Showing posts with label Advent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advent. Show all posts

Wednesday, 26 December 2018

My Gran and the Christmas Invitation







My Gran and the Christmas Invitation:

Today, St. Stephen’s day is a very sacred one in our family… not just because of the first Martyr’s witness and passing to the Lord, but because it is also my Gran’s anniversary.
My Mother’s mother, she was, (and is), one of the greatest influences in my life growing up.

I have always regarded Gran as one of my first and best teachers, not only in the ways of faith but even on the contemplative path within it. 

Many, many hours were spent with her, listening to her stories and imbibing her teaching (though she would never have called it that… she simply taught by her very being, as all good elders do). Faith for her was as natural as breathing, and indeed, if you listened as closely as I often did to her whistled breathing as she went about her day, a short prayer to the Sacred Heart or to Our Lady was often just beneath the surface of her breath.

Like her own Mother and Grandmother before her she was a “sharp woman”, as they used to say in Dublin, meaning a wise person and one with a direct line to the Spiritual world. 
Her mother was sought out amongst the Dublin flats as she had “the way” of helping difficult births and deaths and was often asked for advice about a “match” between couples as she had a “good eye” for these things.

Gran was no different and there were many times I would go over to her house to find her sitting beside the phone waiting for the call that would tell her so and so had died. She, of course, already knew as she had “the dream” the previous night… the phone call always came to confirm it and I soon learned to be used to it. 
On other occasions I would arrive to hear her chatting aloud with someone only to discover her alone by the fire when I entered the room.
I never asked.
She never said.
We didn’t need to.

She taught me those ways too. 
“Look into the fire and tell me what you see” she would say, and then smile when, to my surprise, I saw. 

She taught me to look at people’s eyes when they spoke and at the way they stood and moved. 
She had tremendous devotion to the Blessed Virgin who had “been through it all” and her prayers to her were not so much novenas or devotions as a constant conversation born of a life long trust. She had great respect for the friars and religious orders much preferring their churches in town where she could attend anonymously, not liking the front seat parish people as she called them. 
She reminded me often never to judge anyone and taught me to give to the poor, especially beggars in the street. 
“There’s always a story there,” she would say, 
“No one is on the street because they want to be.” 
Women were on the street or poor because, 
“Men put them there.” 
Men were on the street or poor because, 
“Most men are fools for the bottle or for a story.” 
No matter the reason they were to be listened to and helped.

She had been sharp in other ways too. A hard life and losing her husband early on had made her hard in her mid-life and it was only as a Gran that she softened again. In her later years she would often tell me that she was glad she got to be a Gran after everything she had been through.

She often worried about her death. She was not afraid to die. 
"No one dies alone", she would say. 
She had seen enough deaths to know that, 
“They come to collect you.” 

She was, however, afraid that she would die in the house and that I or another grandchild would find her. So for the last few years of her life she prayed everyday the “Thirty day’s prayer” to Our Lady for a happy death and listed the way she wanted to go:

She wanted to die in her sleep so she could “wake up in Heaven”.
She wanted to die alone but having said her goodbyes and surrounded by love.
She wanted to be ready to go.

She talked about it often, not in a morbid way, but in the way you recite your shopping list.
Going and coming were natural in their very essence and death she had long taught and lived was nothing to be afraid of for a Christian soul.

That Christmas she had been very unwell.
Pneumonia had followed a chest and kidney infection and a stay in hospital was called for. She did not want to go but acquiesced at my Mum’s request. Feeling a little better after a few days of antibiotics she was to be released for Christmas by the Docs even though Mum was not happy that she was ready. She came home to us. She was weak and a slim figure of her former self though I still wondered at the muscled arms of her small frame, a result of countless years of housework when that still meant a physical ordeal. She spent most of the next couple of day’s in bed sleeping. She smiled a lot and we got to visit with her and hold her hand and chat. 
Christmas Eve came and her children and grandchildren all visited with presents and smiles and the occasional worried whispered conversation with my Mum and Dad as to how she was doing. Christmas Day she was very quiet and slept a lot. As the house was beginning to settle down she called my Mum into the room and very deliberately and unusually for a woman of her time thanked her for all she had done and told her she loved her. My Mum was somewhat taken aback but at that moment Gran asked her who it was that was standing behind her. 
There was no one there that Mum could see. 
Gran’s eyes focused on the spot behind her and she relaxed.
“It’s alright,” Gran said, “I know them.”
Mum said her smile was a beautiful thing at that moment.
She told Mum, “You can go down to the family now, I’m fine”.
Mum did, though to the end of her own days she often wondered why she did. 
As she went downstairs she could hear Gran talking quietly in the room.

