Undercover Betrayal

Lessons from the Secret Service scandal;
A Birthday Poem for My 90 Year-Old Great Aunt

Undercover Betrayal
Lessons from the Secret Service scandal

The Secret Service secret lives
(kept secret from their trusting wives)
have been revealed for all to see.
And we should be enraged!

Those Presidential bodyguards
weren’t guarded at that bawdy bar
as Latin women of the night
exposed what makes us blush.

Our national security
was compromised (it seems to me).
For who’s to say what’s said between
two people ‘neath the sheets?

This undercover escapade
meant more than that for which they paid.
Obama’s agents had betrayed
their boss’s confidence.

Beware! All you who choose to cheat.
A broken vow is love’s defeat.
And what is worse, the trust that’s lost
is rarely ever found.

A Birthday Poem for My 90 Year-Old Great Aunt
Reflections in the rearview mirror of life

At ninety there’s no need to slow.
Forget the signs. Just go, go, go!
You’ve earned the right to break the law
and go fast as you can.

On autobahn or interstate,
today’s a day to celebrate.
While glancing at the rearview mirror
you see the hand of God.

In looking back the road of life’s
been marked by mishaps, pain and strife.
Those breakdowns, flats and accidents
gave you much cause to fret.

You lost your mate and found new fears
and in the process cried some tears.
But roadside service soon appeared
to help you journey on.

The Lord was there to rescue you
and tow you so to get you through
those times when you could not go on.
How faithful He has been!

And yes, our Lord will faithful be.
On straightaways and curves, you’ll see.
He’ll guide you to your journey’s end
and lead you safely home.

The above poem is dedicated to my great aunt Betty Watland (who married my maternal grandmother’s brother).

A Tip of the Cap to Fenway Park

A tribute to major league baseball’s oldest stadium;
A Needle in the Clouds

A Tip of the Cap to Fenway Park
A tribute to major league baseball’s oldest stadium

The very week a ship’s doomed voyage
would break a nation’s heart,*
a Boston landmark came to be.
They called it Fenway Park.

That field of dreams became the home
of Bean Town’s summer boys.
A storied place where fans would cheer
and make a lot of noise.

When Honey Fitz tossed out the ball**
on that historic day,
he had no clue his grandson Jack
would lead the USA.

The Triangle and Monster Green
would soon become old friends
to comfort those within the stands
when losses outweighed wins.

A hundred years have come and gone
since Fenway Park began.
And so we celebrate this place
beloved by Red Sox fans.

* Five days after the RMS Titanic sunk in 1912, the historic home of the Boston Red Sox opened.
** John Francis (Honey Fitz) Fitzgerald was the maternal grandfather of John F. Kennedy who (was born in 1917).

A Needle in the Clouds
Celebrating Seattle’s iconic landmark

A needle in a haystack? No!
A needle in the clouds.
A World’s Fair symbol that still draws
Seattle’s airborne crowds.

A half a century has passed
since that orange saucer lay
atop a steel beige pedestal
in rainy skies of gray.

The kid who watched the needle built
was but a boy of ten
who dined within the restaurant
while it would slowly spin.

I’m still amazed (and oh so proud)
to see the Needle stand
now that the wide-eyed little boy’s
a sixty-year-old man.

Beware of Icebergs!

A tragedy of Titanic proportions

They called her a vessel that God couldn’t sink,
a cruise ship that dwarfed all the rest.
A thousand feet tall and 900 feet long.
It was the White Star’s very best.

Titanic they named her. A titan at sea.
More than 2,200 set sail
for the trip of a lifetime (in more ways than one).
A maiden voyage destined for Hell.

An iceberg in-waiting tore open her hull,
a tempter the ship didn’t see.
Too proud to be cautious, she paid pride’s full price
and sank to the depths of the sea.

And so the Titanic provides us the means
to ponder the pride in our lives.
Are we blind to temptations that could take us down?
Do we render such icebergs a guise?

