I have a friend, Strahan Coleman. I know him mostly as an author because we met after I discovered his writing on IG, excerpts from his Prayer Volumes. Here’s an excerpt from Volume 3:
But what I wanted to share here is from his music, which just now, I am starting to listen to. So profound.
Stay
There is a whisper, A quiet invitation, Beckoning me to come, A hand of kindness, A good and trusting one, A hand that will never fail.
My bags are packed but I’m glued to the phone, Cause I’ve got nowhere else to go, So I stay.
I have a mind that will wait for war to take it’s toll, Before it will still itself, But I’ve seen the face of love, A chest that warms and welcomes, A table that never fails. Oh I’ve been running’ I’ve been fading to grey,
But I hear you calling my name, Your voice is singing out like fire in the rain, So I stay.
Oh you’re not finished yet, This can’t be where it ends, Come kick this barrenness out into the grave, You promised better yet, So I’m lookin’ at you my friend and I stay.
How a poem about our Lady on this Mother’s Day? This is a poem I have posted before. It’s also about the Ascension, about her experience after Jesus ascended. Seems doubly appropriate for today.
Our Lady of the Assumption
Fold your love like hands around the moment. Keep it for conference with your heart, that exit Caught on clocks, by dutiful scribes recorded Less truly than in archives of yor soul.
Turn back from His going, be His still-remaining. Lift the familiar latch on cottage door . . . Discover His voice in corners, hear His footfalls Run down the porches of your thoughts. No powers
However hoarse with joy, no Dominations Curved with adoration guess what whispers Of “Mother, look!” and “Mother, hurry!” Glance off the cottage walls in shafts of glory.
How shall your heart keep swinging longer, Mary? Quickly, quickly, take the sturdy needle Before your soul crowds through your flesh! the needle And stout black thread will save you. Take the sandal
Peter left for mending. After that, The time is short, with bread to bake for John.
A beautiful short Sunday-poem. Using just a few words, Joseph Massey creates an exquisite image of prayer in an empty church. Do sit with it for a moment.
In an empty church in the middle of the day dark but for stained glass flooded with sun, a prayer held in the breath in my hands.
You can find his latest bestselling book of poems here.
I’m not sure where I found this Sunday-poem or who the poet is. There are some very beautiful thoughts expressed here which I pray touches your heart and its desires.
Woman of fire, woman of desire, woman of great passions, Woman of the lavish gesture. Mary of Magdala!
The icons show you robed in red, covered in the blood of the Lamb, a living flame, a soul set afire. You are there at the foot of the cross: kneeling, bending low, crushed by sorrow, your face in the dust.
You love, but in that hour of darkness, dare not look on the disfigured Face of Love. It is enough that you are there, brought low with Him, Enough for you the Blood dripping from the wounded feet Blood seeping into the earth to mingle with your tears.
You seek Him on your bed at night, Him whom your heart loves. David’s song is on your lips: “Of Thee my heart has spoken. Seek his face. It is Thy Face, O Lord, that I seek; hide not Thy face from me” (Ps 26:8-9).
His silence speaks. His absence is a presence. And so you rise to go about the city, drawn out, drawn on by Love’s lingering fragrance. “Draw me, we will run after Thee, in the odor of your ointments” (Song of Songs 1.3).
You seek Him by night in the streets and broadways; you seek Him whom your soul loves, with nought by your heart’s desire for compass. You seek Him but do not find Him.
In this, Mary, you are friend to every seeker. In this, you are a sister to every lover. In this you are close to us who walk in darkness and wait in the shadows, and ask of every watchman, “Have you seen Him whom my soul loves?”
Guide us, Mary, to the garden of new beginnings. Let us follow you in the night. Wake our souls before the rising of the sun. Weep that we may weep and in weeping become penetrable to joy.
The Gardener waits, the earth beneath His feet watered by your tears. Turn, Mary, that with you we may turn and, being converted, behold His Face and hear His voice and, like you, be sent to say only this: “I have seen the Lord” (John 20:18).
Red Cast rehearsal of LDS Church’s “Savior of the World” – Conference Center – Salt Lake City, Utah
A Sunday poem for the beginning of this Holy Week.
Adam Chmielowski
Royalty
He was a plain man and learned no Latin. Having left all gold behind he dealt out peace to all us wild ones and the weather. He ate fish, bread, country wine and God’s will. He wore purple only once and that was an irony.
Jan’s book, Circle of Grace, must be one of my favorite books of poetry. This Sunday poem is from another of her books, The Cure for Sorrow: A Book of Blessings for the Seasons.
THE HARDEST BLESSING
If we cannot
lay aside the wound,
then let us say
it will not always
bind us.
Let us say
the damage
will not eternally
determine our path.
Let us say
the line of our life
will not always travel
along the places
we are torn.
Let us say
that forgiveness
can take some practice,
can take some patience,
can take a long
and struggling time.
Let us say
that to offer
the hardest blessing,
we will need
the deepest grace;
that to forgive
the sharpest pain,
we will need
the fiercest love;
that to release
the ancient ache,
we will need
new strength
for every day.
Let us say
the wound
will not be
our final home—
that through it
runs a road,
a way we would not
have chosen
but on which
we will finally see
forgiveness,
so long practiced,
coming toward us,
shining with the joy
so well deserved.
—Jan Richardson
from The Cure for Sorrow: A Book of Blessings for the Seasons