A meditation poem for Good Friday night:
The Tipping Point.
The tipping point
is now reached
at last.
The ancient scales
of justice,
long fixed,
creak stiffly and tilt
mercywards,
weighed anew,
re-balanced
by wooden thorns
and three iron nails,
stirred
by that last shattering cry
of consummation,
more of a breath
than a shout
by then,
delivered into winds
suddenly woven
from calvary's calm;
as though inspired by
His exhalation to wake
all who weep,
or sleep,
or wander,
now drawn to new ways,
all while rocks crack
beneath
the sacred strain
of holding Him who
holds them in themselves,
and a once sure crowd
feels the fear of sudden clarity too late,
too late.
What of His fled followers?
Did they feel it too?
The sad shuddering
of the earth's molten heart
boiling and breaking
in grief,
those who hid themselves
like Adam from an
all seeing eye
of love,
like children who,
thinking to
conceal their faces,
close their own eyes.
Yes, these,
who would soon return,
almost all,
and be gathered
again
around
she who was
His parting gift,
who had first gifted Him
with all He human had.
She the solid earth healing
his broken fisherman foundation
until solidity returns
thrice assured.
Now He seems to return
to rest
upon her lap,
but Soul journeys still
in realms long lost to us
He routs rage
and restores
right.
His light harrows Hell
where revealed now
as Word,
and Lord,
and King,
He claims His dowry,
the seeming dead
of all the ages,
freeing and raising
before being risen
Himself,
while His body,
salved,
shrouded,
and entombed
waits for wedding kiss
of resurrection
dawn.
(stained glass of the Passion from Ards Friary)
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