Monthly Archives: September 2012

John Baptizing

When John was done sloughing off the sins

of hard soldiers and taxmen, your turn came.

You waded in knee-deep, brown water

eddying behind. He watched you come,

still plump from home, your mother’s child.

You met his eyes. Startled and unsure

he washed you anyway. You waded out,

lifting your tunic out of the pile,

sliding it over wet hair.

He noticed you shake out

the cloak, coarse weave,

whittled peg to close the neck.

It turned cloudy. A gust came up.

The next one spun you toward wasteland

silent as bone. Was it thunder he heard,

announcing a storm?

Evening Prayer

 

Bless to me

my rest tonight, O God.

Send love to guide me through

the little death.

While stars swirl

and night deepens

keep your eye on me:

this sleeping life is yours.

Love and guard it

until morning comes,

the next one,

and the last.

Praise for One More Day

Holy One,

the generations come and go,

but you are ageless Love.

No chance or change diverts your heart from us,

the apple of your eye.

Our parents’ parents called on you,

and when our children’s children open newborn eyes,

they’ll find you faithful still—

grace unreasoning in love, untiring and unspent.

Glory be to you, now and forever. Amen.

Evening Praise to the Sheltering Christ

 

O Jesus, risen from the dead,
the birds have nests, the foxes holes,
and the kings of earth their mansions,
but you had nowhere to lay your head.
Yet you made a home for everyone,
gathering us under your wings
like a hen gathers her chicks.
Even in death you were preparing                                                        rooms for us in the heart of God.
And now your eye is forever the lamp
over the door of our lives;
your heart, the safe gate
through which we come and go;
your hand, the roof above our sleeping:
under the cover of your palm
we lie down and dream.
Praise to you, O Christ, shelter and peace,
now and forever. Amen.

Come, Gladsome Light (A Morning Prayer)

 

Come, gladsome Light,

and split the dark of prison cell and tomb,

of numb hearts and anxious minds,

of shamed regret and lost chances.

Shoot like sparks through stubble,

revealing glory in hard places,

grace in sorrow’s gloom.

Shine too is us, frail lamps you made to glow;

and by the faint rays of our gleaming,

even ours,

unshadow shadowed hearts

with Love forever blazing and undimmed.

A Word About Tenderness [A Sermon on Luke 15:1-32]

I want to say a word today about tenderness.

You know what that is, because you need it. You need it and you long for it, because this week someone rubbed salt in one of your wounds, or found a vulnerable place in your heart and hurt you there, belittling you or berating you, or making you feel guilty. A conflict in your family injured you with hot arguments or cold silences, or an injustice at work undermined your sense of self, or some mistake you made a long time ago came back to haunt you, or some weakness or sense of failure or inadequacy that you thought you had dealt with tripped you up out of the blue, and you had to renew the old struggle. Your kids did something dumb at school and you got a call from the vice-principal, or they ran a little crazy on the street and you got a call from a neighbor, or you discovered that they have big secrets and bad friends and you are starting to worry that when a phone call comes, it will be too late.  And the last thing you need to hear this week is that you have only yourself to blame, that you should have been stronger, that you should have been smarter, that you should have known better, that you don’t measure up, that you fell down on the job, that you should be ashamed.

And so I want to say a word about tenderness.

You know what that is. You need it and you long for it, because lately you’ve come to see that things just aren’t working the way you planned, that the road you thought you would travel is not the road you are on, and the road you are on is unmarked, or a dead end, or a treadmill, but you’re on it now, and you can’t see how to get off. And it’s just dawned on you that the world is not going to cooperate with your dreams and will never be the bright stage for all the great roles you believe you were meant to play, and you can barely contain your inner rage and disappointment about how unfair life is. And the last thing you need to hear now is that you should just suck it up and make do, or that since you got yourself into this mess, you’ll just have to get yourself out of it; or that you always were too big for your britches, too dreamy, too ambitious, too impractical and unrealistic, and that you haven’t planned right, lived right, done right, and that you should be ashamed.

And so I need to say a word about tenderness.