Later Mum checked in on her to find her sleeping deeply and gently.

That night a Blackbird sang outside the house all night.
I remember looking out to try and see it.
I could not.
I should have known.
Gran had often taught me to watch out for Blackbirds.
“They are special to our family,” she would say, 
“Your Grandfather loved them and they come to warn us of things.”
“Whenever you see one, say a prayer to your Grandad.”

I still do.

The following morning, very early, Mum woke suddenly and went straight to check on her.
Gran had passed away.
She was still warm and she was smiling gently.

Mum called for the Priest and the Doctor and then carefully woke us all. I still remember that there were no tears in the house that morning. It all felt very peaceful and quiet. The Priest administered the Last Rites as he felt that she had only just gone before Mum found her. 
A little later myself and Mum stood in the room with Gran looking out the window. 

On the lawn a hen Blackbird was hopping around.

We smiled at that.

“Well”, I said, “She certainly got the death she had wanted!”

Mum told me then about the things that had happened the previous night and about Gran seeing someone in her room.
Someone who had made her smile.
“Do you think it was Grandad?” I asked.

At that moment, right in front of us, a Cock Blackbird, all shiny and bright yellow beaked flew down beside the Hen on the lawn outside. They greeted each other and flew off  together.
After that there was nothing else to say.
Gran had gotten the death she had asked for and we had received the little signs of her going.

In Ireland there has always been the custom of the “Cuireadh na Nollaig” the so called “Christmas Invitation” the feeling that a death at this time of the year is especially blessed and that the signs around it are powerful. Today, almost thirty years later I write this so that this story of my Gran’s passing may be remembered and may bring peace and hope to all who read it…

And perhaps the next time you see a Blackbird you might say a prayer for all your loved ones gone before you…




(Photo unattributed found on google)

Monday, 25 December 2017

Christmas Homily: Ards 2017: Year of the Family






Christmas Homily: Ards 2017: Year of the Family


Emmanuel that is the title He gives Himself…
God with us…

Down the dark and longing ages the prophet’s flame touched words are heard,
“A virgin will conceive and bear a Son and his name shall be Emmanuel”…
They were not understood but they were repeated, renewed in each generation’s heartfelt yearning…and so the sacred words come down to us…
They shine an inner light upon that yearning that arises from that deeply gnawing sense we all have of separation… of being alone… of isolation…
Separated from our God, sin sundered from each other, separated by death… we long for completeness, for perfection, for peace… for life eternal,
for God with us…

We look for its fulfilment… so often searching in the wrong places… We give ourselves over to short term solutions, thinking that our hungers are more important than asking why we are hungry at all and, if we are then what are we truly hungry for? We think our desires are more important than those of others, our needs more pressing than yours…and so finding in our overwhelming desires a fire that scorches and destroys when all the time we were really looking for a light that illumines and enlightens…
It is enough to make us despair…
Or it would be…
Were it not for the prophet’s Spirit whispered promise…
Emmanuel: Our God with us…
the fulfilment of all our hopes and dreams with us…
Can it really be possible?
We wonder…

Could the God of gods, the light from light truly want to be with us?
With us in our mess?
With us in our sin?
With us in our brokenness?

