Meditation poem for Easter Friday:
Beach Breakfast.
This morning,
at the
turning
of the
tide of night
into the
blue
of the
new
day,
we sat with
God.
Not doing
anything.
Not saying
anything.
Just sitting
on the beach
of being,
while all around
us
darkness dissolved
into dawn,
and the
waking birds
sang
their psalms
of daily
astonishment
at the gift
of
beginning,
again.
Then,
we ate and drank
God
for
breakfast.
For what
else
would you
call
the first meal
of
the day?
Breakfast
or
Eucharist;
whatever you
call it,
it happened,
happens,
will happen,
every
morning.
We gather.
We sit.
We offer.
We receive,
and we are
received.
We consume
and,
slowly,
over a lifetime
of
mornings,
we are
consumed,
until only
God
is seen,
and we see
only
God.
For
we become
what
we eat.
Don't we?
Then,
after breakfast,
we tumble
into the day
touching
both
its order
and
its chaos
and
knowing both
as gift,
as blessing,
as beloved,
as grace.
Beholding
above the
head of each
and all
we meet,
a flame,
a spark,
of burning bush
beauty,
perhaps forgotten,
or even
unnoticed,
by inner eyes
long used to
downcast
distraction.
So we,
food fueled
and breakfast
blessed,
will
touch
a passing
shoulder,
or elbow
and
in the moment
of their startled
stillness,
smile at their
old young
heart
waking to its
reflected
beauty
as we offer
His
ancient
invitation
to the beach
of being:
"Come
and have
breakfast."
(Written 2019)
No comments:
Post a Comment