2000

September 2000

  • Contents

  • Contents

  • The Faith of a Sparrow

    H. Bruce Stucki

  • Sidewalk Service

    Choi Chung Lap

  • Contest Winners: A Perfect Fit

  • He Is There

    Margo Edgeworth

  • Look What I Found

    Shara Braithwaite

  • One Hundred Questions

    Lani Ricks

  • Q&A: Questions and Answers

  • Mormonad

  • Selected Photos, Art, and Poetry: Pieces of Life

    • Break Forth into Joy

      Jennifer Rose

    • Who’s to Blame for Inactive Scriptures

      Cara Hall

    • From 1947

      Cara Hall

    • Sunday School Lessons

      Karl Rees

    • Psalms

      Karl Rees

    • H.E.A.V.E.N.

      Cara Hall

    • The Spirit and I

      Karl Rees

    • Peter Horry, b. 1666 in Cher, France

      A. Jonathan Vance

    • Superlatives

      A. Jonathan Vance

    • Frosty Winter

      Callie Taggart

    • Clouds

      Sandra L. Pancoast

    • A Spring Shower

      Adrianne Thomas

    • Simply Amazing

      Margot Glassett

    • They Wait; We Wait

      Ijeoma Monica Njoku

    • Sacrifice

      Cassie Peach

  • Impressions in Wet Cement

    Adrian Robert Gostick

  • Of All Things

  • My Dad the Dictator

    Elyssa Renee Andrus

  • Idea List: Ways to Win

    Darrin Lythgoe

  • Letter from Home

    Kimberly Webb

  • The Pink Tie

    Jeanne Nalder McInelly

  • We’ve Got Mail

  • Reader’s Guide

  • Let Us Awake

    Meg Nielson

Psalms
September 2000


“Psalms,” New Era, Sept. 2000, 22

Psalms

by Karl Rees

Poetry is written every Sunday,

sitting on an uncomfortable bench,

keeping uncomfortably still long enough

for brutal honesty to hit its mark.

Remission becomes so complicated a word.

Simplicity survives only in young men

passing out emblems of the body and the blood,

and David seems so much closer than Gethsemane.

Photos by Elsa Bunker