Because on top of everything else, a reckless driver cut you off on the way to church, and you slammed on your brakes and honked your horn, and when you did, he gave you the finger; and you, innocent and still trembling from how close you came to buying the farm, felt a primeval urge course through your veins, and you wanted to punch that SOB’s lights out and make him see the error of his ways, and you may even have trailed him for a mile or two, riding his tail, but then you thought about tire irons, baseball bats, and Saturday night specials under passenger seats, and you cut it out. And you realized as you came in and found your pew and finally sat down that you are tired of how hard it is just to go from point A to point B in this life, you are indignant that nobody obeys the rules, and you are sick of the gratuitous violence that lies beneath the surface of even the most comfortable lives. And the last thing you need to hear from anyone right now is how foolish you were to do what you did, or how maybe you need an anger management course so that you can learn to just chill, or you need more exercise, and oh, by the way, you should be ashamed.

And so I am going to say a word today about tenderness.

You know what that is because you need it. You long for it, and so do I, because we get lost from time to time the way a sheep goes missing from a flock – not willfully, as another preacher wrote, but more by degrees, by keeping its head down, by focusing on the tuft of green grass it has found among the rocks, and then on the next, and then on the next, never looking up, just nibbling and inching farther from the flock, inching and nibbling until it has munched itself into serious trouble. And when we get lost like that, the last thing we need is someone to rub our noses in it, to tell us that it’s our own dumb fault, and that if we had just been paying attention this would never have happened, and so now we can just freeze to death out there, or die of loneliness, because there are other, better, more docile, less stupid sheep back in the flock that deserve more attention than we do. No, what we need when we go missing like that is to be found. What we need is someone like a shepherd to look for us until he finds us and drapes us over his shoulders and takes us back to where we belong, to safety, to be with the rest. What we need is someone so glad to see us still alive and bleating, no matter how dirty or broken or pathetic we look, that his shouts of triumph fill the deep valley and echo back from the sky.

I’m talking about tenderness today because we get lost from time to time the way a coin goes missing – dropping to the sidewalk through a hole in a purse, slipping out of a snoozer’s pocket and falling between the cushions of the couch, or rolling off a smooth countertop onto the floor; lost not like socks in the dryer that lose themselves on purpose, but like casualties of another person’s distracted carelessness, one more unattended and forgotten thing. And the last thing we need at such a time is someone informing us that it’s God’s will to have been so neglected and mislaid, that it’s our lot or role or even our glory in life to be so haphazardly wasted, that there’s a reason and plan for everything and that we just need to be patient until it all becomes clear.

No, what we need when we go missing like that is to be found. We need someone like a woman with a lamp and a broom who will not rest until every last inch of the floor has been illumined and swept, until she finds us and puts us back in the olive wood box with the leather hinge where she keeps all her treasures. What we need is someone who cannot believe her good fortune at having found us even if we are not as bright as we were before we fell among the dust bunnies, and even if it has exhausted her to locate us. What we need is someone who is still not too tired after all that effort to throw open the doors of her house and let the neighbors know that now all is right with the world because she has us back again, and whose joy at finding us fills the village and echoes back from the sky.

I am speaking of tenderness today because we get lost from time to time, like a self-centered boy who disappears trying to find himself, trying to become his own person, and who, when he’s sated with self-indulgence and comes to himself, finds that he doesn’t have a self, but has turned into someone he doesn’t know, a pig person who eats what pigs eat, and who thinks that now even his own father will not know him as a son, but who may be willing to accept him as a servant, a hired hand, which is all he will beg for. Lost like a boy so lost that he is willing to stay lost, even when he’s finally home. And the last thing we need when we are trudging up the lane, shaky and mortified, smelling like a sty and rehearsing our lines, is for some righteous person full of moral clarity to point out the obvious – that we have been naïve and willful, self-indulgent, over-confident, ungrateful and dissolute jerks, and that if we are allowed back into the house even as a servant we should consider ourselves damn lucky.

No, what we need when we come home still lost in our hearts, still far, far away, is to be found. What we need is someone like a parent who totally adores us and for whom we can do no wrong, who sees us before we see him, who cuts us off in mid-sentence and falls on our necks with kisses. What we need is someone who gives us ruby rings and ermine-collared robes, who sends the sound of pipes and drums throughout the house and strikes up all the laughing joy that cancels every debt, while the best meat on the farm turns roasting on the spit.