No! Impossible, we think,
At least not until I make myself perfect, or at least a little better,
God would not come to my home, to my heart, to my family… I mean look at us…
Look at me…
“If you really knew me…” we say
 and the fall silent before the mirror of our own soul and its sin soiled surface
No, we think… He could not want to be with me, and in our twisted pride we close our doors to him, just as surely as the innkeeper did on that night,
as the Pharisees would later,
as Pilate finally will with the washing of his hands…




But look at the name He is announced under…
God with us… Emmanuel
Not God with us if…
Not God with us… when
Not God with us…but

You see, where true love exists there are no ifs, buts, or whens;
no conditions no limits no ultimatums
There is only with…
The Lover with the Beloved
Each allowing the other to be who they are.
The One present to the other in open compassion and peace.
That is love
That alone

And to prove this He comes in the most simple and poor way possible.
He descends directly into the mess, into the heart of the mess,
Into a divided world
Into conquered nation
Into a persecuted people
Into a displaced tribe
Into a dung and straw filled stable
Into a topsy turvy family barely ready for a birth
Into the pure heart of a young girl
Love descends.
Love itself descends and becomes one with the mess
Becomes one with us.
Becomes one with me.
Becomes one with you.
And we touch pure, divine unconditional love

No waiting for us to be perfect here…
If God was to wait for us to be perfect there would never have been a Christmas!
No He comes to the mess and in coming to it begins to heal it there and then.
Right there in the midst of it all.
He comes.
The star hangs silent and almost unnoticed over a town overrun with chaos
The angels travel to the simplest and most unclean to deliver the message
of peace!
(no shepherds allowed in the temple! No farmers before the altar with their muddy sandals and earthy hands.)

Emmanuel: Our God with us…
He comes in stillness
He comes in peace
He comes in vulnerability
He comes in the middle of the night
He comes in the deep midwinter
He comes to be loved
He comes to love as only a baby loves
Without judgement and always in the perfect
present moment, forgetting what has just been before
and open to Love now.

Emmanuel: Our God with us…
One with us…
And in that shining moment of Bethlehem we are made part of His family again
The one great family of creation restored as sons and daughters of the Most High
There is no one without a family ever again
No one without a place here at the manger
No one for whom the babe would not have come
Or did not come…
He came for you
He came for me, broken, sinful me…
And He came so that in the Love that is God the broken would be made whole, the sin forgiven and the new beginning of blessing begun in my life and in yours too…

This is what we celebrate tonight…
Every Christmas light you see reminds us of the light of the stable and the star,
every tree in every window the evergreen welcome of Christ in His Love,
every gift exchanged a shadow of the greatest gift ever given…
this is why we gather here and in all the churches of the world tonight and it is why we are sent from here with this message, this commission to tell the whole world

Our God is Emmanuel
Our God is with us!

Hear it!
You have a commission… You cannot call yourself a Christian and absolve yourself from it! Wherever you are, wherever you go you have a message to proclaim, if not by your words then more importantly by your life!

In your home
In your place of work
In your relationships

You must be Christmas!
You must be the reminder to all that God is with us!
You must become a Christmas tolling bell announcing the Word made Flesh,
the birth of the Saviour…

No one should meet you, friend or stranger and not meet the Good News of God in the mess, God with us…

No one should meet you, should meet me
without knowing they have met another call to the manger,
a call to come home to the family of God,
a call to the embrace of Love;

No one should meet you, should meet me
without knowing that in some way they have met the Christ who comes,
the babe of Bethlehem, the God who is with us…
the God who is love.
The God who sees in us only and always
His beloved sons and daughters
His family.

We have called Him Lord and Master and rightly, for so He is…
We have called Him Prince of Peace, and Wonderful Counsellor and Everlasting Father, and so He is…

But He has called Himself Emmanuel…
God with us…
And that is what we celebrate this Christmas night.

May the Lord give you His Peace this Christmas Night: The Father, the Son and + the Holy Spirit.
Amen/

Sunday, 24 December 2017

The Wild Nativity





The Wild Nativity.

