Category: Poems, Prayers and Promises

  • Advent, Guantanamo and the witness of cup poetry

    The debate about poetry and politics, and the difference between poetry as propaganda and poetry as articulation of human hope and hunger, is much, much more than a hermeneutical conversation piece between academics. I came to this conclusion by reading "cup poetry".

    Cup Poetry is a way of crying, an attempt to find purpose in years of weeping. Cup Poetry gives voice to the unlistened to, even if that voice is heard only by the speaker. Cup Poetry tells of terror, dread and loss of self, in the hope that another human being will hear – and care. Some cup poems are the condensation of human anguish into tears, then used to inscribe and describe despair. Cup poetry is the name for poems scratched on styrofoam cups with pebbles; poems written in toothpaste; poems passed in fragments from cell to cell to preserve as much of them as possible. Anyway, poems written out of unimaginable suffering, composed under atrocious conditions of deprivation, each one demonstrating the capacity of human beings to face the disintegration of life, relationships and personal identity by ordering word and thought into a poetics of suffering.

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    That is the best I can do to describe the experiences out of which the volume Poems from Guantanamo: The Detainees Speak, was born. This volume and these poems created the term, "cup poetry".

    The very existence of Guantanamo calls in question the moral principles and political rationale for our way of life, which claims to be based on such foundations as freedom, justice, rule of law and respect for persons. When these foundations are subverted by the actions of military power driven by political rage, the victims are stripped of those defining rights to life and status as human beings without which human community isn't worth the candle, and our own moral principles turn toxic. It is one of the tragic ironies of the past few years, that the "fabric of cruelty" out of which Guantanamo has been tailored, has enmeshed untried detainees who demonstrate in poetry written under such conditions, the nature and beauty of language shaped to human suffering. Poetry as articulated suffering serves to highlight the moral diminishment of their captors and torturers. Cup poetry has captured the captive voices of those detained without trial. The poems are spoken with fading hope into the deafening maelstrom of counter-terrorist rhetoric, illustrating why poetry has its own non-violent potency when faced with the savage consequences of dehumanising others in the interests of national security and the myths of Empire.

    Cup poetry exists as protest, and exerts both moral and political claim upon a world that has tolerated the obscenity of Guantanamo. But more than protest – cup poetry is an affirmation of human dignity and worth that has miraculously survived the most systematic and mechanistic attempts to erase the humanity of the detainees. Cup poetry as protest and affirmation of human worth creates a further impetus towards understanding the role of poetry as a conversation with theology. Whatever else Guantanamo means, it represents an offence to any moral theology of justice; it boasts a degradation of human values and a refusal to countenance any limit to the exercise of power over the powerless. Any redemptive vision is hinted at, not in the ideology of the Guantanamo regime – but in the poetry of its prisoners.

    What does all this mean for Western Christianity confronting global Islam?

    How does a poetics of suffering compete with the rhetoric that spawns slogans such as "war on terror"?

    Here is a poem, etched originally on smuggled fragments of a styrofoam cup, words against the powers.

    ……………………………………………………..

    Is It True?

    By Osama Abu Kadir

    Is it true that the grass grows again after rain?

    Is it true that the flowers will rise up again in the Spring?

    Is it true that birds will migrate home again?

    Is it true that the salmon swim back up their streams?

    It is true. This is true. These are all miracles.

    But is it true that one day we'll leave Guantanamo Bay?

    Is it true that one day we'll go back to our homes?

    I sail in my dreams. I am dreaming of home.

    To be with my children, each one part of me;

    To be with my wife and the ones that I love;

    To be with my parents, my world's tenderest hearts.

    I dream to be home, to be free from this cage.

    But do you hear me, oh Judge, do you hear me at all?

    We are innocent, here, we've committed no crime.

    Set me free, set us free, if anywhere still

    Justice and compassion remain in this world!

    "Shortly
    after 11 September, Osama Abu Kadir travelled to Pakistan to perform
    charity work in Afghanistan with the Islamic missionary group Tablighi
    Jamat. The US claims Tablighi was providing fighters for jihad in
    Afghanistan and arrested Mr Kadir near Jalalabad in November 2001. In
    his native Jordan, he was known as a dedicated family man who worked as
    a truck driver. In Guantanamo, he is known as prisoner number 651."

    ……………………………………………….

