This piano is located in an abandoned church in northeast Warren County. Took my photo buddies Robert Walker and Jerry Rushing to see it Saturday morning.
You KNOW these are my favorites, and you just keep finding them!
I want to go touch them, to smooth away the dust, to glide my fingers along the keys in "Just As I Am," or really get going on "Everlasting Arms" or "Hallelujah, Thine the Glory!" And there's that wonderful place in "Heaven Came Down," when the congregation's singing and my fingers would be doing a little skipping chromatic up and down the keys---my kind of worship.
I SO want to talk to those old treasures, to tell them how well they were loved, how well they served.
They stand, as surely as stone monument ever did, testament to Man's praise of his Maker, and I think their method is probably His favorite.
Marty,
ReplyDeleteYou KNOW these are my favorites, and you just keep finding them!
I want to go touch them, to smooth away the dust, to glide my fingers along the keys in "Just As I Am," or really get going on "Everlasting Arms" or "Hallelujah, Thine the Glory!" And there's that wonderful place in "Heaven Came Down," when the congregation's singing and my fingers would be doing a little skipping chromatic up and down the keys---my kind of worship.
I SO want to talk to those old treasures, to tell them how well they were loved, how well they served.
They stand, as surely as stone monument ever did, testament to Man's praise of his Maker, and I think their method is probably His favorite.