“Sunday Afternoon,” Ensign, Feb. 1973, inside front cover
Sunday Afternoon
A light whose gentle glow outshines the lamps
Now fills the room with a golden shimmering
And mends the tattered edges of our gathering—
The squealing bundles and the whispering camps.
Voices stumble into harmony
And clear the past week’s dusty accumulation
From my inner chambers, in preparation
For the waking of my memory.
A silent conversation fills the room,
A glow of reverence for an unseen friend,
As young men kneel and struggle with the sounds
Whose sense reminds me to remember Him.
I strain in silence to clean out my heart.
I bow my head, rubbing at the lingering stains,
Knowing that another heart sustains
The blows that purge and make my heart unbend.
I receive the bread of life that makes me whole,
The morsel that fills, warms, and soothes the aches,
And the living water that washes and wakes
The drowsy fibers of my center soul.
As I offer all I have and am to Him,
A clear and silvery stream of light flows in
And waves of healing fire flood my being,
With promise that I might no longer be alone,
With whispers drawing me to distant friends,
Reminding me of things that I have always known.