Bookends

Dear woman friend reading this, Precious is still missing. The shepherd asked Arnold to go look for her. I hope that with his eagle eyes, he can find her quickly. If you are new here and don’t know, Arnold is an eagle. He assists the shepherd in caring for the flock, especially because he can fly and has those eagle eyes.

I need to go back out and help search but first, I need to ask you a question: do you remember what bookends are? In this day of e-readers, we don’t see bookends very often. They are a pair of identical objects placed one at each end of a row of books to keep the books from falling over. Libraries sometimes still use them.

Today’s post is a bookend of sorts. The last post provided a starting point for the next several posts. Today’s post gives an idea of where we will end this group of posts. Click on the link below and take a listen.

https://youtu.be/uCYF5jUs6aw

I need to go back and join the search for Precious…What was that scream?! ‘Bye, friend, I need to see what’s going on.

A Sneak Peek

Dear woman friend reading this, I am not going to do a full post today. Precious, the rabbit, is missing. The shepherd is out searching for her now.

Meanwhile, I want to give you a sneak peek of upcoming posts, Lord willing.

Click on the link below for a hint.

I must go join the shepherd in searching.

‘Bye!

Pasture Pow-Wow and Dreams of the Future

Hi, Little One. Come sit beside me. Hi, Precious. That’s right. Snuggle up and be comfy. We need to have a pasture pow-wow. Where’s Cassie? There she is. Cassie! C’mon over! We need a pasture pow-wow. I could call it a staff meeting but I think pasture pow-wow sounds better. Oh, Cassie, you have so much energy. I wish some of it would rub off on me.

What, what are you doing, Cassie? Oh, you’re rubbing your face against mine trying to rub some of your energy off on me. You’re so sweet!

Has anyone seen Arnold? Whooosh! There he is! Everyone is here now. Let’s begin.

First of all, how do you like the new pasture? What new pasture, you ask? You didn’t notice we’re in a new pasture? I think that’s a compliment to the platform. Migration of our blog went so smoothly. Thanks, WordPress!

Now I know we haven’t published a lot. But we have a new address to make it easier for our friends to find us and a new year, a fresh start.

Let’s dream a little. What adventures do you think your shepherd might have planned for this new year?

Yes, Cassie, bungee jumping off Arnold’s back while he’s flying would be an adventure but I don’t think that it’s a good idea.

Yes, Little One, your shepherd could be planning to take you white water rafting on the Colorado River. That would be an adventure. But I’m thinking of something different.

Maybe calling it an adventure is the wrong word. Anyway, let’s dream about the future. How do you think your shepherd might want us to help our friends this year? What do you think your shepherd might want to help our friends learn this year?

Whoops! Precious! What are you doing? Why are you trying to crawl down my neck? Let’s just sit here on my lap for a while, ok?

As I was saying, let’s dream about the future for a bit. What can we do to help our…Aaack! Precious! What is wrong, little bunny? Why do you keep trying to hide when I mention the future?

Ohhh. I get it. You’re trying to crawl down my neck because you’re afraid of what the future might hold, aren’t you?

Precious, our precious little bunny, you are precious to all of us and especially to your shepherd. He won’t do anything to harm you. You can trust him with the future.

Whooosh! Arnold! Where are you going? Ok, Cassie. You’re an energetic baby goat and just can’t sit still any longer. Little One! Come back!

Well, Precious, looks like it’s just you and me. Let’s enjoy this beautiful day and dream of how we can help our friends this year.

Dear woman friend reading this, I was scared of the future, too, when I moved this blog to a different host, sort of.

I had read and been advised that getting a blog with an easy-to-remember address was crucial to growing the number of visitors to the site.

But what about the cost? And the maintenance? I’m not tech savvy enough to reprogram the page if the code gets messed up.

When I moved the blog to a free WordPress account, I thought that it would be an easy migration in the future when I needed to move it to a paid account. I wanted to use WordPress because I am familiar with it and migrating from a free account to a paid account within the same company sounded like the easiest way to go.

Christmas gifts covered nearly all of the cost of the new blog, it was so easy I did it on my cellphone sitting in the car in a grocery store parking lot, and the whole thing took only about fifteen minutes.

I just wasn’t expecting the future to arrive as quickly as it did!

It’s always been hard to think of what to write. Some bloggers plan out their topics weeks in advance. I’ve tried and never succeeded.

