Tuesday, July 22, 2014

god bless the grass

God bless the grass



By Malvina Reynolds
God bless the grass that grows through the crack. 
They roll the concrete over it to try and keep it back. 
The concrete gets tired of what it has to do, 
It breaks and it buckles and the grass grows thru, 
And God bless the grass.

God bless the truth that fights toward the sun,
They roll the lies over it and think that it is done
It moves through the ground and reaches for the air, 
And after a while it is growing everywhere,
And God bless the grass.

God bless the grass that breaks through cement,
It's green and it's tender and it's easily bent,
But after a while it lifts up it's head, 
For the grass is living and the stone is dead.
And God bless the grass.

God bless the grass that's gentle and low
Its roots they are deep and it's will is to grow.
And God bless the truth, the friend of the poor,
And the wild grass growing at the poor man's door, 
And God bless the grass 

Friday, April 18, 2014

poem for holy thursday

Ongoing Incarnation
breakbreadI lift it up, firm yet pliant, aromatically doughy
hear the rip of it tearing in my hands
and think of the calloused skin
of men toiling under the hot sun
often with little pay
in constant threat,
ever asking themselves:
Will I be sent back as illegal
unwanted
rejected?
despite their long labors
and searching for hope
toiling to plant and harvest the grain that bore this loaf?
As I open my mouth, ready to whisper ancient words
I cannot but think of the body I watched
laying still and quiet
a tangle of cords its shroud
entombed amidst white hospital walls
just as sure as that fated Galilean lay
in rocky borrowed grave
the only sounds surrounding it are
the constant beep of machines
we call life support
which instead of bringing life
simply delay the inevitable
freeing of that one woman’s soul
from a body
transformed from a house of joy
to a stifling prison of pain,
a sound that mingles with
machine-borne labored breaths
which together resound in that room
like water dripping
on stalagmites
deep below Linville caverns.
“This is my body,” my lips whisper
and I cannot but have my mind transported
to the hills and seas of Uganda
where Idi Amin left bodies
Child Abuse Statisticspiled in the sun
of little girls
just like that African princess
who is like a daughter to me
whom he thought defective,
and the smoke clouds of Aushwitz,
which rose engulfing all those
whom madmen called unworthy
while good people watched unmoved.
“Broken” I whisperabuse 1
and think of the man
whose life remains shattered
by one he trusted as a boy
who left scars no one , nor time itself, can heal.
“Broken” echoes
as I remember little girls and mothers
hiding for their life
from the ones that left them bruised.
communionI take the cup, I raise the glass,
and realize
in each of them the Sacred Light burns bright
just as surely as it shined in Mary’s baby boy
and in me.
This is my cup, I hear him whisper as I say his words
poured out in you and many.
As I hear Him, I rememberhomeless in jesus arms
how often we fail to see.
We say “keep those dirty souls out of our parks”
not letting love win for the likes of them.
We say “send them back”,
forgetting that it is in their eyes,
eyes of the stranger
the broken
and the poor,
that the Savior’s eyes shine back upon us.
We say “they are too far away”
while so many baby girls
fall under tyrant’s tank
and terrorist’s bomb
their fathers likewise
helpless to save them.
And I fall to my knees
broken
remembering
all those I turned away
not seeing
calling crazy, faggot,
wetback, and gimp
heart broken wide,
face wet with tears.
And somehow, somewhere,
in the music of the moment
I hear a whispered reminder
This, broken, is my body.
gods handsThis one poured out bears my life.
Be my body, broken with the broken,
be my life, poured out to the empty.
Let us lay a table together
in the valley of death
so your cup overflows
with drank of healing
for all my who lie broken
trembling in fear.

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A poem for Holy Thursday — ongoing incarnation
Today is a holy moment.  It is tonight in the Christian year that we mark Jesus’ last supper, when he broke bread and offered a cup, introducing the central celebration of the Christian life — the Lord’s Supper – and also when he was betrayed by one of his own, to begin the journey to the cross and through the cross to resurrection.
As a way of marking this time, I would like to share a poem based on the celebration of the Lord’s Supper.  May it help you sense your part in the journey of Easter.
And I’m not just whistling Dixie,
Your Progressive Redneck Preacher,
Micah


Saturday, February 1, 2014

PAPA





Papa
February 4, 2002
I lost my papa today,
But not really.
He is in the smiles on the faces of his friends.
I see his peace in the calms and swells of the ocean waves.
I see his love reflected in the passion in my mother's eye.
I see his patience in the remote control model airplanes he built,
And his humanness in the crashes of some of those planes.
I see his love and respect for his church family
reflected in the guidance and love given back to him.
I see his wonderment at the beauty of the sky.
I see his strength in the depth of his faith,
And gentleness in the core of his hugs.
So you see, even though I lost my papa today,
I haven't, really.
I love you.
Janet Kipp Lerch
Copyright ©2007  Janet  K. Lerch

Saturday, January 25, 2014

A SILLY ONE

A SILLY ONE
My furs are not in storage.

Or draped across my bed.

They are standing at the backdoor

Waiting to be fed.

One is fat, The other fuzzy

They watch the birds and bugs  so buzzy.

OK, food is coming

The cans are hard to open

Fingernails break making less than ten,

The meow insisting I hurry with my task

OK OK  all you had to do was politely ask.
 
 
JANE NEALE