    31O6ZfHv-cL._SL500_AA180_The fuller story of this remarkable book can be found here at The Independent, and here at Iowa University Press. And yes. I recognise that we live in a world of terrorist atrocities beyond any scale of moral justification, from Ground Zero to Mumbai. And I understand that extraordinary threats require extraordinary response. And that undeserved pain and innocent suffering inflicted on victims of such atrocities are themselves a negation of the deep principles of human moral existence. As such they are to be condemned, opposed, and overcome – but surely by means which do not undermine those fundamental principles of justice and humanity which every terrorist atrocity diminishes.

    But responses are more than extraordinary when institutional cruelty, intelligence gathering torture, and unremitting despair tighten an already vicious circle of violence and hate. That happens when principles of freedom, justice, moral accountability and the dignity of human beings are seen as dispensable in the pursuit of military and political goals. In the non-Western world, and amongst many in our Western democracies, Guantanamo stands for an unprecedented and grievous loss of human decency and moral authority. Against this place and its purpose, these poems bear witness; and against this place, and against the terrorist violence and hatred that has spawned it, as a follower of Jesus, I pray.

    Advent – peace on earth and goodwill amongst all people -  is a good time to hear of the demise of such a place, and to pray for that peace which makes such places, and the terrorism used to justify them, unthinkable.


  • The Inconceivable Consequences of the Annunciation.

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    I have a signed copy of Luci Shaw's book of poems, Writing the River. It occurs to me that a number of those poets whose work resonates most sympathetically with many of my own questions, and who reach deeply and disturbingly into that place within us where deep longing and spiritual perception come together, are women.  They include Elizabeth Jennings, Denise Levertov, Mary Oliver, Luci Shaw, Anne Stevenson – and recently discovered after a nudge from a fellow bibliophile, U A Fanthorpe.

    In thinking through the points of connection and collusion which open poetry and theology to each other, I suppose it's obvious that the nature of the relationship between these two ways of speaking the world, and our place in it, might be significantly affected by the gender of the writer. Or is that not so obvious? Are there insights, ways of knowing and articulation, ranges of human experience and capacities for feeling and thinking, that presuppose not only differences of personal history, but differences of gendered embodied experience?

    While I want to think this through much more thoroughly, it's simply the case that some of the insights I value most into the nature of God, what it means to follow faithfully after Christ, and how this is lived out in community within and beyond the church, have come from women poets and women theologians. And I can speculate with the next person as to what that says about me, my theology, my approach to the Bible, my understanding of ministry and the pastoral and personal relationships that underlie meaningful spiritual friendships. But I'd rather consider than speculate, and I'd rather illustrate than argue.

    Advent_annunciation
    So here's a poem by Luci Shaw. It is called simply, "Virgin". Could a man have written this poem? Leave aside for a minute all the theological conundrums that surround the Incarnation, and what James Denney once called "Chalcedonian metaphysics". How else but in the experience of embodied womanhood could we have any sense of what the Annunciation meant and felt like, its implications from the inside of one particular woman's experience? I find the "as if" of this poem utterly heartbreaking in the positive sense of that phrase. The vulnerability and the courage, the gift and the given, the tenderness that has immeasurable consequence, the patience and the urgency that enables the birthing of human life – and these only some of the untold and inconceivable consequences of this requested incursion into the life plans of a young woman. And the radical surrender of "Let it be so…."

    As a poem read at Advent, it places this young woman at the centre of the mystery of Emmanuel.

    Virgin
    As if until that moment
    nothing real
    had happened since Creation

    As if outside the world were empty
    so that she and he were all
    there was – he mover, she moved upon

    As if her submission were the most
    dynamic of all works: as if
    no one had ever said Yes like that

    As if one day the sun had no place
    in all the universe to pour its gold
    but her small room


    Luci Shaw, Writing the River, (Pinon Press, 1994), page 27.

  • Happy 400th Birthday John Milton

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    Today is the Quartercentenary of the birth of John Milton, a towering presence in English poetry and a significant player in the political theory and machinations of the 17th Century. The masterpiece Paradise Lost is a tour de force of theology as well as poetry, though for some a theology inadequately Christian. Milton's influence on poetry, and his contributions to political and moral thought have decisively shaped English culture.