I’ve had the idea that I had to feel a certain way before I started writing and as I began or I wasn’t writing what God wanted me to write.

I’m used to teaching kids. I don’t want to sound like I think you are seven years old. You’re a grown woman, not a child.

And I definitely don’t want to sound preachy!

So…I rarely put up posts.

So, dear woman friend, I can understand your fear as you face your future. Oh I know. Writer’s block on a blog doesn’t begin to compare to what you are facing.

But, as Corrie ten Boom said, we don’t have to be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God.

The big question is, do you know Him? Do you know God? I refer to Him as the Shepherd in this blog. Shepherd with a capital “s” as opposed to the lowercase “s” I use when referring to Little One’s shepherd.

When I say, “know God “, I’m not asking if you know about God. I’m asking if you know Him. As in having a relationship with Him.

It’s possible, you know. And God wants this relationship with you so much that He gave His Son to make it possible.

But a one-sided relationship doesn’t work too well. You have to want it, too.

How about it? Would you like to have this relationship?

Let’s hang out together here in the pasture and I’ll tell you more about this relationship.

See you next time!

Who Are Cassie and Precious?

Dear woman reading this,  who are Cassie and Precious? I may have introduced Cassie to you some time ago but Precious is brand new.

Cassie is a baby goat.  If you have spent as much time as I have on YouTube watching baby goat videos, you have a pretty good idea what Cassie is like.  If Cassie had a theme song, it would be “Happy Rhythm” recorded by the Cathedrals and also by Ernie Haase and Signature Sound and probably by others.  I don’t know who originally wrote the words and music but I get the idea the song has been around for a lot of years. Sometime, search YouTube for one of those groups singing that song.

Precious is a rabbit.  She has issues we probably will find out about in the future but she was purchased by a family and then rejected and brought to the pasture because she didn’t lay colored Easter eggs.

Let’s see how Precious is doing in the pasture.

Did you just hear a scream and see something fly past us? Cassie! Little One! What’s going on?

Arnold! Over here! Arnold always makes a grand entrance just because of his sheer size! He’s one big bird!

Arnold,  did you hear that scream? Do you know what happened?

Here comes The Shepherd carrying Precious and she looks terrified.

Arnold,  she looked at you and screamed.

Oh. I get it.  Eagles are a rabbit’s natural enemies.  She’s certain you will carry her off in your talons.

Shh! The Shepherd is speaking to Precious in a quiet, gentle voice. Notice how he isn’t scolding her for being scared.  He understands.

Notice, also, that the Shepherd isn’t shooing Cassie away and saying he has something more important to do. Although he is gently reassuring Precious,  he is also enjoying Cassie as she runs and jumps.  Whoops! Cassie just jumped on your back,  Arnold! That’s gotta be a first: a baby goat on the back of an eagle!

Dear woman friend reading this,  just like the Shepherd in the story,  your Shepherd,  the Lord Jesus,  understands you and me. He understands our weaknesses.  Like the Shepherd understood Precious’ fear of Arnold,  the Lord Jesus understands our fears.

Like the Shepherd didn’t push Cassie away and tell her not to be a  nuisance,  the Lord Jesus doesn’t consider you or me to be a nuisance.

We can be so thankful that our Shepherd understands us!

Leave a comment telling me about how the Lord Jesus understands you and doesn’t criticize or scold you for having weaknesses.

 

 

 

Happy Easter!

May I depart from the usual format for this post?

A friend recently wrote that Jesus’s life was bookended by two possibilities: a virgin’s womb and an empty tomb.

Today we celebrate the empty tomb.

Some may say Jesus didn’t really die. He only swooned and revived in the cool of the tomb. Do you remember what the soldier did right after Jesus gave up His life? The soldier pierced His side with a spear. Blood and water flowed out showing the sac around His heart had broken,  something that only happens at death.

Some may say that Jesus’s followers stole His body and falsely claimed He arose.  How would the disciples have gotten past the soldiers guarding the door? Neglect of duty would cost them their lives. If the disciples had stolen Jesus’s body, what gave them the courage to proclaim the resurrection so boldly knowing it wasn’t true?

Why did the veil in the temple tear in two from top to bottom? The veil symbolized that humanity’s sin prevented access to God. The weight of the veil could have caused it to tear some from the bottom up  but it didn’t tear that way. The way it tore, you could say God Himself tore it from top to bottom to say that now, through Jesus’s death,  humanity can have direct access to God.

