A place of prayer, poetry and hopefully peace all in and through the Franciscan tradition
Tuesday, 6 June 2017
At the centre, the Heart.
What do we find at the centre of our faith?
The Cross, uniting earth and Heaven in a communion of Love stronger than death, despair or evil.
What do we find at the centre of that Cross?
A human heart that holds the fullness of Divinity.
What do we find at the centre of this heart?
A burning wound of fire and light wherein our woundedness is healed, our darkness illumined, our sin forgiven, and our existence united with Divine Nature forever.
What do we find at the centre of that wound?
The point where time and eternity meet in that mystery of Divine Love we call Incarnation, we call Jesus.
What do we find at the centre of the Incarnation?
The answer to all the questions of our being:
We have come from Love.
We are now because of Love.
We are called into Love for eternity.
And we are loved so much that God would break His own heart for eternity to prove to us just how much we are loved.
Most Sacred Heart of Jesus
I place all my trust in thee.
Sunday, 4 June 2017
Thoughts about #Thoughts&Prayers
Thoughts about #Thoughts&Prayers
Last night, as the terrible events unfolded yet again, this time in London, social media lit up as it does with tragic familiarity with the chaos of contrary bulletins, appeals for help and offers of assistance, congratulations to the first responders and condemnation of the perpetrators and, following quickly of the politicians too…
And then comes the wave of hashtags: #prayers&thoughts, #PrayforLondon etc… and, as is usual of late, following hard and fast on their heels come the wave of those who do not want the “platitude of prayer” or are frustrated with the offering of “prayers and thoughts” that seem to do nothing but make people feel better about themselves and perhaps even seem to absolve of responsibility…
“Do something!” the crowd roars… “Don’t just stand there thinking and praying do something!”… and then the virtual crowd tears itself apart as it tries to decide just what it is we should be doing… how we should be reacting… and very quickly shock becomes sadness, and sadness becomes frustration, and frustration becomes anger, and anger becomes hate and hate seeks a victim, and violence begets violence and it is all understandable…but lamentably so.
So I wonder… perhaps this hashtag is more important than ever in these days of struggle with fundamentalist forces and knee-jerk reactions to events? After all, the terrorists want to do one thing and one thing only… they want to dictate how you should pray and what you should think. This is the reality of religious fundamentalism. They do not want you to reflect and to choose your reaction as thousands are doing in Manchester and London tonight, choosing love over hate, and even more so in the case of our Coptic brothers and sisters of Egypt, who astound with their long suffering forbearance, and choose forgiveness over hate. The terrorists, indeed the fundamentalists of any sect or group, are always most threatened by a human being choosing to reflect, to think, to pray according to their own conscience. And so they engage in terror, in random acts of violence calculated to disturb, to anger, to disable our rationality so that our knee jerk reactions will simply fulfil their twisted prophecies of hate and spiral out of control into ever decreasing circles of fear, anger, pain, death.
No, instead let us truly offer our thoughts and prayers. Let us, people of all faiths and none, choose the reflective path that looks not at symptoms but causes and then attempts, calmly but unflinchingly, to deal with the symptoms by changing the causes, while consistenly and constantly affirming the rights of all to the freedom of thought, of faith and of prayer that is at the core of what we all believe.
Before we do something let us think, and pray, and reflect. Then we will be more likely to do the right thing. At the very least we will be doing the one thing they do not want us to do; for after all, our thoughts and prayers are exactly what the terrorists want to control.
Peace to London, to Manchester, to Afghanistan, to Egypt, to Syria, to Iraq, to the Philippines… peace to all…
And yes... my thoughts and prayers are with them all tonight.
Sunday, 16 April 2017
Reunion of the Mother and Son: Easter Dawn
It is often asked where the risen Christ was when the women, and later the apostles, got to the garden... Mystics and Mothers (who are often the same thing) have always known the answer.
After all, where would any son go first who had put his mother through so much?
The following lines express this hidden and unknown joy of Mary perfectly...
May it be your meditation this Easter morning.