We have our prophecies too
you know,
we tell our own tales,
and so we knew
to gather there
that night,
ambassadors of our
varied kinds all.
Before old Joseph
came back
with supplies from the inn.
We were there,
hidden in the hay,
up amongst the old beams,
resting by the manger
or drawn there
by the new star
that rose that night
pure and shining
like a snowflake
in its light.
We were there.
We had felt the
old pull of Eden
in our furred and feathered hearts
and felt his long forgotten nearness
once again who walked with us
once in evening light.
Old rivalries forgotten,
or at least put aside tonight,
we sat peacefully
in storied rank
half hidden in the shadows,
lost in awe at her,
settled
so still
in the straw,
her eyes closed
as though present
to a mystery
within.
We were there
waiting for Him
with her.
Let us prepare
His place we said...
Wren moved first,
to pluck her own breast
scattering the softest down
amongst the rough straw
and sparrows followed
weaving moss and herbs
as mattress
as Owl, and old Crow
and Hawk directed.
"I will keep him warm",
said Robin,
reddening his breast
while fanning flame alight.
"We will sing to him
when at last He comes"
said the little ones,
four footed and furred
and long tailed too,
piping in their tiny voices
choiring high as mouse
and vole, rabbit
and hedgehog all
assembled there,
followed by fox's clear tenor
and Badger's earthy baritone
to sing their
benediction of
wild welcome.
And then he came.
How? As sun shines sudden through a cloud breaking blindingly!
How? As the first rays of dawn mark that moment when night becomes a new day.
How? As a scenting nose is suddenly aware of a change in the air.
He came.
More than that we will not say.
Ours alone was that privilege to see and we will guard it down the ages...
And Mary looked upon us with love
and thanked us all
and in her smile and words
we heard old Eve laugh
at last again.
And then there was noise,
and people,
so many people,
and we withdrew
as we always do
to the shadows
again.
But not before He smiled at us
a smile of long recognition
graced and grateful
both.
After the shepherds left,
and their piping drumming din
went off amongst the crowds.
After Bethlehem finally became still.
After old Joseph nodded off
to his Angeled dreams.
We were there
and came forth again
from the shadows
to dwell with them,
our new Adam and Eve,
and heard then
our Gospel
preached to us,
who are already
of His kingdom
and always were.
We made our covenant
with Him then,
to be the first apostles
of His love
and in
our being blessed
and shared with you
to remind you
of the innocence
you lost
and He renews
if you would but follow
our
wild way to
Eden's light
again.
We have been
forgotten now
as shepherds, kings
and crowds
followed,
but not by Him,
who from his mother's arms
smiled past them all at us
hiding in the shadows
there.
And we would later
meet Him
in the desert
and the garden,
there
we will be with Him
again,
for we have
our prophecies too
you know,
and tell our tales
too,
whispering
to each other
across the woods
and hills,
on this night
each year
as you toll your bells
and sing,
we look to the skies
and
remember;
we
were
there.

Christmas Blessings to you and yours this Holy Night +

(Pic is of The Christmas Star by Lynn Bywaters)

Saturday, 23 December 2017

On the Edge of Waiting: A Meditation Poem for Christmas Eve, Eve.




On the Edge of Waiting.
(A Meditation Poem for Christmas Eve, Eve)

Shhh...
Come away a moment,
my friend.
Come away
from the lights,
and the crowds,
and the shops,
and the noise,
and the pressure,
and the worrries,
and the old wounds that
winter us
before our time.
Come and sit with me here.
Rest.
Just for a moment.
Let me share with you once again
what we forget in our festive
frenzy:
He is coming…
Down the long ages of despair
He comes as Hope.
Down the rough road of doubt
He comes as Faith.
Down the broken byways
of the
human heart
He comes as Love.
He is coming…
Sit with me on the edge of waiting…
Sit in sacred stillness…
Breathe the deep breath of
blessing.
You do not have to do anything.
He is coming…
Whether you are ready or not
Aware or not,
Able or not,
Present or not,
Believing or not,
He is coming…
As the sun rises,
as the moon shines,
as the tides turn,
as the stars dance,
He is coming…
So do not worry.
Let the tyranny of
tension
fall from you…
You never needed to carry it.
Let the false face of
righteous readiness to defend,
dissolve.
You never needed to wear it.
How could you ever be ready
for this?
For the first proclamation of the
Kingdom to be heard in a baby’s
cry.
Nothing is asked of you
but
to be here and now
who you are.
Truly.
Fully.
Broken?
Yes.
Weak?
Yes.
Called?
Oh yes.
He is coming…
And He is calling you to come to Him.
As He always does.
As He always will.
So, how will you greet Him,
the One who is coming?
The One who calls you,
to His crib.
(Yes, you.)
Will you prepare a place for Him?
Will you open the cave of your heart to Him?
Will you place Him in the sanctuary of your soul?
Will you lay Him upon the rough straw of your life?
Will you swaddle Him with your silence?
Will you offer Him the gentle warmth of animal breath?
Will you offer Him your love?
Or not.
He is coming…
Do not miss the moment
Of Mystery’s
mangered birth
by succumbing to
Bethlehem busyness.
No.
Become as still as a shepherd watching the flock of slumbering sheep.
Become as still as a sage watching the long dance of the stars.
Become as still as Joseph hearing Angels on the edge of dreams.
Become as still as she who is the stillpoint of love’s longing, filled with light,
and whose silence
brought forth the
Word of Love.
Be still and you will know
He is coming…
Always…
In stillness,
on the edge of waiting…
He is coming for you…
He is coming to you…
Always.
He is coming in Love.