Why did Jesus die so much faster than usual? Jesus died about 3:00 which was the time the Passover  lamb was killed. As the final Passover lamb,  He had to die at the same time as the lamb.

Why death by crucifixion? I love to point out to the children in my Sunday school class the reason for this. Back in Egypt,  the Israelites were instructed to kill a lamb and put the blood on the top of the door and on the door posts. Now do something you haven’t done since childhood and connect the dots.  What do you get? A cross. How did the Israelites roast the Passover lamb? Their roasting method had the lamb connected to something resembling a cross.

So what? Maybe this is all familiar to you. Maybe you have heard this for years. Maybe you ask what this has to do with us 2,000 years later.

Go back to the veil.  All this was done to make a way for humanity to once again be in a right relationship with God.

Think about it.  We had rejected God and went our own way which leads to destruction.  But God loves us, loves you, personally,  so much that He took our place,  your place, on the cross and paid the penalty for our sin, for your sin, once and for all. Then, upon His death,  God Himself tears the veil from top to bottom,  opening the way to Himself once again.

Ok, fine. What’s the resurrection got to do with this? It was proof that God accepted Jesus’s death as payment for the sin of humanity.

Fine, but what does this have to do with us 2,000 years later?

When someone offers you a gift, when do you get the benefit of that gift? When you accept that gift.

Have you accepted Jesus as your substitute? Have you received the gift of forgiveness and eternal life He offers?

Believe that Jesus died as your Substitute and rose again and ask Him to forgive you and be your Savior and Lord, the Ruler of your life.

Easter really doesn’t have anything to do with chocolate bunnies and marshmallow chicks and colored eggs. It’s the celebration of when Jesus conquered death.

Wouldn’t right now be the perfect time to receive the gift of forgiveness and eternal life that God offers?

If you have received Jesus’s gift of forgiveness and eternal life,  would you let me know in the comments below? If you received the gift of forgiveness and eternal life after reading this post,  would you let me know in the comments below?

Little One,  Arnold,  Cassie and Precious, if they were real, would love it if you received the gift of forgiveness and eternal life today. Accept His gift. Accept it now.

An Interview with Benjamin Ministries

Cheryl:  Hi, Little One. I brought a friend with me today. Her name is Pam Waterman and she, along with her husband, Dan, direct Benjamin Ministries. Pam will explain what Benjamin Ministries does in just a minute. Where’s Arnold? Oh! There he is, way up in that tree over there! Helloooooo, Arnold! C’mon down! I have a friend I’d like you to meet. Here he comes! Duck, Pam! Wooo! We always see you flying way up high and don’t realize how big you really are, Arnold! Arnold, this is Pam Waterman. She and her husband, Dan, are the directors of Benjamin Ministries. Thank you for visiting us here in the pasture, Pam. Can you explain what Benjamin Ministries is and what it does?

Pam: Well, hello, and thank you for having me as your guest today. I would love to answer that question. Benjamin Ministries is a faith-based bereavement outreach that provides various services to help people during the time that we believe can be their stormiest days on this Earth. When people lose a loved one, they usually are not prepared to say goodbye. There can be numerous challenges in the days ahead as they try to figure out their New Normal. The heart of our ministry is to provide a free bereavement care package that includes a personalized remembrance document as well as carefully selected bereavement materials that can be personally given or sent to people who have lost a loved one. Our bereavement care package project has grown tremendously in the past 1 to 3 years and we are now delivering 100 or more care packages, each and every month, all over the United States.

We also provide bereavement support groups, a wonderful website loaded with helpful grief resources, and a bereavement respite project which I will share a little bit more about in a few minutes. Oh, and we have hosted one very successful bereavement conference and hope to do more of these in the near future.

Cheryl: When you mention loss, what kind of loss do you mean?

Pam: The loss of a loved one can be the death of a child, a spouse, a parent, a sibling, a grandfather or grandmother, uncle, aunt, cousin, friend or co-worker. This loss occurs upon the death of one of these special people that we are acquainted with or love very deeply.

Cheryl: Is this just for those who have suffered a recent loss of some kind?