Reunion:
The stone
rolled off,
And no one
saw it.
Her heart
was jubilant
And full of
ecstasy.
She knew
that a sea of joy
Would flow
out of the sea of sorrow;
Although it
would
Recede to
sorrow again
She could
remember
Being born
in the midst of
God the
Father,
And being
created
Before
creation.
Did She
truly watch
Light come
out of darkness?
Did she see
shores
Come into
being?
It seemed
you could play
See-saw on
a wave!!
She never
moved.
Quietly and
closed in a room,
She sat
behind a door
That no one
dared to open,
And looked
upon the streets
Of her
beloved Jerusalem,
Watching
the crowds
Hurrying
hither and yon;
Watching,
and not seeing at all;
For the sea
of sorrow
Was
receding
Into the
desert
Where seas
go;
And she was
playing
See-saw on
a wave
Made by
God.
She knew
the Pieta was Piety.
The sorrow
in her face
Was sorrow
of the past.
Upon it
lingered still
The shadow
of the cross
And Him
upon it;
But when
her hands
Had touched
His face,
Which the
disciples thought was
Dead,
She felt
the warmth
Pulsating
through it.
How could
God die?
He touched
death
For an
instant –
Abolished
it forever,
And it
became
An angel of
surpassing beauty;
For whom
men of faith
Would wait
with bated breath;
Death
hasn’t icy fingers at all
They are
warm –
The fingers
of the angel of love.
The ice,
the cold, the decay
That is for
men of earth to see;
For their
eyes are not conditioned
To the
resplendent state of the
Soul.
She knew
He was not
dead forever;
Not one
bone would decay.
He slept,
quietly, obediently,
In the
tomb;
For He was obedient
Even after
death.
But when
they rolled
The stone
before the tomb
He was free
to roam;
To come, to
go
To be
Where all
those years
He could
not be
Or could
show Himself.
Out of the
tomb
To hell,
To bring
joyous news;
Then, like
a man
Would visit
In a
pilgrimage of love,
The places
that made His heart
Beat faster
As a man.
When She had held His cold-warm
Body
She
trembled
With the
joy of it –
Knowing He
would come
To visit
Her first
The
Magdalene would be the next
To see Him.
So She sat
alone
With the
door closed –
They
thought to grieve
But no! To
wait.
Who was
there to see
Or hear
what passed?
Who was
there to know
The glory
Of music
born in that room?
The Music
of His voice and Hers
Mingling as
voices
Never did
before.
“Tonight is
the night
Of my first
unknown joy.”
“It is just
as well
That men
count them as seven;
For how
else could they count
My joys or
sorrows?
There are
not enough stars
In heaven
To add them
up –
Seven will
do nicely.”
“Come
Share in
one of my unknown joys.”
“He came to
Me
In my
chamber,
My Son!
My Lover!
And
overflowing rapture
Condensed
in utter ecstasy
Filled Me
again.
“It was as
if
I had
conceived anew,
For all my
being
Felt His
coming.
The room
pulsated
With the
beat
Of angels’
wings
But even
the seraph’s eyes
Were
sealed.
Not even
they
Could look
then
Upon the
Mother and the Son
And so they
chanted
Alleluias.
“Did you
know that I,
The first
stigmatic,
Had the
wounds?
It happened
simply,
Perhaps He
was two or three,
Perhaps, I
am not sure.
It is hard
for one who
encompasses
eternity
to think in
time.
One day He
was playing
At My feet,
And
suddenly
Like a little
swallow
He kissed
each foot.
The wounds
began to throb.
“At seven
or eight
He kissed
each palm,
Lingeringly.
And I knew
The feel of
nails.
“He came
once
In early
spring,
On a shiny
sunny day.
His hands
were full of flowers.
He sat on a
small stool
And wove a
crown for Me.
I knew the
weight
Of thorns
Upon my
head.
“In May, in
your land,
Children
repeat His gesture.
It brings
back the memory
Of thorns,
sweet, deep, sharp.
