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  • Hope is hard work. Lent Day 28

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    Hope

    I gave to Hope a watch of mine: but he
    An anchor gave to me.
    Then an old prayer-book I did present:
    And he an optic sent.
    With that I gave a vial full of tears:
    But he a few green ears.
    Ah Loiterer! I'll no more, no more I'll bring:
    I did expect a ring.

    We only know the full force of hope when we live through delay, frustration and longing. Hope is hard work, especially when all the evidence seems to make what is hoped for impossible.

    Hope is a Loiterer. By definition what is hoped for is beyond our immediate control or we could, and would, make it happen. Instead of giving what we hope for right now and for the asking, Hope defers.

    Three couplets describe the negotiations between the poet and Hope (Christ). The watch is a timepiece, new technology in Herbert's time; so Herbert gives all his time to Christ (Hope). In exchange he gets an anchor. The obvious link is Hebrews 6.19:"the hope set before us, an anchor of the soul, sure and steadfast…" So instead of giving what is hoped for, Hope gives the strength to hold on and wait. The cruciform shape of the anchor points the reader to the cross, and to the stability and security of being anchored in the eternal love displayed there. 

    The Prayer Book in Herbert's time is an emblem of long term, regular and faithful devotion. So Herbert effectively casts up his years of devout loyalty to the liturgy and to the church, as a negotiating package. But instead of realised hopes he is given a telescope to be able to see what is hoped for, while at the same time being compelled to live with distance, and that frustrating not yet, that makes hope such hard work.

    The vial of tears is the gift of his repentance, the proof of his love, the evidence of hope's intensity. Echoing Psalm 8.8 "put my tears into thy bottle", Herbert is asking God to take his tears as proof he has waited long enough. But not quite. Green ears of grain point to a later harvest, and it was only a few green ears. Once again hope is disappointed by wanting it all early, and the response is again a reminder of both assurance and deferment. Hope doesn't become reality on demand. But the tears haven't been bottled. They have irrigated the grains of hope and now the green ears promise eventual harvest.  

    Trust Herbert to find a new word for Christ – Loiterer! In Herbert's day the word was used to describe the person who delayed paying their bills! One of the levers in a negotiation between parties is the decision to walk away from the table. Impatience, hurry and compulsion inevitably find hope a frustrating process. So "I'll no more; no more I'll bring" is an ultimatum to force Hope's hand. 

    Truth is, he didn't need to bring anything. Hope is a promise guaranteed by Christ; his promise is as sure as an anchor, is visible through the telescope of faith looking upward, is evidenced by green ears of grain. The fact that Herbert wanted a ring. This has a double meaning. The ring of marriage points to the spiritual union of the Christian with Christ; the ring as symbol of completeness and perfection points to the full blessing of eternity. The full consummation is future; for now we live in hope.

    This short poem teaches us something we now need to know about hope. We look on a world forever changed by the coronavirus pandemic. We hope so many things; for the safety of those we love, for a vaccine, for our local communities to be responsible, caring and constructive, for a return to a way of life without this fear and loss of control, for the safety and health of all those who are keeping essential services going, the NHS staff, food suppliers, emergency services, for ourselves an eventual return to human community and flourishing, but perhaps with a clearer idea of why it is important to care about our planet, our human communities, and the economy as servant not slave-master.

    We hope these things, and so we pray for them. With Herbert's impatience; with what Jesus called importunity, that noisy persistence that won't shut up. And in our hoping and praying, we will hold on to the anchor, look through the optic towards a future in God's purposes, and imagine those green ears that confirm there will again be harvest.      

  • Keeping Relationships Strong by Clearing the Air. Lent Day 27

    Storm
                       

    The Storm

    If as the winds and waters here below
    Do fly and flow,
    My sighs and tears as busy were above;
    Sure they would move
    And much affect thee, as tempestuous times
    Amaze poor mortals, and object their crimes.

    Stars have their storms, ev'n in a high degree,
    As well as we.
    A throbbing conscience spurred by remorse
    Hath a strange force:
    It quits the earth, and mounting more and more,
    Dares to assault, and besiege thy door.

    There it stands knocking, to thy musick's wrong,
    And drowns the song.
    Glory and honour are set by till it
    An answer get.
    Poets have wrong'd poor storms: such days are best;
    They purge the air without, within the breast.

     

    Somewhere in his memory, perhaps as a child, the poet remembers Storm Herbert! Thunder and lightning, gales and rain, instilled the fear of elemental powers beyond human control. The borderline between awe and terror is quite easily crossed when human beings are caught up in  nature turned tempestuous.