    Years ago I learned by heart his sonnet "On His Blindness", one of the most moving statements of non-resignation I know; I'm not at all sure that in this sonnet Milton is resigned to providence, and I sense behind the poem lies deep complaint, not silenced by the reply of "patience to prevent that murmur". In any case today is Milton's 400th birthday, and I've been reading some of those lines which poured from the quill of "that one Talent". Here's his sonnet "On His Blindness":


    WHEN I consider how my light is spent

             E're half my days, in this dark world and wide,

             And that one Talent which is death to hide,

             Lodg'd with me useless, though my Soul more bent

    To serve therewith my Maker, and present

             My true account, least he returning chide,

             Doth God exact day-labour, light deny'd,

             I fondly ask; But patience to prevent

    That murmur, soon replies, God doth not need

             Either man's work or his own gifts, who best

             Bear his milde yoak, they serve him best, his State

    Is Kingly. Thousands at his bidding speed

             And post o're Land and Ocean without rest:

             They also serve who only stand and waite.
  • Advent and “My personal revenge”

    My personal revenge will be your children's
    right to schooling and to flowers.
    My personal revenge will be this song
    bursting for you with no more fears.
    My personal revenge will be to make you see
    the goodness in my people's eyes,
    implacable in combat always
    generous and firm in vistory.

    My personal revenge will be to greet you
    "Good Morning!" in the streets with no beggars,
    when instead of locking you inside
    they say, "Don't look so sad"
    When you, the torturer,
    daren't lift your head.
    My personal revenge will be to give you
    these hands you once ill-treated
    with all their tenderness intact.

    150px-Candleburning
    Tomas Borge was a leader of the Sandinista Revolutionary Front, imprisoned and tortured in Nicaragua during the struggles of the 1960's and 1970's. After the Nicaraguan revolution in 1979 he became Minister for the Interior, and faced his jailers and torturers in court. Given the freedom to choose the form and severity of punishment, he clearly stated his desired revenge – he chose to forgive them and in the courtroom declared them forgiven.

    The above words are the song written by Luis Enrique Meja Godoy based on this redemptive scandal. Advent is a good time to remember events like this. As Harriet Walters said introducing the poem, this "is not wooly wishful thinking from a comfy armchair. It comes from the front line".

  • That highly charged place between prayer and protest….

    I am posting today over at Hopeful Imagination, so if you're visiting here you're invited to there!

    More than ten years ago I received a Christmas card made by refugees in Beirut. The card and its story still touch deeply into who I am and how I look at the world. I've tried to say why, both in prose and poetry (of a sort).

  • When, when, Peace, will you, Peace?

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    When an ex Secretary General of the United Nations and an ex President of the United States are refused visas by Zimbabwe, the world is expected to be impressed by more petty power games of a corrupt regime.

    But for the people whose suffering is intentionally orchestrated in the power-hungering and power-mungering across international borders, this is no game.

    I turn to a poem by a Victorian Catholic, one of the finest peace poems in our language, I think. Hope and disappointment, longing and endurance, impatience and trustful waiting, the rebuke from the heart of the oppressed tempered by a hopefulness driven underground seeking means of survival, and finding it – believing that eventually, one day, peace will come.

    The tyrant who causes other people's fear to hide his own insecurity, can't forever silence voices, crush human spirits, exclude hope. The Spirit of God needs no visa, is subject to no exclusion orders, and when He comes 'He comes with work to do'. 

    And so I pray, "When, when, Peace, will you, Peace?


    Peace


    When will you ever, Peace, wild wooddove, shy wings shut,
    Your round me roaming end, and under be my boughs?
    When, when, Peace, will you, Peace? I’ll not play hypocrite

    To own my heart: I yield you do come sometimes; but
    That piecemeal peace is poor peace. What pure peace allows
    Alarms of wars, the daunting wars, the death of it?

    O surely, reaving Peace, my Lord should leave in lieu
    Some good! And so he does leave Patience exquisite,
    That plumes to Peace thereafter. And when Peace here does house
    He comes with work to do, he does not come to coo,
                          He comes to brood and sit.


             Gerard Manley Hopkins

  • Reading Poetry, and Recovering a Sense of Slow

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     Slow reading of poetry is becoming a favourite way of recovering a sense of slow. Some of the most important human experiences require us to take our time, or better, to take the time it takes to listen, see, understand, appreciate, enjoy, allow ourselves to be spoken to from outside ourselves. And the time it takes isn't the time I can spare, but the time it takes for that other voice to speak. So whether that voice is Brahms' Violin Concerto, a tern diving into blue sea, the distant profile of a mountain I climbed years ago, Rublev's Icon of The Trinity above my desk, a sycamore tree aflame with autumn, food lovingly prepared and eaten in friendship, shared silence with the love of our life, or poetry – these are voices that are raoutinely obscured, obliviously silenced by the noise of undeterred preoccupations and the clatter of a life too busy to want to hear them.

