Sunday, May 24, 2026
Creative Evolution
I have thinking about this world ever since I popped out of my mother’s womb in 1951.I was born and raised as a child, guided along by my Catholic mother and my hard-working father, a lapsed Baptist.
Mama sent me to a Catholic school. It was good; I did well, serving as student council president before graduating in 1969. In 1970, I went to the other end of Baton Rouge, moved into a dorm room in north stadium at LSU.
In the introductory philosophy class, Dr. Henderson lectured about Rene Descartes famous statement, “I think, therefore I am”. (I mentioned that lecture in chapter 9 of my novel, King of Soul.) A year or two later, the Moody Blues followed up on that principle with an extension: “Of course you are, my practical star!”
Anyway no matter what you can, or cannot, figure out. . .Life is good!
Today, May 24, 2026, Memorial Day Sunday, I was reading the Bible. We read in Genesis that Cain killed his brother Abel, and so the Lord punished him. Cain wandered out into the wild parts of the earth, but he got scared. He cried out to the Creator with the fearful complaint that whoever would find him would kill him.
The Creator, YWHW, revealing his merciful nature, put a mark on Cain that made it clear to other earth inhabitants that they should not mess with Cain.
“Then Cain went out from the presence of the Lord, and settled in the Land of Nod, east of Eden. Cain had relations with his wife, and she conceived, and gave birth to Enoch. After that, several more generations brought forth another character named Enoch, who has lately been the subject of much attention, because he wrote a book.
I can relate. Having written and published four books myself. But as I was saying, ruminating on digression. . . several thousands of years rolled by. . .
Along comes a smart fellow, Charles Darwin. Watching animals on Galapagos, his scientific mind noticed patterns in the animal kingdom; and so he presented his theory of natural selection, better known as the theory of evolution.
Ever since Darwin, our human race has witnessed a whirlwind of theories, discussions, controversies about the origin of the human race.
But here’s the good news! I’m here to tell ya that it’s all good. I’ve got this question figured out. There’s no argument between the religion folk and the scientific folk. There is really no controversy between Genesis and Darwin’s evolution. Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel. . . they were a special project that Creator YWHW set up in the garden of Eden. But because Adam and Eve had free will , they blew it.
Meanwhile, back at the evolutionary ranch, east of Eden, there was another divine project going. on.
The truth includes both/and:Creation and Evolution.! Cain was a son of God, created in YWHW’s special Eden project. But when he was banished from Eden, he entered into the natural world, the animal kingdom in which natural selection and genetic genesis was the determinant. The genetic code was, you might say, the new sheriff in town, but the Lord, who wrote the code, was still Lord of all heaven and earth.
So. . . Meanwhile, back at the evolutionary ranch, east of Eden, there was another divine project going. on, with a different set of rules.
In Genesis, chapter 6, we find this: “Now it came about, when men began to multiply on the face of the land, and daughters were born to them, that the sons of God saw that the daughters of men were beautiful; and they took wives for themselves. . .
Cain was a son of God, created in YWHW’s special Eden project. And even though
he screwed up the Lord’s special project, the Lord set him free in this world anyway.
As for history, and the descent of man through it. . , the truth is plain to see.
The Lord of Creation had two projects going. One was the Eden project, which didn’t work out. The other was the animal kingdom, with homo erectus at the forefront, manifesting a special status as “crown of creation.” . . .
or the crown of evolution. . . whichever perspective floats your analytical boat. . .
It’s both/and, y’all!
So where did Cain find his wife? In the land of Nod, where evolutionary natural selection was the divine order of the day, the order of the earth evolutionary age. The special project in Eden had not worked out according to plan, because YWYH God took a chance on free will.
But a few thousand years later, the Lord’s second special project did work out well. That was project in which Creator YWHW sent his only son, Jesus Christ, into this world, to teach us how to live. . . (see Sermon on the Mount, Matthew chapter 5&ff). . . and to demonstrate that human life, properly lived, in spite of our fallen condition, can be corrected with a Christian attitude and Faith. Thereby, eternal life does indeed transcend death!
It’s all good, y’all. You just gotta believe: Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.
And if you believe that, I’ve got some real estate in heaven I’ll share with you. Maybe when we get there, we’ll meet Cain and Abel, and all the other folks, Adam and Eve, Moses, Peter, Paul and Mary, your mother, your father, sisters and brothers, your ancestors, your children, grandchildren and your old friends. . . all the good folk who ever lived. . . maybe even Charles Darwin if he got his evolutionary ducks in a row without it damaging his Faith. My friend Ben just made his journey there about four months ago. I look forward to seeing him again.
King of Soul
Dronesy Starrish Night
Dronesy, dronesy lights
They glow in glorious starrish light
Streaking in their glorious dronesy might
With programmed flight in spring’s first celebration night.