Pam: The services that Benjamin Ministries provide can be for those who have lost a loved one recently or years ago. You see, we believe that the bereavement journey is a lifelong journey. We never truly get over losing a loved one. We will always miss them and long to remember them. We can learn to carry on…and the days can become less heart-wrenching and painful. We can come to a place where we can even experience joy in remembering these loved ones. Each person’s bereavement journey is unique. It is the desire of the Ben Min Team (as we sometimes call it) to help anyone that reaches out to us no matter where they are in their bereavement journey. It’s never too late to ask for help.

Cheryl: Why did you name the ministry Benjamin Ministries, if that’s not too painful a question to ask?

Pam: No, I’d be happy to tell you that story. It was 19 years ago that my husband, Dan, and I would lose our little baby boy, Benjamin, in a horrific auto accident that I and my two older children would survive. The loss of a child, especially a newborn baby, is overwhelmingly heart-wrenching. Even though we had wonderful support from family members and friends, as well as our church family, we would have the need for bereavement support. When we went looking for a faith-based or Christ based, bereavement support group, we couldn’t find anything where we lived or even outside of the area that we lived. Dan and I knew at that time that this would need to change. Our world needs Christ-based bereavement support. When God called us to begin the ministry, we felt it very fitting to name it after our beloved, Benjamin.

Cheryl: Are licensed counselors on staff with Benjamin Ministries?

Pam: Though we do have many highly-skilled professionals on the Ben Min team, we don’t have licensed counselors on staff at this time. As our ministry grows, it is in our vision to one day provide that service as well.

Cheryl: What if it becomes clear that professional help is needed?

Pam: We do have the ability to make excellent referrals to licensed counselors and have done so numerous times for those who have had that need.

Cheryl: What about the ministry’s logo? Why a lighthouse?

Pam: Ahhh, this is one of my favorite questions to answer. It sort of started with my love for lighthouses which my father instilled in me when I was growing up. We would visit lighthouses all over the east coast, and even some on the West Coast. In the Christmas season of 1997, shortly after our little Benjamin went home to heaven, we purchased a little lighthouse ornament to put on the Christmas tree in his memory. It was the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, one of the most famous lighthouses in the world. We nicknamed that Lighthouse, Ben’s light.

We love the symbolism of the lighthouse during the storm. It reminds us that a strong light can save us during times of peril. We believe that Jesus is the Light of the world Who rescues us from the perils of sin and destruction and His love, grace, and forgiveness can lead us to eternal life. We also believe that Jesus is our Lighthouse Who can save us from the raging sea of grief. It seemed only fitting to make the lighthouse the symbol of Benjamin Ministries.

Cheryl: That leads me into my next question. Is there something in the works involving a lighthouse?

Pam: We have had a vision for numerous years to begin what we call a Bereavement Respite Project. This project would entail raising funds to send a couple and/or individuals that are experiencing complicated grief on a 2 – 5 day respite; an escape from the everyday routines of life. A time for folks to relax, refresh, restore, rejuvenate, and hopefully, reunite with God. It’s highly recommended that folks who are experiencing complicated loss take time to get away, but not everyone can afford to do so. Just as there are programs that have been designed to send families that are dealing with cancer for these times of respite, Benjamin Ministries would like to do the same for those who have suffered the loss of a loved one.

Can you believe that we have discovered that there is a bed and breakfast lighthouse right here west of the city of Rochester on the shores of Lake Ontario? Not only that, but we have made an arrangement with the owners of the Braddock Point Lighthouse to develop this project so that we can send chosen couples/individuals on a two day/night lighthouse respite as part of our Bereavement Respite Project. We have raised enough funds to purchase our first gift certificate for a two day/night respite to the Braddock Point Lighthouse. It will be presented to a family that our team has selected to receive this gift during the month of April. This will be the answer to our prayers for just about 7 years now, as we have been praying for this project to get off the ground. We hope to send more couples/individuals on a bereavement respite this year and in the years to come. We are currently seeking donations in order to help us to do so.

We’ve also learned that the Braddock Point Lighthouse is on the market. We believe in bold and big prayers and have been praying that God may see fit to give us this lighthouse that we may use it for this mission as well as the central headquarters of Benjamin Ministries, a place to provide bereavement support groups, and so much more.

Cheryl: What are the support group meetings like? What happens during one? How often do they meet? How can someone join the support group?