    Denise
    Amongst those from whom I am currently re-learning the gift of slow listening, is Denise Levertov. She would have rejected the description of her work as 'Christian' poetry – rather it is the poetry of one who during her life as a poet, came to deep convictions through an inward conversion, expressed in words and ideas recognisably Christian. Not so much Christian poetry as and increasingly recognisably Christian theology giving form and tone to her way of seeing and saying the world. Here are a couple of short poems to read………slowly…..more than once…

    Suspended

    I had grasped God's garment in the void
    but my hand slipped
    on the rich silk of it.
    The 'everlasting arms' my sister loved to remember
    must have upheld my leaden weight
    from falling, even so,
    for though I claw at empty air and feel
    nothing, no embrace,
    I have not plummetted.

    The Avowal (Recalling the 300th Birthday of George Herbert, 1983)


    As swimmers dare

    to lie face to the sky
    and water bears them,
    as hawks rest upon air
    and air sustains them,
    so would I learn to attain
    freefall, and float
    into Creator Spirit's deep embrace,
    knowing no effort earns
    that all-suurounding grace.
  • George Herbert: Secretary of Praise

    200px-George_Herbert Amongst my treasured literary possessions are several carefully sought out, frequently handled, and regularly read editions of The Temple, George Herbert's matchless contribution to Anglican Spirituality. For my 40th birthday I was given a leather bound early Victorian copy by my friend Kate. It was given as a prize for Arithmetic, to Master W L Riddell, in 1864, while a pupil at Mr Crerar's School,13 Forth Street, Edinburgh. It was published by the Edinburgh firm of James NicholI, around the time they started issuing those famous sets of the works of Standard Puritan Divines such as Thomas Goodwin and Richard Sibbes. The book has copper engraved borders within which each poem is placed like a framed word picture – which much of Herberts verses are. In bookseller's parlance, the condition is "used, no marking, previous owner's bookplate (the prize label), finely bound in tooled and gilt leather with signs of some use." Perfect – and it couldn't be in safer, more appreciative hands!

     

     Herbert 001 Nearer my 50th Birthday I uncovered another Victorian edition, maroon cloth, elaborate gilt celtic tooling, and used enough in the past 150 years to make me feel that reading it is an act of recognition, that someone else, numerous someone elses, have enjoyed the look and feel, the smell and heft, as well as the contents of a favourite book. This edition has copper engraved prints(an example here) as well as page borders, good illustrations of how the Victorians imagined seventeenth century English life, and now enjoyed by a 21st century bibliophile. One example of Victorian devotional book illustrative art shows the choir singing 'Let all the world, in every corner sing, My God, and King'. I've  never visited  Bemerton where Herbert was country parson, but later this year, as part of several sabbatical pilgrimages, I'm going looking for Herbert's church of St Andrew's, Bemerton. and Leighton Bromwold. Salisbury Cathedral  which I've never seen is nearby and will be enjoyed as an enduring  expression of  devotion to God through archtecture on the grand scale. But the little church Herbert restored bears witness to a different scale and quality of devotion – in my imagination I see Herbert being as careful about the details and care for restrained beauty of expression in the restoration of God's house as he was about the selection and arrangements of words and images in The Temple.

     

    Coats-memorial-church-s I remember on a warm June evening, singing that Herbert psalm, 'Let all the world, in every corner sing', in the magnificent setting of Coats Memorial Church, with the choir (who didn't look anything like in the picture above) and a small gathered congregation. I've never forgotten the coincidence of mellow late evening sunlight, the soft authority of the great organ, the harmony of choir and congregation, and the aesthetic beauty of a building that is itself an historical accident. It was built in 1894, when the finest material and the most skilful craftsmen were affordable, when Victorian confidence was still high enough to build without thought to cost, and before the turn of the century move away from large scale gothic towards more functional, modest places of worship. But that night, the glow of late sun-soaked oak, the clear handmade glass, the sanctified spaciousness outwards and upwards from the chancel, allowing light to be shaped and toned by warm sandstone and carved wood, all of which was part of the architect's intention – it all makes for a memory still sharp with the sense of smell, touch and sound. Reading George Herbert's hymn still has the effect of collapsing time into vivid memory of sight and sound.

  • Alas, that Wisdom is so large – And Truth – so manifold!