The crowd is seated in the field below
seated in their readiness down low
as kids and cameras await the dronesy show
it’s not like any show that ole folks know
Now I understand what Vincent tried to show
because he never saw these drones that glow
Dronesy, starrish streaks; yes, we’re amazed
Flaming thrusts that brightly blaze
Swirling drones to brighten stadium haze
Reflecting glorious technologic glow
Putting on their perfect programmed show
Now I understand, what this world is coming to
what Vincent did foresee before this old world morphed to new
For there’s. no way he could have known
the starry show that droning glory’s honed
the buzzing glory of droning bees
flashed up in their technologic ease
You imagined it all as artists often do
long before these drones came into view.
Yours truly, poems of Rowland
Thursday, May 21, 2026
A Circle Unbroken
I’ll never forget, back in the day, when I was a student at LSU, a couple of friends, good ole boys from Slidell, Bruce and Bob, who turned me on to that historic record album, “Will the Circle Be Unbroken?” a collection of music and songs from our American heritage, performed and sung by the nitty gritty dirt band.
Their musical mission seemed to be to bring some classic American folk music back into the consciousness of our “turned on-tripped out” generation. The Nitty Gritty Dirt band guys were accompanied by some old-timers, including Mother Maybelle Carter and Doc Watson.
The most vivid audible memory of that album was the voice of Doc Watson, a blind master of guitar flat-pickin, accompanied by his son, Merle. Little did I know at that time that the providential leading of an Almighty Lord would establish my life’s most productive and most satisfying years in a mountainside homestead in the same county where Doc Watson had lived, Watauga County, North Carolina.
The county seat is Boone, where on the corner of King and Depot streets, you’ll see this parkbench with a bronze sculpture of Doc, accompanied, for a brief moment in time, by yours truly.
David Holt, an historian of American folk music, later conducted interviews, with video, of Doc in his home, near Deep Gap, where he and Rosalee had raised Merle. In those 1977 interviews, Doc would talk about their life in the Blue Ridge, their homestead and heritage. He would often mention his wife Rosalee.
Maybe you could say. . . the circle was not unbroken between my appreciation of Doc’s legacy and the fulfillment of my own destiny. Back in my day, before i had moved to Boone, the Lord had enabled me to record two record albums. Something for Everyone Songs of Rowland was recorded in Nashville, in 1977, thanks to Tom Behrens.
Later, in 1978, I recorded a Christian testimonial album, Revelation 5:9, in Asheville. Thanks to Eddie Swann and friends. I greatly appreciate the ensemble of musicians who helped me record those songs, old and new, on Revelation 5:9.
One of those friends was David Holt, who happened to be living across Garren Creek Road from me at that time. I greatly appreciate his old-style frailing banjo in that session, with a little help from me friends, an ensemble of local musicians, including Dan Lewis on harmonica, on that old hymn from Appalachian history, Life’s Railway to Heaven.
Life's Railway to Heaven
Years after that recording, after Pat and I had moved to Boone, I was singing some of those songs at the Watauga County fairgrounds, North Carolina state fair. Doc’s widow, Rosalee, was listening, seated in the audience. After my set, she spoke to me kindly, commending me on my songs. As I said earlier, I’ll never forget the sound of voice when I first heard him in 1972. And I’ll never forget Rosalee’s appreciation of my song, later.
As Bob Hope and Bing Crosby used to sing, long before I was born: “Thanks for the memories.” That will be my greeting to Doc, Rosalee and Merle, when I meet them in that heavenly circle in which will never be forever unbroken!
King of Soul
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Cleaning the Mess
an excerpt from chapter 19 of Glass half-Full
Marcus opened a can of turpentine. He tipped it slightly so that its upper contents would spill onto a rag that lay on the parking lot next to his car. With the rag partially soaked, he began rubbing on the driver’s-side door. Someone had painted a black swastika on it while he was working late.
His cell phone rang. He opened it, looked at the mini-screen, saw “Grille,” which stoodfor Jesse James Gang Grille. In the last few days, however, whenever hewould see “Grille” displayed as the caller ID, it registered in his mind as “Girl,” meaning Bridget, because she would often call from there.
“Hi.”
“Marcus, have you heard about the explosion?”
“No, where?”
“At the Belmont Hotel, about 20 minutes ago. That’s where the FEF convention is.
“Aleph told me he would be going there tonight. Has anybody been down there to see what’s happening?”
“Kaneesha left here right after we heard it, but she hasn’t returned. I don’t think anybody’s getting in there for awhile. The police have got the whole block barricaded.”
“I want to find out if anything has happened to Aleph. Don’t you think he would have left there by now?”
“The TV News says the police aren’t letting anyone in or out except rescue workers.”
“I’m headed over there in a few minutes, as soon as I get the car-door cleaned up. Someone painted a swastika on it.”
Glass half-Full
Monday, May 18, 2026
Purloined Poetry
Once upon a time, I knew a fiddler up on a roof. . .
Under the canopy of memory. . .
I don’t remember growing older. When did they?
and a secret chord that David pleased that pleased the Lord
Though I have walked through the shadow of death, I did fear no evil.
for Jesus’ resurrection has reassured me. . .
So even though some things went wrong, I stand before the Lord of song, with mostly on my tongue: Alleluia!
On the other hand. . .
All lies and jest, still a man hears what he wants to hear and
disregards the rest. Let it be, let it be, the wistful words of wisdom… the several things that I’ve done all right and it’s singing songs
Ole man River; he don’t say nothing; he just keep rollin’ along.