(I wrote this last year and just discovered it has been shared over 1000 times on FB! As it seems to be something we all need to hear I'm posting it again. May its words continue to bless all who read it... Happy Christmas Eve, Eve to all)
Brother Richard

O Emmanuel: A meditation on the seventh of the Great O Antiphons of Advent.






O Emmanuel!

You who are God with us,
Come and deliver your people!
All holy one
who dwells higher
than the Cherubim,
adored by the living fire of the
Seraphim in love
so exultant it enflames all
it touches,
you who hide behind
the cloud and thunder of Sinai,
lest we would die
in awe,
descend now
and reveal at last
your face to us
our Saviour!

O Emmanuel!

Name by which
we would never
have named you,
so awesome is your mystery;
and yet, this name you choose
and place upon your
prophet who speaks it as sign
through lips of flame.
Descending into our nature
so to raise it on high;
our God above,
beyond,
before
you are,
yet now revealed as
with us
in our every moment,
as in your incarnation
eternity weds time
and heals the long broken
human heart
consecrating the cosmic 
temple anew.

O Emmanuel!

Love incarnate
and light from light!
You fill all things,
and all things 
have their being in you,
yet you choose us
for your family
and come to dwell in us
through the mystery 
of a mother’s love!
For nine moons
at play in that sacred pool,
ever unrippled 
and undisturbed,
you hallow
the waters of the womb 
again
and in its sacred darkness 
dance,
making of the one who builds you
from her own blood
and feeds you on her own milk
the first tabernacle from
which all of us 
will feed!

O Emmanuel!

Hear us on this seventh
and most sacred night,
as we complete 
the circle of 
our sacred invocations,
closing at last the wreath 
of evergreen time,
and gather once again
at star-rise to call you
from the heavens
and down the winding roads
of our long hoping
to be born in us again!
O hear our song
sung from the heart
of humbled humanity
that we, who have in you
our very God with us,
may learn the wisdom from
your prophet promised
and thrice holy mother,
to bow our heads
and enter Bethlehem’s barn
and there be with the One
who in love’s divine mystery
is always and ever
with us.

“O Emmanuel, our king and our lawgiver,
the hope of the nations and their Saviour:
Come and save us, O Lord our God!”

Friday, 22 December 2017

O King of the Nations, O Rex Gentium: A meditation on the sixth of the Great O Antiphons of Advent






O King of the Nations!

Long desired one we call to you!
Come from
your Royal Throne
and reign over us!
You who are the beginning
and the end of all;
the first principle
and the fount of all that is!
Come, we pray,
and restore the
divine order of this cosmos,
long thrown into chaos
by the discordant note
of our sin.

O King of the Nations!

Of old known by so many names
and in so many places sought!
Desired in the hearts
of all peoples, of all times
and
templed in the souls 
of all those ancient elders,
men and women of
justice,
peace,
and truth.
Tear down, then
the veils of separation
and reveal your holy name
to all,
as you did to Moses,
that from the many nations
there may be formed
one peaceful people,
one flock,
beneath the loving gaze of
the Good Shepherd.

O King of the Nations!

Come and be our cornerstone!
Take our lost
and tumbling efforts
and re-found, re-form,
our crumbling clay
in your divine matrix
that humbled,
we may stand tall again
and find our place
within your temple
as living stones
once more!

O King of the Nations!