“He was a
suckling at My breast.
One night,
Somehow,
His face fell
From My
nipples;
And His
warm mouth touched my side.
Was it a
kiss?
Was it a
lance?
From that
blest night
The pain
was there
Never to
go.
“So you
must know
My unknown
joy,
The
rendezvous We hels –
My Son and
I –
The night
they thought
They had
sealed His tomb
So tight.
Where do
you think
He went?
He went to
the place
He loves
most in Palestine
–
The room of
His Mother.
“Wonders
will never cease!!
The room
was aflame;
For where
My Son is,
There is My
spouse,
The Crimson
Dove
Who holds
Me tight.
The angels’
wings
Made melody
of strings
As they
chanted their
Alleluias
In a circle
of bliss,
And He sat
at My feet
And I
looked into His eyes –
Above to
below.
“The
Crimson Dove
Brought the
flame of love;
And the
Father was there
Unseen,
jubilant, joyous,
Taking
delight in His Son.
And as He
did,
The Crimson
Dove grew,
And a flame
covered the earth.
Alleluia
Alleluia
Alleluia.
“The stone
was still tight
On the tomb
of My child
Who was
with Me.
“I give you
the Paschal gift.
Put out
your hands
And take it
to your heart
This is the
night of joy!
Alleluia!
I am an
Alleluia
In the
flesh
Tonight.”
(Lines from Catherine
deHueck Doherty's epic poem: "Our Lady's Unknown Mysteries.)
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Saturday, 15 April 2017
Homily for the Easter Vigil 2017
Homily for the Easter Vigil:
We have kept vigil… we have waited with hope… we vigil with all of
Christianity…with all of the cosmos who since that first Good Friday have
entered into the Divine Space where these sacred events always exist, at once
both human and divine, in time and in eternity.
We have walked their ancient paths, worn by
countless generations of faith-filled ancestors all over the world, and we have
arrived at that upper room where the Disciples and Apostles gather to wait… For
what they do not know… they are simply called to wait… sustained by a silent
Mother in their midst who believes as only a mother can believe that the story
of her broken boy is not yet over…cannot yet be over… must not yet be over… She
a single, silent point of illumined faith in a world of darkness and pain… a
star shining in the night dark in despair…
Let us go to that place now and be with them a
while, entering in spirit that room of darkened windows and locked doors… where,
since yesterday afternoon, they have descended into that quiet that enters the
human heart when, hoping against hope, we wait…
We wait…
We wait… when waiting itself seems a vain act,
a hopeless effort of a heart and mind too broken to take in the awful reality
of what has just happened…
The world would call it denial… it would see in
it a people who are broken by their own betrayal of the One they claimed they
loved and who now cannot accept the consequences of that betrayal…and so they
leave us alone… their work is done… our work is done…we betrayed Him… they
crucified Him… no matter who did what… who held the nails… who held the
scourge… who placed the crown of thorns upon His head… He is dead… That is all…
And so they leave them at the tomb… leave them to crawl back to the upper room
of vigiling… of waiting… of silence…
We look around the room… and remember…Can it
really be only a few days since He was here, speaking, teaching, loving? We see
the bowl of water, the towel, we see the empty plate and cup, we remember His
call to love and we remember his prediction of betrayal and how, just for a
moment, almost none of them, none of us, could meet His eyes…
We try and stop remembering…instead we wait
with them… not really sure of what we are waiting for… there is simply a silent
insistence to be here… to gather… to wait… and sometimes… when we think no-one
is watching or listening to weep… to weep for what we saw… those of us who
stayed and walked behind Him in the crowd; to weep for what we didn’t see,
those of us who fled to rooms and hills and hidden places where, though we did
not see it all we felt it all… heard it all…
Sometimes it is harder to feel and to hear than
it is to see… especially when the mocking voice arises from the silence of our
hearts and sneeringly delivers us to the edge of despair as we look back and watch
our brave words crumble into cowardice…
And so we wait… we wait as people have always
waited at sickbeds and deathbeds, at moments of birth and moments of breaking,
at moments of making and unmaking, we wait with the Earth our mother, and the
