Pause

Pause now
and give names
to all that
encircles you
this day.
Sit
at the feet
of your own
promises.
Do not give
your life
a hollow
greeting
or forget
to bow
in that keen
threshold
between the thing
that is you
and the
sharp slant
of silk-web
binding
to it all.

 

img_9888

The Infinite You Possess

Recently I’ve been reminded of events that cause me to reflect on the past five years of our lives. It’s easy to look back and ask, What have we really accomplished? 

In the emotions of this question I gain the tiniest glimpse of what it must be like to look back on seventy or eighty years of your life and say, I still have so much more left I would like to do. These infinite desires are not something to be squelched: they are the echoes of eternity within us. They tell us something about what it means to be human. 

I think all of us in this season have had to reckon with, and rein in, our natural desires. Our desire to see or hold family members anytime; our desire for a casual trip to the market without planning and precautions; our desire to travel or work anywhere we want. Part of living a life well does mean learning to have mastery over our desires and finding contentment even in imperfect circumstances. Certainly this season has given us ample opportunities to practice this. 

But I also think there is an essential piece of truth in the fact that God created man and woman as hungry beings. This cycle of hunger and fulfillment was not merely meant to be an inconvenience, a way of reminding us of our weakness and dependence upon the earth. It was not something that came after the fall, something we will “grow out of” in the new earth. In fact, eternity is often compared to a great feast. 

Catherine of Siena writes about eternity: “But, in this way, hunger continues: Those who are hungry are satisfied, and as soon as they are satisfied, they hunger again. In this way their satisfaction is without disgust, and their hunger without suffering. 

“Thus your desire is infinite, or otherwise it would be worth nothing.

…The only infinite thing you possess is the affection and desire of your souls.”

I’ve grappled with this idea in many of my poems this year because I want to learn to cultivate the right kind of hungers: the hunger for justice over serenity, the hunger for growth over predictability, the hunger for connection over insecurity. But most of all, I want to cultivate the kind of hunger that can only be satisfied by the Infinite. 

Someday, if I get the chance to look back on my life fifty years from now, I want to be the one who says, What an incredible gift. But I also want to be the one to say, What’s next?

 

All your life stretches out before you

And you will never reach the end

Of the banquet table. 

 

Welcome to the feast!

 

four trays of varieties of fruits

Infinity

You never say, Enough

What I have given, I have given.

You never tire of pouring yourself

out for the life of the world.

Day after ten thousand day

we grow weary, we run dry

and you are still our Abundance,

still your Infinity serves us

with a towel tied gladly

about your waist.

 

This is the meaning of your glory:

Love which begets love, Power

which stoops in perfect humility,

delighting in the raising.

It presses in daily upon us

and all my heart cries out for you

and (I confess) mixed

with adoration pities you, which

only shows my poverty.

 

Oh humble love, wider

than the heavens!

Oh, the bliss of someday loving

half as well as we are loved!

 

img_9300

Unveiling

Peel back the layers of darkness

That cover our minds.

Sweep the smoky shadows from our eyes.

Reveal yourself to us once again.

 

We have grown old and blind

In our waiting

We have strained our eyes for

The sweep of the dramatic curtain

The sky broken open in glory.

 

A mourning dove sings.

A sudden tinge of dawn

On the slender horizon.

 

Listen, and you will hear the song

Of all things calling forth from memory

Back from true desire.

 

Listen—

Let us dance along the crevice

Of the trembling dawn

Let us hasten on to meet you

With arms piled full of light.

 

IMG_8438

Poem for a New Year

We will never know

If the trees ask the sap to rise

Beg the light to become blossom

Open their slender bodies

To swell and ripen into fruit.

 

We will never know if they call the birds

Who come to them in their dreams.

 

We can only ask ourselves:

Will I beg the light to rise in me

Or stand dormant?

 

We can only say, Come to me.

Come and do not delay.

NewYearPPP

ChristmasPPP

Alleluia – He has come!

Receive the news you’d lost

The name of hope for

Dance with awe in this most

Undeserved rain:

Our Father did not leave us

As orphans!

Our King comes with wind

And wild-wonder in His train!

 

O Christ!

O dearest Comer

We beat the drum of our hearts in thanks

We crush your gift to ourselves in love

We pour our tears on your feet in praise

And it is never enough for this joy!

For when the death was darkest

You came.