He just keep rollin’. . . way back. . . way back.
through the Mississippi darkness, rolling down to the sea. . .
We came to Big Muddy and we forded that flood
on the Tennessee mare and the Tennessee stud.
Like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel. . .
looking out from that crummy hotel room in Washington square. . .
I could have told you, Vincent, this world was never meant for. . .
Where have all the flowers gone, anyway, long time passing?
Let the Life go by; I don’t care as long as I. . . can be on the street where we live.
I’ve looked at life from both sides now, and still somehow,
it’s life’s infusions I recall. . . at age 74. . .
I am I said and no one heard, not even the chair.
But hey! It’s all good, y’all. I’m here to tell ya. . . so Jah say
And even though some things went wrong, I stand before the Lord of so song with nothing on my tongue but Allelluia.
Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no
. . . .whatever happens.
Sunday, May 17, 2026
A Life Journey
From Roncevaux pass across the channel, around Brittania, up to isle of Mann, a strain of Euro mankind turned westward. A young man sailed for the new world, through the harbor where the tired, the weary and the huddled masses were yearning to be free.
Round and round, down and down, through mountains, southward,the people and the young man trod; they floated, by wagon and by train,through rain, down to the sunny South. At the father of American waters the Carey ancestors floated down the Euphrates of the new world, to Ur of those called to the delta, to the bayou, almost to great Gulf.
And there, Pilgrim was born, in Ur of the new world, the land of many waters, where he was raised in the Roman way of worship, with host and chalice, balanced out with a sprig or two of Baptist faith, lingering in the pages of time, and he grew up and he traipsed the halls of acadamia, searching for paradise lost, comprehending the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune that flesh is heir to.
And after he had grown some, he took to himself an orange, and he noticed the veins in the leaf, and the light and the balance. Then he was in that stage of life when a man must discover his own path, and so he turned eastward, to the panhandle of health and wealth, the peninsula of sunshine.
He prospered; he figured out a thing or two, but after a season or three, he gravitated to the land of the high country, over themountain and through the Appalachian woods to the buncombe of liberated free youth, guided homeward by the face of an a an angel. . . drawing him to a destiny yet to be determined. . . he knew not what.
As Roland had sounded his horn at Ronceveau in ancient times the young man sounded his songs out upon the mountains of destiny, the turntables of time, contemplating the little big horn and the windows of the world, among other things.
It was all good; but trouble, tribulation and vows unvowed compelled him back westward . . . to the land of open spaces, to Waco, and no more whacko whipso strangeo. And so he had an encounter with the One who broke the seals of time and destiny, the ancient seals of creation, destruction and new creation.
Then later. . . after an unsettled runaround in the wild west, he returned to his adopted high country home, he met the woman of his destiny, and they settled into the good, prolific life on the old trail where Boone had found the way westward, back in the day, where spring’s new hope, born of leaves decaying, settles into the ancient Appalachian forests of time.
Glass half-Full
Saturday, May 16, 2026
Deep South 1964
from chapter 5 of King of Soul
But Liberty and Justice for All is not something that just happens. As compatriots with liberation and deliverance, liberty and justice emerge triumphant from the very embattlements of human history. Where their zealous advocates manage to grab some foothold in the landscape of human struggle, freedom is fleeting not far behind. Noble aspirations are all summoned up when the careless slayings of men demand value more sacred, more holy, than the mere clashing of weapons and the expiration of breathing bodies.
In our present exploration’s story, the bad news is: there is an inevitable outflow—the shedding of blood—which propels violence to ever higher levels of atrocity.
The good news is: where there’s shedding of blood, Soul is not far beneath.
In the summer of 1964, all of these elements of human struggle converged in an unprecedented way. Way down south, in the piney woods and sweltering fields of Mississippi, a new activist strain of blood-red camellia was taking root in that freshly-tilled civil rights black delta loam.
As God had heard the cry of Abel’s blood arising from Edenic soil, he heard now the beckoning of enshrouded laborers, those dead and these living. Their muted cries called forth liberation; they demanded deliverance.
So while black folk of the deep South were struggling to register their right to vote as Americans, a vast brigade of like-minded souls from other regions caught a whiff of their newly-planted liberty, and so the new brigades took it upon themselves to go down to Mississippi and lend a hand.
Go down, Moses, was the call. Go down, collective Moses. There were many who heard that call; there was even a man named Moses, Bob Moses from Harlem. He, and others who stood with him against discrimination, planted themselves in Mississippi at the crossroads of injustice and opportunity. Down here in the verdant lap of Dixie where the honeysuckles twine sweetly and the slaves had mourned bitterly, a battalion of wayfaring strangers from far and near came to cultivate the new growth offreedom.
They were filling a void in the whole of the human soul. Robbed of freedom, the Soul of Man wails out a distress call; then in regions afar, theSoul of Man hears, and resonates with action. Deep calls unto deep.
https://www.amazon.com/King-Soul-Louis-Carey-Rowland/dp/1545075115
Glass half-Full
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