There is a time for judgment. A time for remorse. A time for what we usually mean by repentance, for coming face to face with our mistakes and regrets, for taking responsibility for our carelessness and indifference, our aimlessness and self-preoccupation, our greed and dishonesty, our insecure and narcissistic betrayals and all our secret vices. A time for getting help, for change and growth and forming new habits. There is a time to sort out what we did wrong and what was done wrong to us, to heal and be healed, to forgive and to be forgiven. But because so much of the time what we think of as sin is more a matter of haplessness than perversity; because choice is never as simple, free and obvious as we think; because motives are never uncomplicated or completely conscious; because pain is everywhere, relentless and cruel; because we are so hungry and thirsty for love and acceptance and worth that we are prepared to do almost anything to satisfy ourselves, and because more often than not people do not even know they are lost until they are found, the first thing has to be tenderness. The first thing has to be grace.

There is also a time for us to talk about the the church as the collection of the tender, the wounded, and the erstwhile missing, and a time when we must talk more deeply and more insistently about our calling to be a vessel of tenderness, to offer tender healing ministrations to the heart-aching, blood-soaked frictions of our families, our politics, our workplaces, our markets and our suffering beauty-of-a-world. There is a time to exhort each other energetically to embrace our calling to tend the sheep and to be the earthly expression of the loud angelic joy that overcomes heaven when the lost are found and the wounded made whole. But for now, for right now, tenderness is what we need. Tenderness is enough. The tenderness of Christ who knows how we are made, who know that we are dust, who has compassion on our mortal frames.

He comes to us now, all meekness and kind concern. He has eyes only for you. Tenderness for you. God’s tenderness and nothing else today. Only this. Nothing else. Rest in it, and be at peace.

Prayer before Bedtime

 

Jesus, our Mother, see:

we scrubbed our faces,

washed behind our ears,

brushed our teeth.

We pulled our jammies on,

the ones with feet.

It is time for bed.

Please read us a story.

Sing us to sleep.

Watch while we drift.

Bend down to hear

our even breathing

and kiss us on the head.

Turn off the light.

But do not tiptoe out.

Do not close the door.

Do not leave us to dream alone;

for not all dreams are sweet,

not every bed is snug,

not every child sleeps through the night.

If we should need a drink,

a whisper in our ear,

a soft “There, There”

for our whimpering hearts,

if we should need another lullaby,

O Christ, be near

Morning Prayer (Summon Me, My God)

Summon me, my God,

to a death down deep.

 In the fresh furrow of this day,

bury the small cask of my life.

And if I struggle hard

against the mercy that sows me,

afraid of the dark

and all I lose by dying,

count out for me

the cost of my fear:

the green withheld,

the fruit unborne,

the damage done

by desiring too little.

Summon me, my God,

from life seeded on the surface

to death down deep today.

Neighborhood Praise

 

Praise to you for the boy in the park

outside my window.

You made him lanky and brown

with feet as big as his skateboard.

He’s wrecking the soft bricks

trying to perfect a fancy move.

It is eluding him.

He swears when he falls off.

Where did he learn those words?

He tries again. When he misses,

the board slaps sharply on the sidewalk.

He misses a lot. Slap, slap, slap.

It startles the cat.

It’s impossible to concentrate

while he’s working at joy,

but when he pulls it off, oh baby!

oh brother! I think of you,

the glee you feel when

we make it: when just once

we get love right.

A Morning Prayer (for a New Heart)

Create a new heart in us,

O risen Christ.

Our old hearts falter,

exhausted with nostalgia,

shrinking in yesterday’s shadows.

They look to the past to find you,

but you are not in the past.

You live in the future.

From tomorrow’s fullness

you are coming to us,

aflame with morning light.

Help us, then,

who live so ploddingly,

to imitate you

not as we conjure you on

mythic hillsides long ago,

but as you are now in glory:

all imagination

unlimited, original, and new.