Pam: We have two bereavement support groups that are gathering at this time. Each group meets one time during the month. We have a group dedicated to mothers who have lost or miscarried a child, and another group for any and all loss. The group for the loss of a child is bouncing around to various restaurants around the Rochester area.

Our other group is currently meeting at a local coffee shop as a place of convenience for those who come to this meeting. These meetings are a time for us to check in with each other, see how each member of the group is doing, share some of the struggles that are faced during the bereavement journey, discuss Scriptures that are helpful to the bereavement journey, have a time of prayer requests and prayer, and simply share from the heart, cry, smile, sometimes giggle, motivate, and encourage each other in these challenging days of the bereavement journey.

Cheryl: What about the bereavement packages? What’s in those and how does a person request one?

Pam: As I previously mentioned, our bereavement packages have been at the heart of our ministry since we began back in 2001. Each bereavement care package has a document presented in a picture folder. This document can be a personalized document that would include a picture, name, and date/s placed on it in remembrance of the loved one that is no longer here, along with Bible verses and a poem. If the requestor would rather not have a personalized document, they can choose our Loss of a Loved One document which is a beautifully written Scripture verse (Romans 8:18…our ministry verse) set on a Footprints in the Sand image. We provide faith-based bereavement materials in each of the packages including a small paperback book. Just visit our website www.benjaminministries.org and click on Learn About our Bereavement Packages and follow the prompts to order a package.

Cheryl:  Who does all of the work for this ministry? You and your husband can’t possibly do it all yourselves!

Pam: You are certainly right about that! We are extremely blessed to have a group of 15 to 20 highly-skilled volunteers that help us do the work of Benjamin Ministries each and every month. We also have an Advisory Board of 10 volunteers who help us with some of the challenging decisions to make in the work of the ministry. We would not have the type of outreach that we have today if it were not for the committed work of so many volunteers. As we grow, our volunteer base needs to grow as well. We are always recruiting more hands and feet to come on board and help us with this unique, loving and extremely needed outreach.

Cheryl:  How can a person become involved in Benjamin Ministries?

Pam: Anyone can become involved with Benjamin Ministries by emailing us at:

info@benjaminministries.org,   calling our office, or speaking personally to Dan and I or any of the volunteers on the Ben Min team.

Cheryl: Are you on Facebook? Twitter?

Pam:  We are on Facebook and Twitter. We do have volunteers that help us to keep our Facebook page current and up-to-date. Find us on Facebook at Benjamin Ministries. We have a Twitter account, too, but do not have volunteers to help us keep that to a cutting edge. We would love to find a volunteer to help us on Twitter and to help us on Instagram as well.

Cheryl: Do you have any goals for the future of BenMin?

Pam: We would love to send our bereavement care packages to countries around the world. National pastors are asking for us to do so. We need to raise more funds and recruit more help for this to happen. As I mentioned, we’d love to send more couples and individuals on bereavement respites. We’d love to get a lighthouse that could become our main base of operations and to be used to bring the bereaved to it for that 3 to 5 day respite. As our ministry has grown, so has the need for package supplies. We have a good foundation of donors who give to us regularly, and many who will give a one-time gift, for this we are so grateful. As we continue to grow and one day become a worldwide ministry, we need talented fundraisers and grant writers to help us create a broader base of donors and funding.

Cheryl: How could someone contact Benjamin Ministries? If Little One knows of a lamb in his flock that is grieving, what should he tell that lamb?

Pam: Please visit our website to request a bereavement care package, and browse our bereavement resources, stories, and testimonials. Email us at info@BenjaminMinistries.org or call us at 585-334-9048 ext. 236 or visit our Facebook page.

Cheryl: I’m sure I’ve forgotten pertinent questions here. What else could you tell Arnold and Little One about Benjamin Ministries?

Pam: We care for those who are grieving. We don’t want anyone to feel alone or to give up the hope to go on. There is a suicide epidemic and so many who suffer from anxiety and depression. We know that our ministry is in the fight to help lower this epidemic and help people to cope after losing a loved one.

Choose to live! Ask us for help! Get support! We care…you are not alone!

Cheryl: Thank you so much for coming to visit us here in the pasture, Pam. I will do my best to provide a link to the Ben Min website from this post. Arnold, we’d better let you get back to hunting. Whoooosh! Duck, Pam!  Arnold’s wingspan is measured in feet, not inches! ‘Bye, Arnold!

