BELFAST RB BOOKLET 2020 - Flipbook - Page 95
Ci t y of Belf ast Grand Bl ack Chapt er - Dem onst rat i on Bookl et 2020
THAT'S ENOUGH
Well now I heard that you been thinking 'bout me, really I don't mind
I know you try to block my progress a lot of the time
Well the mean things you said don't make me feel bad
Cause I can't miss a friend that I never had.
For I've got Jesus and that's enough - that's enough
When I'm sick, He's there, or I'm troubled, He's there
When I call him he will answer my prayers.
When I'm burdened, He's there; with a load, He's there;
That's when Jesus is a comforter, to my soul.
Well you may scorn me turn your back on me
God's got his arms wrapped all around me
For I've got Jesus and that's enough - that's enough
You know there's been a lotta times that I didn't have a dime
And I didn't cry to nobody but my Lord
He heard my plea and came to see about me,
Cause he's one thing I can afford
So if you push me down He'll pick me up
And He'll stick by me when the goin' gets tough
For I've got Jesus and that's enough - that's enough
Well He's the great emancipator and my heart regulator; yes He is
He'll make my way brighter and my burdens lighter, yes He will
Well you may scorn me or turn your back on me
God's got his arms wrapped all around me
And He fights down the devil till
He makes him give up; that's enough - that's enough.
~ T H E HU G U E N O T S I N F R A N C E ~
The Edict of Nantes of 1598 established the protection of the rights of the
Huguenots (French Protestants) whereby the Royal statute of Henry IV granted
freedom of worship and legal equality, within certain limits, for the Protestant
religionists; Although he himself was a Protestant before taking the throne,
Henry quickly converted to Roman Catholicism for political reasons, although
his sympathy for Protestantism allegedly, still remained.
The King's edict finally brought an end to the
religious wars between Roman Catholics and
Protestants that had plagued France during
the second half of the sixteenth century.
It granted a limited degree of religious
liberty to the Huguenots in a country that
was still deeply steeped in the papacy.
This meant that Protestantism was no longer
considered schismatic or separatist and those
of that Faith, once referred to as rebels; they
were also granted basic rights.
However under the legislation, the
Huguenot Church was to be generally
tolerated though never, ever accepted, as
being in any way, equally on par with
Roman Catholicism, though it did generally
flourish in certain regions of France.
IN MEMORY OF THE FALLEN - 93 - AND THE FUTURE OF THE LIVING