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    My current enthusiasm for bringing theology and poetry into conversation, means I'm reading and re-reading poems I mistakenly thought I already understood. Here's one by Emily Dickinson – a poem that is theologically charged, and which recognises the tensions between learning and ignorance, and exposes our childish attempts to expound with great certainty the things we hardly begin to understand.

    It is one of the great gifts poetry bestows that it challenges the mindset that always, everywhere and everything must explain and expound – the needed reminder that our intellectual grasp can never be sufficient to the richly textured tapestry and mystery of our all too human existence. And indeed, the word grasp is encoded throughout with the idea of possession and control – but it may be that the most important things remain beyond our grasping grasp. That's true of both theology and poetry, forms of human speech which imply more than they say, reveal much less than their whole, just as what is visible of Atlantic icebergs is superficial, above the surface, implying unseen mass and weight. 

    Emily Dickinson – Poem 531
     

    We
    learned the Whole of Love –

    The
    Alphabet – the Words –

    A
    Chapter – then the mighty Book –

    Then
    – Revelation closed –

     

    But
    in each Other's eyes

    An
    Ignorance beheld

    Diviner
    than the Childhood's

    And
    each to each, a Child –

     

    Attempted
    to expound

    What
    neither – understood –

    Alas,
    that Wisdom is so large –

    And
    Truth – so manifold!

    The same general point is made with remarkable force by Hans Urs Von Balthasar in his meditation on the 'simplicity of sight' that is essential in all true seeing.

    Here, finally it becomes clear why it is crucial to stress "simplicity of sight" (Mt 6.22; Lk11.34) so much when we encounter the form of Jesus. The Greek word for the simple people, haplous, means here both "lacking convolutions" and "healthy". For only the healthy / simple eye can see together the apparent contrasts in the figure of Jesus in their unity, only the little ones, the poor, the uneducated, are not seduced by an ever-increasing accumulation of nuggets of knowledge to consider individual traits only for themselves, thereby missing the figure because they are lost in pure analysis.
    (Hans Urs Von Balthasar, Epilogue, page 96)
  • Messed about by time, and the perspective of poetry

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    The last couple of days I've been messed about by time. Well, messed about by watches anyway. Two or three years ago my Rotary watch, a gift from Sheila for my 21st birthday, finally creaked to a halt and the jeweller said it couldn't be repaired. So Sheila bought me a new watch, a Skagen slimline like the one in the picture. Last week at the Baptist Consultation, while delivering my paper, I became aware that it had been half past eleven for ages! The watch continued to start stop for a couple of days, finally giving up on Sunday morning, just as I was leaving for the Sunday service at Hillhead! I borrowed Sheila's, and went in the afternoon to have the battery changed. Only to be told it needed repairing and would cost a lot.

    I came home weighed the pros and cons, but I do need a reliable watch, so I ordered a replacement, virtually the same but with a different coloured face – titanium blue this time. Then I went into my desk drawer where my old Rotary had lain untouched for over two years, wound it up more in hope than expectation – and it started, and kept going, and is still going. So I have a new watch coming, which is ok cos the old Rotary has a high mileage on the clock. But speaking with another watch repairer in Glasgow, he didn't seem to think my first Skagen was irreparable, and would estimate before proceeding, and at no charge for the check up and tests. I could end up with three watches, which isn't at all what I set out to do.

    Elizabeth_jennings
    While negotiating my way through these past days of unreliable time, I was also reading Elisabeth Jennings and came across this poem. Is it not a beautiful meditation on the elusive and perplexing experience of time, the unknown future, the known history, and the present which is all we actually have…momentatily? This is Jennings the Christian poet at near her best, as she takes something ordinary, like ordinary time, and finds a pathway from there to those deep doctrinal realities that are themselves the mainspring of Christian faith.

    The poem is dedicated to a Dominican preacher.You can find out about him here.


    Time's Element
    For Robert Ombres OP

    I know that I was wrong about the hours
          And time and clocks and bells.
    I thought that only future had its powers
    Upon us. Hearing you, I see the false

    Premise and perspective. All that's now
          Indeed is moved into
    Futures we can't rely on or know how
    Anything that happens here is true.

    Of course the past is only sure and feels
          Certain. It is our
    History. The future may be false
    And any moment take from us one hour.

    Then I remembered those prophetic words,
          'Before all was I am.'
    Christ lived among us with a cross and swords
    And yet he with his Virgin Mother came

    Into the moments of the angel's plea.
          She carried God and man
    And gave the future her willed history
    As she took part in God the Father's plan.

    From Elizabeth Jennings. New Collected Poems (Carcanet: 2002) 308.