Or do we acknowledge we’re likely to sink
unless we draw nearer to God?
Our choice is not destined. We aren’t ships of fate.
We can choose to steer clear of sin’s fog.

The Master’s Weekend

Recalling a comeback of cosmic proportions;
The Reason for the Season

The Master’s Weekend
Recalling a comeback of cosmic proportions

It appeared as though
there would be no green jacket for the Master this time.
No green palm fronds either (for that matter).
By now they were brittle and brown,
crumpled on Jerusalem’s cobblestone streets.
Had the previous Sunday parade been merely a charade?
One couldn’t help but wonder.

The customary fairway had given way to rough
treatment that was totally out of character
and totally out of bounds.
The Master’s scratch handicap
had been replaced by scars and stripes
inflicted by those whose sinful nature
he willingly embraced.

As the gallery watched,
the Master stumbled through his round.
His stance betrayed his discomfort.
Noticeably off balance, he swung
the shaft of the cross.
Awkwardly grazing the ground,
it fell (as did he).

A bystander was pressed into service quite unexpectedly.
The inexperienced caddy carried the Master’s wood
while he limped in a forward direction
wedged between a twosome of condemned players
who had not survived the cut.

The Master, in obvious pain,
found a smile for his few followers
while grimacing at the leaders.
Ignoring the marshals’ calls to be quiet,
the large disappointed crowd desecrated the silence
with rude remarks.

The Master bent low
trying to read the break he’d been denied.
What had been a “gimmie” before
had become a “why me?”
Feeling forsaken,
the Master scanned the sky (eagle eyed)
hoping (in vain) for divine intervention.
But none was forthcoming.

Having given it his best shot,
he’d reached the end of his round (fully spent).
He finished his course
and he’d kept the faith.

In the process, however, 
he’d humbled himself.
The Master (humiliated)
hung his head motionlessly.

Removed from the viewing area by his handlers,
he was written off as a failure.
His reputation was immediately buried
by analysts and pundits who attested to his demise.

But, those who claimed to know it all
didn’t seem to know the Master’s weekend
was far from over. After all,
Sunday’s final round was yet to be played.

The last day of the event began without fanfare.
By the dawn’s early light
the arrogant leaders enjoyed a leisurely breakfast,
grateful the Master was no longer a contender.
With premature pride
they proceeded to retrieve their sticks (and stones)
with which they had humbled the crowd favorite
earlier in the weekend.

But as the mist evaporated and the fog lifted,
something was amiss.
The course was significantly different
from what the leaders had anticipated.

The Master
(given up for dead the day before)
was back. Furthermore,
he was unstoppable.
His recognizable form left little doubt
why he would not be beaten.

With obvious wounds in his ungloved hand,
the Master waved to those who surrounded the hole
from which the flag (and the stone)
had been removed.

Yes, it was a comeback of cosmic proportions.
The Master reclaimed his green jacket after all.

In a blaze of glory,
wearing his coveted blazer of righteousness,
Jesus inscribed his name in the history book,
defeating death once and for all.
The score had been settled.
His signed card had been verified.

Christ is risen!
He is risen, indeed!

* The Master’s Weekend is dedicated to Pastor Glen D. Cole who died unexpectedly on February 14, 2012 in Sacramento. Glen was my friend and mentor. He loved golf almost as much as he loved his Savior and his family.

The Reason for the Season
How could we ever forget?

The reason for the season
isn’t Peeps and chocolate eggs.
It’s not the Easter bunny’s holiday.
It’s the death-defying miracle
when Jesus (doorknob dead)
left his grave clothes in a heap and walked away.

The reason for the season
finds the cosmos on its toes
in anticipation of what lies ahead.
There’s a whole new world awaiting.
The Creator’s in control
and the proof is that His Son’s no longer dead.

Yes, the reason for the season
calls for more than Sunday church
or a champagne brunch (complete with lemon pie).
It’s the confidence we’re given
(since the stone’s been rolled away)
that our caskets cannot keep us when we die.