. To Bessie
Chandler in this poem, it was the pruning of the gardener.
Soul-Gardening
“O,
my child, my pure and perfect man-child,
With the light of heaven in your eyes,
And your yellow hair like glory resting
O’er a face so angel-sweet and wise!
O my child, I hold your hand and tremble
When I think of all that you must meet
On the way, where there is naught to guide you
Save my clouded eyes and stumbling feet.
Is the gardener not appalled and daunted
When he sees but leafless twigs, and knows
That within the bare brown thing there slumbers
Waiting for his waking hand, the rose?
So I fear from fingers all unskillful
Some rude touch your perfect growth may mar;
If the pruning knife slips but a little,
You must carry all your life the scar.
O, my child, unknown, unconscious currents
Meet and mingle in your young warm blood!
So, God help me, when your soul shall blossom,
And–God help me should I blight its bud.”
The same
thought is again expressed by a well-known writer, J.H. Hunter:
“The other day I saw a barricade
erected on the sidewalk around a newly-laid piece of cement that it
might have time to dry and harden before being used by pedestrians.
But someone had inadvertently ‘put his foot in it.’ We have all seen
these clearly defined footprints in the sidewalk, made when the
cement was soft, and hardened at last into an indelible print to
remain for all time. It was not a mark placed there maliciously,
on his own business that he did not heed anything else beside but
left
a mark that remains. The hard surface tells nothing more of his
coming and his going save that one marring print that will endure
as long as the sidewalk itself.
“There
are many souls in the world that bear the marks of blundering
feet. How easy
it is to leave a mark on a young life by a blundering foot. It is
not a deliberate wound that is inflicted. Just some slighting
remark, some expression of a youthful idea or ideal, the
faith or
exuberance of youth made light of, a generous love thwarted by
someone intent on airing his own views and too ignorant of the
sensitive, plastic nature with which he deals to know that he is
leaving a lifelong scar. Ridicule, an example of irreverence,
a
coarse jest, may leave a disfiguring mark on some soul that time
will never efface. Let us take heed to our blundering
feet lest we
fall ourselves or, worst of all, cause another to stumble.”
Sad to say,
some parents do fail in their God-entrusted task. Such tragic
failure is graphically expressed in the following poem:
As the Twig
“We,
the youth who shock you so,
Ask, ‘How much did you help us grow?’
You gaze at us with astonishment.
Where were you when the twig was bent?
If you wanted saplings tall and straight,
Why did you wait? Why did you wait?
You gave us bread. Did that atone
For the days and nights we were left alone?
You laughed our heroes from their height
And left them worthless in our sight.
They lost their standards in the dust;
Their weapons dulled with bitter rust.
And when we asked for God, you turned
Our answers back with doubt that burned.
We watched you tempt the hand of fate.
The world plunged into war and hate
In mockery of brother-love;
Nothing on earth, nothing above!
You blame us for skirting danger’s brink-
We want to feel, for we dare not think.
Who asks good fruit from a well-grown tree
Must take the time for husbandry.”
-Gertrude Ryder Bennett
While
walking around a garden one day, a child was asked why
he thought a certain
tree grew crooked. “S’pose somebody must have stepped on it when it
was a little fellow,” was the thoughtful reply.
We pass from
this sobering thought of the danger of marring that precious thing
in our hands to that of the inspiring task that is ours. We may know
that He who has entrusted into our hands the noblest and most
enduring of all labours, will grant the vision to plan and the skill
to shape.
To every mother comes the call to be
An adept in life’s finest artistry-
To mould a plastic to a great design
That will remain forever strong and fine.
The work God gives to motherhood alone
Is like in beauty to His very own;
Which is to bring forth life and make it whole
By weaving all Himself into each soul.”
In no field of
activity can man or woman leave such a lasting monument as when he
or she seeks to impress the mind of a child.
“What if God
should place in your hand a diamond, and tell you to inscribe on it
a sentence which should be read at the last day, and be shown then
as an index of your own thoughts and feelings? What care, what
caution, would you exercise in the selection? Now, this is what God
has done. He has placed before you the immortal minds of your
children, more imperishable than the diamond, on which you are about
to inscribe every day and every hour, by your instructions, by your
spirit, or by your example, something which will remain, and be
exhibited for or against you at the judgement day.” -Dr. Payson
The Planter
“One
man ploughed an open field
And planted winter wheat:
His labour lasted a year – until
The harvest was replete.
Another wanted his work to endure
His lifetime through, and so
He planted a tree of oak, and then
With pride he watched it grow.
Another planted for eternity
And with diligence and manner mild,
He planted a true and noble thought
In the heart of a little child.”
-Wilma Burton
“If
you write upon a paper, a careless hand may destroy it.
“If you write upon parchment, the dust of centuries may gather over
it.
“If you write upon marble, the moss may cover it and the elements
may erase it.
“If you engrave your thoughts with a pen of iron upon the granite
cliff, in the slow revolving years it shall wear away, and when the
earth melts your writing will perish.
“Write them on the heart of a child. There engrave your thoughts and
they shall endure, when the world shall pass away and the stars
shall fall, and time shall be no more. For that heart is immortal
and your words written there shall live all through eternity.”
-Anonymous-
Building Temples
“A
builder builded a temple;
He wrought with grace and skill-
Pillars and groins and arches
All fashioned to work his will.
Men said, as they saw its beauty,
‘It shall never know decay.
Great is thy skill, O builder;
Thy fame shall endure for aye.’
A teacher builded a temple
With loving and infinite care,
Planning each arch with patience,
Laying each stone with prayer.
None praised his unceasing efforts,
None knew of his wondrous plan;
For the temple the teacher builded
Was unseen by the eyes of man.
Gone is the builder’s temple,
Crumbled into the dust;
Low lies each stately pillar,
Food for consuming rust.
But the temple the teacher builded
Will last while the ages roll;
For the beautiful unseen temple
Is a child’s immortal soul.”
-Unknown-
“No orator, no
singer, no artist-worker, is to be compared with the mother who is
carving the image of God in the soul of her little child. No mother
needs long to go out of the household, as if that were an obscure
place. ‘The Gate of Heaven’ is inscribed over every humble family.”
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