MHP777.com logo

Images (Clouds)


And the high priest answered and said unto him,
I adjure thee by the living God, that thou tell us
whether thou be the Christ, the Son of God.

Jesus saith unto him,
Thou hast said: nevertheless I say unto you,
Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man
sitting on the right hand of power,
and coming in the clouds of heaven.

And the high priest answered and said unto him,
I adjure thee by the living God, that thou tell us
whether thou be the Christ, the Son of God.

Jesus saith unto him,
Thou hast said: nevertheless I say unto you,
Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man
sitting on the right hand of power,
and coming in the clouds of heaven.

And the high priest answered and
said unto him, I adjure thee by the
living God, that thou tell us whether
thou be the Christ, the Son of God.

Jesus saith unto him, Thou hast said:
nevertheless I say unto you,
Hereafter shall ye see the Son of man
sitting on the right hand of power,
and coming in the clouds of heaven.

— Matthew 26:63-64 KJV —


Cotton candy floats across a pale blue firmament
Sheep and lobsters ride the wind, morphing and nascent
Gilt-rimmed flowers bloom in a horizon arrangement
Spaceships hover, monitor earth with near-covert movement

Streaks and layers, waves and blankets, mists and shrouds silent
Whites, grays, blacks, reds, yellows, blues, in dark and bright raiment
Covers, signs, shapes, life-rains, storms: perceived embodiment
Hope and fear and growth and loss in humid wonderment

May we give our hearts to Him whose clouds give testament
of His might and goodness and life-trials heaven-sent,
so that our compassion, love, and wisdom may augment
as we ready all the world for His Second Advent,
clouds of glory crowning His millennial commencement

Cotton candy floats across a pale blue firmament
Sheep and lobsters ride the wind, morphing and nascent
Gilt-rimmed flowers bloom in a horizon arrangement
Spaceships hover, monitor earth with near-covert movement

Streaks and layers, waves and blankets,
mists and shrouds silent
Whites, grays, blacks, reds, yellows, blues,
in dark and bright raiment
Covers, signs, shapes, life-rains, storms:
perceived embodiment
Hope and fear and growth and loss
in humid wonderment

May we give our hearts to Him whose clouds give testament
of His might and goodness and life-trials heaven-sent,
so that our compassion, love, and wisdom may augment
as we ready all the world for His Second Advent,
clouds of glory crowning His millennial commencement

Cotton candy floats across
a pale blue firmament
Sheep and lobsters ride the wind,
morphing and nascent
Gilt-rimmed flowers bloom in
a horizon arrangement
Spaceships hover, monitor earth
with near-covert movement

Streaks and layers, waves and
blankets, mists and shrouds silent
Whites, grays, blacks, reds, yellows,
blues, in dark and bright raiment
Covers, signs, shapes, life-rains,
storms: perceived embodiment
Hope and fear and growth and loss
in humid wonderment

May we give our hearts to Him
whose clouds give testament
of His might and goodness
and life-trials heaven-sent,
so that our compassion, love,
and wisdom may augment
as we ready all the world
for His Second Advent,
clouds of glory crowning
His millennial commencement

– MHP (2016_1028) –

~

Clouds invoke wonder in us. We take countless images of them, while spanning a wide range of emotions from rejoicing in the infinite variety of gigantic and ever-changing shapes in the sky to fearing the awesome forces of a dark thunderstorm or worse. We forecast weather based on them, plan our travel and outdoor lives around them, see signs and portents in them, pray for life-giving rain to fall from them, and dream of flying above them. We also use them as synonymns for when life gets hard and we cannot see either the sun or the way through.

Yet for all their wonder and mystery, we often forget that the Lord planned clouds for these very reasons—to rain down water upon our thirsty earth; to provide beauty in the sky and invoke our awe; and to remind us there is always sun on the other side, even in our darkest, most cloud-covered hours.

And as we learn in the poem Footsteps, it is during such cloud-covered times when the Lord most often carries us.

Please enjoy the images below of clouds and fog—interesting to me for their variety, formation, setting, and/or simplicity—in and around the Malangen and Balsfjord areas of Northern Norway.

Clouds invoke wonder in us. We take countless images of them, while spanning a wide range of emotions from rejoicing in the infinite variety of gigantic and ever-changing shapes in the sky to fearing the awesome forces of a dark thunderstorm or worse. We forecast weather based on them, plan our travel and outdoor lives around them, see signs and portents in them, pray for life-giving rain to fall from them, and dream of flying above them. We also use them as synonymns for when life gets hard and we cannot see either the sun or the way through.

Yet for all their wonder and mystery, we often forget that the Lord planned clouds for these very reasons—to rain down water upon our thirsty earth; to provide beauty in the sky and invoke our awe; and to remind us there is always sun on the other side, even in our darkest, most cloud-covered hours.