sun and the stars our elder sisters and brothers; those powers who stopped in
their tracks and hid their faces and broke open in horror at what their human
brothers and sisters had done… at what we had done…
We wait as armies await the dawn hoping for the
cry of a new day and a new hope… and slowly, hesitatingly, we remember…
Did He not say that this would happen? Did He
not speak to us of a handing over… of a death that had to be faced… of an hour
that had to come… Did He not berate us for not understanding… for not
believing… Did He not in this very room…only a few hours ago tell us, as He
broke the bread and blessed the Cup, that He would be taken from us but that He
would return… and that then He would always be with us…
We hear His words in our hearts…
At first… they are weak sounding… against the so
new and so near sight of blood, and nails, and spear, and… blood… so much blood,
poured out upon the earth They are weak against the memory of His groans and
words in the midst of agony upon the Cross…
But the words sound themselves in our hearts and
with each one we shudder at the remembrance…
“Father forgive them they know not what they do”…
“Today you will be with me in paradise”…
“Mother behold your son”…
“Son behold your mother”…
“My God, My God Why have you forsaken me”…
“I thirst”…
“Father…Into your hands I commend my spirit”…
And as they sound we remember that last groan…
that almost silent word… more of a breath… a gasp, fighting its way to the
surface to be heard…
“Kaaaah laaahhh”… “It is accomplished!”…
and somewhere deep in our memory awakens the
knowing that this is the word the High Priest utters in the temple as the last
Passover Lamb is slaughtered… Kahlah… it is accomplished…
and we are stilled…
and we think…
the lamb…
the blood of the Passover Lamb…
the blood daubed on door post and lintel that
says in this place death has no power…
And we remember a man… John…worn thin and brown
by prayer and desert sun both, and his arm, wiry and long, as it pointed across
the river and his voice crying aloud, “Behold the Lamb!”… and we, they, all of
us through all time begin to hope…begin to yearn… begin to pray… begin to
think… maybe…just maybe…
For yes, He was truly the long-awaited Lamb and
the true High Priest and even the Altar of Sacrifice itself and in that
whispered moan of Kahlah as He yielded up His spirit He accomplished all that
He had been sent to do, all that He had freely chosen…
In emptying Himself of Glory He descended into
the darkness of a sin conquered world and became its liberator, its conqueror,
its saviour, its light. And we who know that darkness, who know its pull and hear
its siren call daily, know also that we are made for that light, long for that
light, long for that love, long in the deepest places of our hearts for new
beginning and the grace of an inward dawn that never yields to the night of
self or death or sin again…
And this is what we vigil for… this is how we
can endure the memory of the scourge, the crown, the nails, the cross, the
spear… because we know how the story ended! Not in the dark despair of a Friday
night, at the sealed dry rock of a tomb, but in the dawn light of a Spring
garden on a Sunday morning where resurrection was announced by birds greeting
the new day in song…
For in that divine breathing forth, that cry of
Kahlah…
Life itself went forth to meet death,
Light itself went forth to meet darkness,
Love itself went forth to meet hate, and…
death was made the door of life,
darkness was dispelled and illumined, and
hate was defeated and cast down by Love
and breath born creation was in-spired again, created
anew as in the Saviour’s expiration it received the breath of God…the Divine kiss
of life saving a sin drowned cosmos and so could begin to breathe anew…
And this happened…this happened… and it is
happening now… here in this place… not again, but always!
For in the eternal now of God this waiting in
the darkness of sorrow, always becomes, when transcended with faith, a vigil of
light and hope, always becomes a resurrection moment as we touch the power of
the Risen One and His grace…
And this is how by Fire, and Story, and Water,
and Bread, and Wine we pass through thousands of years of waiting and longing
in a single night, and with hearts made new and candles kindled, we become who
we really are: the anointed sons and daughters of God who know that the despair
of the upper room on that Saturday will surely, surely, yield to Easter joy and
light.
