Dm C Dm
|
Jesus was a working man
|
C Dm
|
And a hero you will hear
|
C Dm Am
|
Born in the town of Bethlehem
|
Dm Gm
|
At the turning of the year
|
A7 Dm
|
At the turning of the year
|
|
When Jesus was a little lad
|
Streets rang with his name
|
For he argued with the older men
|
And put them all to shame
|
He put them all to shame
|
|
He became a wandering journeyman
|
And he traveled far and wide
|
And he noticed how wealth and poverty
|
Live always side by side
|
Live always side by side
|
|
So he said "Come you working men
|
Farmers and weavers too
|
If you would only stand as one
|
This world belongs to you
|
This world belongs to you"
|
|
When the rich men heard what the carpenter had done
|
To the Roman troops they ran
|
Saying put this rebel Jesus down
|
He's a menace to God and man
|
He's a menace to God and man
|
|
The commander of the occupying troops
|
Just laughed and then he said
|
"There's a cross to spare on Calvaries hill
|
By the weekend he'll be dead
|
By the weekend he'll be dead"
|
|
Now Jesus walked among the poor
|
For the poor were his own kind
|
And they'd never let them get near enough
|
To take him from behind
|
To take him from behind
|
|
So they hired one of the traders trade
|
And an informer was he
|
And he sold his brother to the butchers men
|
For a fistful of silver money
|
For a fistful of silver money
|
|
And Jesus sat in the prison cell
|
And they beat him and offered him bribes
|
To desert the cause of his fellow man
|
And work for the rich men's tribe,
|
To work for the rich men's tribe
|
|
And the sweat stood out on Jesus' brow
|
And the blood was in his eye
|
When they nailed his body to the Roman cross
|
And they laughed as they watched him die
|
They laughed as they watched him die
|
|
Two thousand years have passed and gone
|
Many a hero too
|
But the dream of this poor carpenter
|
Remains in the hands of you
|
Remains in the hands of you
|
|
-----------------
|
The Ballad Of The Carpenter
|
Phil Ochs |