Hear our sacred invocation
as we sing the royal hymn of the Lady,
she who is your Queen and Mother both!
Let us follow her 
in magnifying your power
in its paradox of grace!
For you,
O Conquering Messiah,
in your stabled birth
will teach us the true path
of kingship,
and bestow upon our nature
a royal dignity
never to be taken away!
So then,
may we become, again,
as once we were,
the highest gift
and twice blessed
in our being
by following your
descending
path to the lowest point
of emptiness
and there,
between the
breathing of the beasts
and the beating of a Mother’s
heart,
beneath the star-stilled sky,
and
only there,
come at last
to hear the
Angels
exult
in true royalty
revealed
as Love.

“O King of the Nationsand their desire,
the cornerstone making both one:
Come and save the human race,
which you fashioned from clay.”

Thursday, 21 December 2017

O Rising Sun, O Oriens: A meditation on the fifth of the Great O Antiphons of Advent





O Rising Sun!

On the day of the deepest dark
we call you!
Come to us O promised light!
Gazing upon the eastern edge
of the world
we thrill,
as from our long benighted being
the first dayspring spark is cast,
and a red dawn heralds
a conqueror’s coming!

O Rising Sun!

You who are light from light,
scatter upon us
the uncreated light by which our dull eyes
may even now behold
the dawn of your presence!
Illume us as lanterns,
kindle us as fires,
breathe your flame upon us as beacons
in a world so cold
and a winter of the heart so dark
we oft forget the dawn that has come,
is come,
will come again,
needing our annual remembering
to rekindle our rebirth in you
O Son!

O Rising Sun!

We long for your dawn
down the dark and ancient ways of ancestry
Feeling in our old yearning
the gathering of ghostly generations
who followed their deepest knowing,
that map,
long inscribed upon the centre
of our being
but written in a sacred script
unknown to eyes lost to Eden’s light.
For they,
So desperate for the
warming of a presence
they remembered
but did not know
wrought stone,
and marked ways,
and offered song,
and told story,
and gathered green,
and even spent
blood,
to charm back an earthly sun
while truly seeking
for the Divine Son
who would warm
the winter of our heart
and make of Himself
the sacrifice that brings the light back
for an eternal day  

O Rising Sun!

We call you by our evening invocation!
Kindling our vesper candles and vigil lights,
wrapping the wreath of time
in flames of rose and purple,
we sing now the soul song of
the Lady of the Light.
She whose heart blessed beacon
shone so bright in love,
it drew you from
the realms of everlasting day
to that sealed chamber in which,
with quickening touch,
you, the dayspring and the morning star
both
bestowed your spark of glory
and found your home,
issuing forth
as Word and Light
to bestow the blessing
of a dawn from our Midwinter night,
that re-orients us to righteousness,
and reveals the Light beyond all night
Bethlehem born and blazing
as the true and victorious
Son.

"O Rising Sun!
Splendour of light eternal and sun of righteousness:
Come and enlighten those who dwell in darkness and the shadow of death!"

Our Lady of the Solstice

Lady of the Solstice

At the moment
of
the
deepest dark
and,
at
the sharp point
of the
longest night,
at such distance from
dawn
that we groan
beneath
the burden of
being,
and touch within
ourselves
only
the winds of winter
and the
wild longing
where
light
is only a memory
long lost
and left behind in
summer sun;
then we,
suddenly,
and just for
the merest of moments,
are hushed
into silence,
as the turning
of the
ancient
wheels of wonder
stop,
and sun and stars
all,
still their divinely
directed dance
and take their
yearly yearned for
deep remembering
rest,
like lovers suddenly
still,
when struck
by desire's reverie;
or dancers,
pulsing with passion,
awaiting the next
beat
of beauty's music
to liberate life within.
They,
our elder siblings
of the sky,
recall in
their
sacred stillness
that moment
when
once,
just once,
their fiery song,
sung since
first
divine kindling,
was
paused,
hushed,
stilled,
stopped;
just
once,
long ago,
so as
to
listen to
a new note
joined to
the
great hymn of gratitude
that all
offer
simply by their very being.
For in that
moment
of their listening
was revealed
she who is
our true solstice.