This is why we are able to not just tell the
story but to become the story for a world that longs to hear it, needs to hear
it, was made to hear it… and when we become that story in the Risen One, when
we allow Him to once more be the Word made Flesh in us then, only then, does
the marvel of Easter take place:
Christ will rise in your heart, in my heart.
Christ will work in us and through us.
Christ will pour out His blood upon us and
breathe His Spirit into us and illumine us with His light and with His love…
And, when the moment comes for us to enter into
His Kingdom, we will hear Him say, as He looks upon us all, “Kahlah!” “It is
accomplished!”, and we will know ourselves to truly be His New Creation, His
Victory Song, His Easter People who sing His Alleluia Cry…
This is why we vigil and this will be why we
vigil to the end of time…
Yes…we have touched darkness…and will touch it
again… earthly and fallible and fallen as we are…
We have seen how quickly our “Hosannas!” turn
to cries of “Crucify!” and we know our sin, but we know our Saviour too and
know that no darkness, however powerful it seems will stand against His
Resurrection light!
No need for shame, or guilt, or fear, this
Holiest of Nights, for they are the fruits of Adam’s turning away…now the new Adam
appears, and with Him who is both God and Man we are returned not merely to
Eden, but to Heaven itself, there to gaze upon the face of God forever and to
hear our names called as children of the Most High…
Yesterday we kissed the Cross,
This evening we have vigilled from darkness to
light
Tomorrow and forever…we are an Easter people
for we know that above all, beyond all, behind all:
Christ has died,
Christ is risen,
Christ will come again!
May the Lord bless you and yours this Easter
Night: The Father, The Son and the Holy Spirit. Amen!
Wednesday, 12 April 2017
Spy Wednesday: a meditation
Spy Wednesday:
We feel it once again
approach,
the annual reminder,
the telling of the
true tale;
of the betrayal
of love,
of light,
of God
that exists
not just then
but
always;
an option in each
moment.
Beguiled by shadows
of desire,
always appearing
bigger and better
than the that whose
shape
they,
in their smoke selves
flickeringly take
falsely;
we tell ourselves
the story
as old as eden
"It is for our good,
for their good,
for goodness sake,
for eventual good."
But we
know,
always,
deep down we
know,
as inch by inch,
step by step,
we turn our back on
Him,
on Love,
and allow
the callous clinking of
coin
to fall upon the
floor
of a once clean
sanctuary,
our fairy gold that
disappears
in morning light,
yet we,
knowing that good is
hard,
too often
take the eden easy
way,
and
descend the
steps of
desire
until despair
beckons...
Hold!
He is looking at
you,
always,
in this moment,
meet His eyes,
who saw you
first in
eternal
gaze of Love
from everlasting,
and hear Him call
your true
name!
Give Him
your
judas shrunken self,
lost in egoic agony,
and let
His betrayed and bought
blood
purchase for you
instead
Peter's
true tears,
crystalising
into repentant
rock
beneath
Easter's
thrice told
benediction.
We feel it once again
approach,
the annual reminder,
the telling of the
true tale;
of the betrayal
of love,
of light,
of God
that exists
not just then
but
always;
an option in each
moment.
Beguiled by shadows
of desire,
always appearing
bigger and better
than the that whose
shape
they,
in their smoke selves
flickeringly take
falsely;
we tell ourselves
the story
as old as eden
"It is for our good,
for their good,
for goodness sake,
for eventual good."
But we
know,
always,
deep down we
know,
as inch by inch,
step by step,
we turn our back on
Him,
on Love,
and allow
the callous clinking of
coin
to fall upon the
floor
of a once clean
sanctuary,
our fairy gold that
disappears
in morning light,
yet we,
knowing that good is
hard,
too often
take the eden easy
way,
and
descend the
steps of
desire
until despair
beckons...
Hold!
He is looking at
you,
always,
in this moment,
meet His eyes,
who saw you
first in
eternal
gaze of Love
from everlasting,
and hear Him call
your true
name!