Little One, I hear your shepherd calling you. You’d better go. ‘Bye!

Dear woman friend reading this, are you grieving a loss of some kind? A child? A parent? A spouse? A sibling? Another type of loss? Benjamin Ministries would be honored to send you a package, free of charge, to minister to you during this time. Ordering information is on their website and you can also contact the office with questions.

Would you be interested in joining the support group they offer? Information about that is also available on their website or by contacting the office.

Please don’t hesitate to contact them. They would love to have the opportunity to help you on your grieving journey.

 

 

Address:   990 Calkins Rd.  Rochester, NY 14623

Phone:  585-334-9048  ext. 236

Email:  info@benjaminministries.org

Website:  www.benjaminministries.org

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/benministries/

Twitter:  https://twitter.com/BenMinistries

 

 

 

Tossed Salad? Antipasto?

Dear woman friend reading this, did the title startle you? Are you wondering what salads could possibly have to do with Little One? The answer is, “nothing”. I just wanted to alert you to the fact that today’s post is a “salad” of sorts. A combination of website URLs that may be helpful and songs that may encourage you. Ready?

https://www.lyricsondemand.com/h/hawknelsonlyrics/livelikeyourelovedlyrics.html

Hawk Nelson with “Live Like You’re Loved”

 

 

Lauren Daigle with “O’ Lord”

 

 

 

Mark Wills with “Like There’s No Yesterday”. I first heard this song on a YouTube video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAmmvj-7g6o). When you apply it to the believer’s relationship with Jesus Christ, it is beautiful!

How about some URLs now?

 

http://benjaminministries.org/

Benjamin Ministries — for those in bereavement

 

Your Key to Heaven??

Wondering what happens after you die? Check this out!

 

https://www.facebook.com/HopeCenterIndy/

A ministry to those victimized by human trafficking

 

Future

A new member of the “pasture family” will be arriving soon. Stay tuned to meet her!

 

Meet Cassie

Little One, who is that over there? That doesn’t look like a sheep. Why, that’s a goat! Why is there a baby goat in your flock,  Little One?

You say her name is Cassie?  She sure seems happy,  Little One.  And her energy.  Where does she get so much energy? I’m tired watching her. I’m going to go sit down under that tree over there and rest a bit.

Are you tired,  too, Little One? Let’s sit here and rest a few minutes.  Well,  hello, Cassie.  Are you coming over to rest with Little One and me? Ooof! You are a busy little goat, aren’t you? You just jumped on me and now you’re jumping over Little One.

You’re a pretty little goat,  Cassie, and so happy!  But why are you in this flock of sheep?

Do you know why Cassie is here, Little One?  You don’t know?

I wonder how we can find out why Cassie is in the flock?

Dear woman friend reading this, have you ever had someone unexpectedly enter your life?  Did this unexpected someone seem like she didn’t belong and you didn’t know why she was there?

Maybe you were that unexpected someone.  Maybe you found yourself some place and wondered why you were there?

Little One doesn’t know why Cassie joined the flock.  Cassie is running around and jumping over Little One and I so we haven’t had the chance to ask her.

Dear woman friend,  there is One Who knows exactly why you are where you are today.  He knows you feel like you don’t belong. If you’re wondering why a certain someone is in your life,  He knows.  Your Shepherd knows.

We may have to wait a while to find out why Cassie is part of the flock and you may have to wait to find out why you are where you are.  Your Shepherd may or may not tell you.  The question is,  are you willing to trust Him that He knows best in this situation?

Dear woman friend,  trust your Shepherd.

 

Psalm 23

Dear woman friend reading this,

I decided for this post that I would wrap up the mini-series I’ve been doing in the last posts on the blog. If you read through the passage below, you can see how I tried to take phrases from the psalm and show how they worked in Little One’s life and how they can work in ours.

 

 

 

A Psalm of David.

 

The LORD is my shepherd;

I shall not want.

He makes me to lie down in green pastures;

He leads me beside the still waters.

He restores my soul;

He leads me in the paths of righteousness

For His name’s sake.

Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,

I will fear no evil;

For You are with me;

Your rod and Your staff, they comfort me.

You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies; You anoint my head with oil;

My cup runs over.

Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me

All the days of my life;

And I will dwell in the house of the LORD

Forever.

 

Psalm 23