Sunday, May 31, 2020

Poem: Time After Pentecost

Pentecost is a Christian holy day 50 days after Easter commemorating the descent in wind and fire of the Holy Spirit to the Apostles.  This event (Acts 2:1–31, New Testament) marked the beginning of their ministries and is sometimes called the birthday of the Church.  

After Jesus came and went, we kept
Awhile to ourselves. We needed time
To sort it out: the stories we wanted to keep,
Those times with the fish, the sense he made to women,
And who had claimed the body from the grave;
When God let on he'd come again, or someone
Next of kin. The brightness hurt our eyes.
This time the house was shook – we couldn't think.
He came in wind and flame so hot, so fine,
We hardly needed words to say what happened.
Our muscles took on shine, they rose and moved
Like water moves that knows for sure its way.
Our mouths relaxed, our tongues were in our hair,
Shifting fire that made our bodies talk,
And travelers from out of town tuned in.
We climbed the roof still glowing.
Some spirit Inside seemed his because it itched to fly
And made us flirt with fear to follow life.
But the ribs and legs were ours this time, as if
God had finally learned to make his home
In anyone who loved to stand the heat.

Once we felt the light we had to change,
To set aside the extras for the real.
We'd save his stories, since he was a friend,
And Christmas carols, because we knew the words,
And honor each cathedral built from love.
But some things had to go. With living fire
To play with, who needs heavy air and smoke,
Hidden talk, or dressing up like kings?
Why stand in boredom looking at the sky?
Why grope and mourn to please offended gods?
We cry our own tears now – there's living water;
The list of virtues we had only learned
Have taken form in human eyes, in angry
Lungs that stretch and tear the air for justice,
In hands that know the art to heal by touch,
Where trembling through the joints of our own bodies
We feel the energy of holy grace.

I tell you, these were changes, this was living.
The house had hardly cooled when we set out
To take the path the fire takes, to let
The churning in our rib cage show the way.
We went in twos and threes, sometimes alone.
The road kept finding us, the earth rose up
Against our feet to meet us like a lover.
And who's surprised? Wherever God leaves traces
The ground is hot: I test it with my skin.
Sometimes he's fire above, or blood within
Sunk way beneath the tissue of my words,
Beyond where fear or answers can intrude.
And "Breathe," he says, as he's done from the start.
And "Let my fire through your lungs and heart."
For all the ways to know him, I insist
The only path is never to resist
His breath within your breath, in who you are:
This gravity is lighter than the stars.
He loves and burns and dances up the spine.
I do not know his name, but he knows mine.

                Richard Bollman, SJ




Saturday, May 30, 2020

A little place

This world is just a little place, just the red in the sky, before the sun rises, so let us keep fast hold of hands, that when the birds begin, none of us be missing.
            Emily Dickinson, in a letter to Frances and Louise Norcross, September 1860