The Woman,
that moment of
perfect stillness
between
divine in-breathing
and creation's
exhalation of excelsis.
So they watched,
as she who is the
stillpoint
of
the dance of story,
and the sanctuary
where
myth becomes flesh,
then,
before angelic emissary,
dropped the pebble of her
yes,
in its utter simplicity,
longed for through the countless
ages of agony,
into the pool of our pain.

Behold the Solstice of the Lord…
Be it done unto me according to His Word…

Looking deep they
saw its
ripples now run to the
edges of existence
trembling them with
the promise
of a new
Spring.

And the Story became flesh…
And dwelt amongst us…

This young girl,
this Lady of light.
who is our solstice.
She,
the perfect place
of stillness,
so attuned
to the coming of the Light
that in her
all
creation stills,
the old cycle of sin
is broken
and,
even the deep dark
of despair
must yield
to glow of dawn.

She,
the light that glows before
the rising Sun,
heralded by Robin
and Wren
and fluting Blackbird,
She, like that blessed moment
when Sun and Moon
both
hang in the deep blue together
and bow as they pass
gentling our hearts
and
drawing us from dreams
to welcome
the advent of the One
who
IS
Love's Light
and eternal Word both,
spoken now into time’s renewed turning
by the Yes of one who
holds
within her heart
the perfect emptiness of Love.

Treasuring in
the holy dark of
her womb the hearth
where Spring's spark is
kindled
and brightens with beauty
as a
first place of
promised Easter exhalation
the cave of
rebirth;
in which
eternity and time
are married,
and infinity will wed itself
forever
to clay's embrace.

Here, in this
sacred solstice place,
Eve's aching
is healed,
and
here,
Adam's sin
undone,
as from the dry root
of the
sundering tree
a new shoot rises
at the word of
one
whose whole being
is Yes
whose whole being
is
Love,

And so,
yearly
we sit,
rooting ourselves
once again
in Mother Earth's embrace,
and while looking ever upwards
we find the still point
of the skies
and yet
inwardly gaze
into
the light of story
long-kindled
against the cold of winter,
and so become
re-minded,
re-hearted,
re-souled,
by she who is our solstice,
whose self-forgetting
Yes
brought to us
the turning of the light
and blessed us
all
like barren trees
brought to beauty
by a sudden
anointing
of
new snow.

Wednesday, 20 December 2017

O Key of David: A meditation on the fourth of the Great O Antiphons of Advent




O Key of David!

Opener of the way between the worlds
Come and open our tight locked hearts!
O you who make of your very self
both the door and the key
make straight our path to you this night
and from the long winding of the ages
order us aright and
set our feet upon the way of peace
who long since left the path,
and stumble blind in darkness
of our own making!


O Key of David!

You who unlock the ancient temple treasury of Israel
come and liberate its golden light
to illumine the darkness of the whole world!
Open the minds
of all who seek truth and beauty
to find their source and summit
in your mangered birth.
Temper our being,
O Sceptered smith
of the heavens
by the hammer
of your divinity
until we are fit vessels for your sacred meal,
tabernacles of your spirit,
alloys rendered pure again
and fit for the King’s own
birthday feast.

O Key of David!

Open the long barred doors of Heaven as you descend!
Claim again the authority of divinity over humanity,
and humanity in divinity over creation.
Release the locks of longing
holding the doors of limbo shut
and quicken again the hearts
of patriarchs and prophets,
of the ancient fathers and mothers
of all times and places
who have kept faith with the promise
of a freedom scarce imagined,
yet desired of all the ages.

O Key of David!

Unlock in us the song of heaven
that sin strangled into silence
so long ago!
Let ours be the song
of the Woman
whose faith drew you down
upon the earth
she, the thrice holy one,
in whom the gift of grace
shone so bright
that even the shadow of
death
was put to flight,
and you who are
life unbounded
and eternal,
key and door both,
dwelt sealed in her
three seasons long,
so as to unlock for all
and forever
the way to
the eternal
Spring.

"O Key of David and sceptre of the House of Israel;
you open and no one can shut;
you shut and no one can open:
Come and lead the prisoners from the prison house,
those who dwell in darkness and the shadow of death!"