While it was still dark we grabbed our cups of warm beverages and set off down the nearly-empty street, the watchful eye of the half-moon looking out from the sky growing bluer every moment. Everyone on the beach is a silhouette, recognition made harder by the masks we wear. But somehow we know each other by the choice to be present here in the cold dawn on the colder sand. The singing starts. It’s more muffled this year, but not even thirteen months of pandemic will silence us altogether. We watch the horizon where a band of cloud meets the placid water, and I wonder what we’ll actually be able to see this year. We sing the sky to brightness, and the first streaks of color break through: jagged lines, like stretch marks where the whole world has been waiting to give birth to this particular morning in this particular place with these particular people shouting “Alleluia!” And indeed the sun does crown the cloudy horizon. And a child marvels at just how big it is. And the lake reflects the glowing red into a path of light, a pillar of fire guiding the way into liberation. Death has lost its sting, and God has arisen in the swimming muskrat and the calling seagulls and the little boys gleefully kicking sand as the round stone of the sun rolls higher into the sky, as the pillar of fire grows too bright to look at and sinks slowly into the water where it becomes the promised land.
Month: April 2021
“My God,” shouts out the suff’ring Lord
Written last year as we catapulted into the fullness of the pandemic and Holy Week.
To the tune of KINGSFOLD (To Mock Your Reign)
–
–
“My God,” shouts out the suff’ring Lord,
“Why have you forsaken me?”
Our king and the Incarnate Word
Has pow’r for just one plea.
His body bears an anguished pain
Beyond the heavy cross.
No human language can contain
This emptiness of loss.
–
“My God,” yells out the hungry child,
“Why are you so far from me?”
Their body, dirty and reviled,
Is home to Deity:
The lonely Christ is present there
And joins the tearful cry
That dares to give voice to despair
And hungers for reply.
–
“My God,” cries out the broken Earth,
“Can you not hear my groan?”
This planet to which God gave birth
Now reaps what we have sown.
The Lord of Life with flesh of clay
Is there in every death,
In each extinction, every way
Creation gasps for breath.
–
“Where are you, God?” the desperate pray
As they reach out for a word.
Both midnight and the brightest day,
They question who has heard.
The lonely, sick, abused, and poor –
Christ joins them from the cross
And echoes from his wounded core
The fullness of their loss.
