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Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Book Comment: Poems of Faith


In college, I had a triple major course of study of Biology, Psychology, and English with a minor in Chemistry.  In my poetry classes, the name of Helen Steiner Rice often came up for denigration.  Her poetry was held up as an extreme example of excessive sentimentality and rigid adherence to an ultra-simple rhyming scheme.  Her poems resemble the verses in greeting cards because that is where Steiner began writing her poetry, working for American Greetings.

Helen Steiner Rice (b. 1900, Ohio, USA – d. 1981) was an advertising manager turned poet who has become known as “America’s beloved inspirational poet laureate” and the “Ambassador of Sunshine.”   Her books have sold over seven million copies, so far, and they still are selling well, years after her death.

By all accounts, Mrs. Rice was loved by everyone who knew her.  She was a pious, prayerful woman devoted to her Lord.  She told her friend, Fred Bauer that “I’m just another worker in the vineyard of the Lord, trying to do God’s will.  All I have to say is in the thoughts He places on my heart, thoughts I put to rhyme.”

Poems of Faith (1981) is a collection of 124 of Mrs. Rice’s poems.  In keeping with the nature of Mrs. Rice’s poems, the book is illustrated with paintings of numerous flowers by artist Judith fast.  The poems are not to everyone's tastes, including mine, but there is nothing heterodox or objectionable in any of them.  Millions of people find them to be inspirational statements of Christian faith and devotion. 

A Steinerian poem in response to the critics of Helen Steiner Rice.


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