Give Him
your
judas shrunken self,
lost in egoic agony,
and let
His betrayed and bought
blood
purchase for you
instead
Peter's
true tears,
crystalising
into repentant
rock
beneath
Easter's
thrice told
benediction.
Sunday, 9 April 2017
Palm Sunday extremes: The dangers of shrinking God...
Holy Week
begins with Palm Sunday, a time to reflect on the extremes within us.
The same
crowd who greet Jesus as King and Lord and sing “Hosanna!” shout “Crucify Him!”
barely a week later. It is a reminder to us all of the potential for both good
and evil present within our hearts… just because we are crying out hosanna in
this moment does not mean that we may not fall and find ourselves crucifying
Him in the next… Palm Sunday in its two Gospel passages sobers us… and gives us
a vision of human reality, our reality. Beginning in joy and ending in sorrow
it reminds us what happens when we try and shrink God, try and manipulate Him
into what we want Him to be, or even worse into what we want Him to want us to
be. The crowds shouting Hosanna do exactly this. They are good people, God
fearing people even, and that may be their problem; they fear but they do not
love. Love expands our understanding, fear shrinks it. In their fear and anger
their understanding is limited and so they want God to submit to them, to
follow their plan. They want Jesus to be their conquering Messiah, a warlord
who raises an army and frees the chosen people from their Roman overlords. They
don’t want what God wants to give; not a warlord Messiah but a suffering
servant who frees, not just a city or a people from physical domination and
slavery, but the whole cosmos from the slavery of sin and evil; They do not
want it, but they receive not a king upon a throne, but a lamb upon a cross.
Yes, “Hosanna!”
can turn to “Crucify!” so easily, so quickly. It can do that in my heart, in
your heart too. Anytime we try and shrink or constrain God to our plans, our
way of thinking, or our agendas, no matter how worthy or good they seem to be,
this is what happens…
So what is
our way out of this mess? Jesus shows us… In all of the chaos of palms and
processions He is simply Himself, silent, still, present. He submits to the
Will of the Father and empties Himself so that we may be filled… In the house
of the High Priest, before Pilate and even on the Cross He is simply following
the will of the Father and so is serene, secure, still. He is the still-point
of pure love around which the world, the cosmos turns and in His stillness He
opens for us an ever expanding vision of God, an ever expanding vision of Love.
Let our Holy Week begin and be blessed by uniting ourselves with the Stillness
of the Saviour and allow Him to call us to the simple acceptance of the will of
the Father for us whatever it may be, the divine vision for us that never
shrinks us to shout “Crucify!” but always gives us an ever-expanding vision of
Love that causes us to sing “Hosanna!” We may not even know what it is for us
in our lives as yet, but we can be certain that as long as we allow Christ to
be the still centre of our being we will pass into the flow of the Divine Will,
into the flow of Love.
(Pic is by James Tissot)
Monday, 30 January 2017
What was he like? Brother Leo remembers Brother Francis
What was he like? Brother Leo
remembers Brother Francis.
“What was
he like?”
I asked,
exhausted from
my climb to pierce the
cold cliff top cloister
of
this cowled
brother’s retreat,
hoping to stir
to remembrance his soul
stung by
the Seraph’s fire so long ago,
yet burning
still in eyes ancient but clear,
that gazed
upon my lack of grace with mercy,
and smiled
at me from a distance I cannot fathom
“What was
he like?” he whispered to himself
holding my
question as carefully as the jug
with which
he poured me water, cave cold and clear
to quench a
pilgrim’s thirst.
Then on
that hill above Assisi
the old
hermit friar spoke,
slowly at
first, and stumbling,
as though
his tongue, long lost in silence
of cave and
forest, had now to stretch itself
and awaken
language once spoken,
like one
who comes home from a foreign shore
and finds
the accents of his own confusing.
So we sat
before his cave he and I,
friar and
novice,
lost in
legends and lore,
all the
more beautiful for being
at the same
time,
truth;
and needing
to be told once more
to a world
longing for his possibility to be made present
in edenic
blessing
once again.