And as we learn in the poem Footsteps, it is during such cloud-covered times when the Lord most often carries us.

Please enjoy the images below of clouds and fog—interesting to me for their variety, formation, setting, and/or simplicity—in and around the Malangen and Balsfjord areas of Northern Norway.

Clouds invoke wonder in us. We take countless images of them, while spanning a wide range of emotions from rejoicing in the infinite variety of gigantic and ever-changing shapes in the sky to fearing the awesome forces of a dark thunderstorm or worse. We forecast weather based on them, plan our travel and outdoor lives around them, see signs and portents in them, pray for life-giving rain to fall from them, and dream of flying above them. We also use them as synonymns for when life gets hard and we cannot see either the sun or the way through.

Yet for all their wonder and mystery, we often forget that the Lord planned clouds for these very reasons—to rain down water upon our thirsty earth; to provide beauty in the sky and invoke our awe; and to remind us there is always sun on the other side, even in our darkest, most cloud-covered hours.

And as we learn in the poem Footsteps, it is during such cloud-covered times when the Lord most often carries us.

Please enjoy the images below of clouds and fog—interesting to me for their variety, formation, setting, and/or simplicity—in and around the Malangen and Balsfjord areas of Northern Norway.

Please also enjoy a spiritual, uplifting, and popular YouTube video (nearly 10 million views), published by user LoveOneAnother2011, of Blessings, a profound, simple, and stunningly emotional song by Laura Story.

Against a simple yet solid mostly-keyboard accompaniment, the singer asks the Lord “What if your blessings come through raindrops? What if your healing comes through tears?…” and thanks Him for all of the goodness and mercy He shows as he teaches us through and blesses us in the trials of life.

— Select Image Page —

(ALL, or max 12 per page)

Amber end-of-year sunset with sea fog (From Mortenhals, Norway)

ID: D19690

2009_1231 12:25

Amber end-of-year sunset with sea fog
(From Mortenhals, Norway)

Crimson mirror sunrise over Nordfjorden (From Mestervik, Norway)

ID: D20183

2010_0210 08:27

Crimson mirror sunrise over Nordfjorden
(From Mestervik, Norway)

Impressionist sunset art between peaks (From near Litjevatnet, Norway)

ID: D20277

2010_0223 15:56

Impressionist sunset art between peaks
(From near Litjevatnet, Norway)

Low clouds over fjord in pastel sunset (From Sandsvika, Norway)

ID: D20784

2010_0421 22:34

Low clouds over fjord in pastel sunset
(From Sandsvika, Norway)

Brilliant lobster-spaceship sunset (From near Josefvatnet, Norway)

ID: D20854

2010_0430 18:45

Brilliant lobster-spaceship sunset
(From near Josefvatnet, Norway)

Lavafire sunset over Fugltinden (wide) (From Bergneset, Norway)

ID: D20883

2010_0505 21:47

Lavafire sunset over Fugltinden (wide)
(From Bergneset, Norway)

Lavafire sunset over Fugltinden (zoom) (From Bergneset, Norway)

ID: D20909

2010_0505 21:51

Lavafire sunset over Fugltinden (zoom)
(From Bergneset, Norway)

Seagull soars against ember sunset (From Storbukta, Norway)

ID: D20987

2010_0512 21:52

Seagull soars against ember sunset
(From Storbukta, Norway)

Boat in striated sunset reflections (From near Mestervik, Norway)

ID: D20998

2010_0512 21:59

Boat in striated sunset reflections
(From near Mestervik, Norway)

Second Coming sunset over Kvaløya 1 (From near Sand, Norway)

ID: D21016

2010_0512 22:20

Second Coming sunset over Kvaløya 1
(From near Sand, Norway)

Second Coming sunset over Kvaløya 2 (From near Sand, Norway)

ID: D21026

2010_0512 22:22

Second Coming sunset over Kvaløya 2
(From near Sand, Norway)

Second Coming sunset over Kvaløya 3 (From near Sand, Norway)

ID: D21027

2010_0512 22:22

Second Coming sunset over Kvaløya 3
(From near Sand, Norway)

~

License / Technical:

Images and Poems License: All photo images (e.g., banner and block photos, but excluding graphics such as the MHP777 logo) and poems published on this page are licensed as Creative Commons (CC) BY-NC 4.0, unless otherwise indicated. Please follow the “Go!” links for license terms on each individual image.

Images Technical: All images published on this page are presented with no photographic manipulations, except (as applicable) to rotate/crop them if “tilted,” resize/crop them for presentation, and/or save them at reduced JPG quality for page download efficiency, unless otherwise indicated. Please visit the “Go!” links for full-size, max-JPG-quality versions.