What was he
like?
Like a Tree
he was,
that on Summer
days shines green
and in its
topmost branches feels,
the waft of
Heaven’s winds
and dances even
at the stillest hour,
or that in
Autumn clings not to leaf but
changes loss
to gift by
casting
clothes windwards and
delights in
lightness,
its bare
bones describing sky
and
pointing arrowlike
always
upwards.
What was he
like?
Like a Stone
he was,
smoothed by
the sweet rain,
graced by
countless hours of chiselling prayer
into a
solidity of stillness.
A
cornerstone, a keystone, a foundation stone
able to
hold the weight of wisdom lightly,
yet bear up
the broken and bridge the gap;
a stepping
stone to wholeness and home
for those
long lost.
What was he
like?
Like the
Night Sky he was,
open, and
sheltering, and many
couloured
in magnificence, but
starlit in
simplicity.
Its beauty
simply a gradation of light,
infinite in
scope and eternal in origin.
What was he
like?
Like Fire
he was,
tracing his
storied path from spark to ember,
even in
stillness, a banked flame
and always
energy of exultation breathing blessed,
a
conflagration of communion,
buried just
beneath the ashes of abstinence.
What was he
like?
Like a Stag
he was,
who knows
where the sweet water flows,
and travels
the deep dark valleys
and
mountain crags to reach his slaking spirit stream.
Loud as a
Bear he was,
and as
quiet too,
spending
his winters between
wakefulness
and sleep,
lost in the
cave of the heart,
barely
breathing
but
murmuring
mercy for all,
until
Spirit spring stirs and his
honeyed
roar was heard again
upon the
hills.
Like a Wolf
he was,
singing
soul songs beneath sister Moon’s gaze
with clear
eyes lost in Heaven’s love,
calling to
himself his pack, those
who knew
their song and soul sound
in his
echoes of emptiness.
Badger
brawny and
filled with
faith’s wisdom he was,
and likened
to old Broc,
he knew the
ancient ways and
night
walked, as they do,
secret
silent paths,
long
trodden, but needing
refinding
always, in each
generation’s
journey.
Like a
Salmon leaping he was,
glittering
like glass
light
sparkling from sliver scales,
struck by
sunlight, suspended
between sky
and stream in a
moment of
stillness
over ever rushing
river.
What was he
like?
A living
song spark wrapped in the
nest of
Mother earth,
enfolded in
the dun dust brown of the Sparrow,
small and
thin he was,
with a
barefooted skipping gait
barely
holding the joy that burst from his breast
his
feathered soul never far from song.
Like a Wren
in a thornbush he was,
cocking its
eye wryly at the earth bound,
certain of
its power of flight
and yet
choosing our company.
Like a Robin
he was,
who, tree
hidden from view,
sings its
piercing song of Heaven
drawing
down remembrances of innocence past
into hearts
sure they were
long past
childhood’s delight in sheer being,
and there waking
wonder once again.
Thin like a
Thrush he was,
who seeks
the highest branch
even in
storm, and sway-sings with delight a tone made purer
for the
assault of wind, and rain,
and thunder
crackling all around it.
Like a Hawk
he was,
staring
with unblinking eye into Love’s light
and falling
like a stone from heaven
to shock
his sleeping prey awake.
And now?
What is he
like now?
Like a Lark
he is,
free and
flying heaven high
whose
sun-kissed song
seeks only
an open soul and then,
beckons all
skywards.
And I miss
him, though
he sings
his lark song in my heart too,
Aye, and in
yours as well or you
wouldn’t
have visited me here
now would
you?
But I shall
fly to him soon
and there
we will sing together
once again
our lark lauds for the One
who gathers
all bird, and beast, and brother, in blessing.
And then we
sat, old and young together
Cowled in
brown both, though centuries between
and ghosts
to each other,
until the
sun set and the moon rose
waiting for
the Nightingale to chant her compline call
and Assisi bells to ring
their song of peace.
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