    The natural world is often the starting point for Herbert's poetry of the inner life and spiritual reflection. For Herbert the world of nature is "the creator's eloquent countenance", a thought similar to Calvin's view of creation as the "theatre of God's glory."

    Storms are for Herbert a powerful metaphor for a conscience that is troubled and in turmoil, his feelings and affections an inner storm of remorse, guilt and emotional distress. So he storms heaven's doors,and uses the metaphor of the storm to depict the laying of a siege and hammering on God's door till he gets an answer.

    The throbbing conscience, the driving of remorse and the frantic cry for an answering word that makes the wrong right. This is Herbert at his most confrontational with God. In his Prayer sonnet he had said prayer is like "an engine against th'Almightie". 

    Importunate prayer, that is a refusal to be put off by not getting an answer, has a long tradition in Christian spirituality. Going back to Jesus parable of the annoyingly persistent widow and the noisy friend who disturbs the peace at night till he gets what he wants, there has always been a place for the kind of praying that just won't shut up, that storms heaven's gates, and lays siege to God's ears.

    It's not easy for the 21st Century mind to appreciate the religious intensity of post-reformation England and the age of the Puritans. Not many would compare guilt for sin to a meteor shower, a storm of light shooting through the darkness; but "starres have their storms" and so does heaven as its doors are stormed by those seeking an answer to their prayers for forgiveness. 

    The final two lines rehabilitate storms as descriptions of inner tempest and spiritual turmoil: spiritual imagination:

    Poets have wrong'd poor storms: such days are best;
    They purge the air without, within the breast.

    Storms clear the air. Strong exchanges can lead to new understanding. Better to have a row and reconcile than spend a lifetime in resentment. Like Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony, human relationships have their own outer and inner weather; Warm mellow feelings of the countryside,  peasants celebrating summer, the noises of the countryside from rippling streams to singing birds, and then the thunderstorm explodes across the orchestra, before giving way to the calm melodies of everything returning to normal, washed by rain, illumined by sunshine and the clouds dispersing. Herbert's poem, and its last line, sit exactly in those moments of transition from thunderstorm to calm and renewed summertime.

    The poem is not quite resolved. Herbert will have it out with God, and clear the air. That's what storms do. But the making up, the forgiving and moving forward, are merely implied. This poem, in the context of the whole sequence that makes up The Temple, needn't spell it out. God sets aside glory and honour and condescends to answer Herbert's noisy knocking and clamorous pleadings for God's restored love and understanding.  

     

  • When we are possessed by the desire to possess. Lent Day 26

    Loo loot

                      Avarice

    Money, thou bane of bliss and source of woe,
    Whence com'st thou, that thou art so fresh and fine?
    I know thy parentage is base and low:
    Man found thee poor and dirty in a mine.

    Surely thou didst so little contribute
    To this great kingdom which thou now hast got,
    That he was fain, when thou wert destitute,
    To dig thee out of thy dark cave and grot:

    Thus forcing thee, by fire he made thee bright:
    Nay, thou hast got the face of man; for we
    Have with our stamp and seal transferred our right:
    Thou art the man, and man but dross to thee.

    Man calleth thee his wealth, who made thee rich,
    And while he digs thee out, falls in the ditch.

    This poem is about money; and the love of money; and the madness of greed.

    It's natural to want what I need. Greed is to want more than I need. Avarice becomes a moral disease and against human nature, when the need to possess more and more becomes the primary drive of our lives. Covetousness is a deadly sin because it kills the conscience.

    At that point we don't possess money, it possesses us. 

    Herbert's poem is an address to money personified. The tone is one of puzzled wondering: how can what started its life hidden in dirt, become something human beings would kill and die for? 

    More than that, by refining gold and silver, then stamping a human face on coins, and creating a currency of wealth and worth, humanity has reversed God-given values. Money is gold and man is dross; man and woman made in the image of God have sold that image in order to create wealth.

    This poem has hardly ever been treated at length by literary critics. Helen Vendler, one of Herbert's most stringent and admiring critics was left wondering. Why did a poet of immense spiritual subtlety and sensitivity feel the need to satirise money? And why go to the trouble of writing a poem, a sonnet at that, a demanding poetic form usually reserved for less banal subjects? 

    Vendler's scholarship is impeccable, authoritative, and one of the benchmarks of Herbert scholarship. So I'm puzzled by her puzzlement! Herbert was a theologian of sin and love, of judgement and mercy. Human corruption was one of Herbert's theological research interests. Looking around at the world beyond, the discovery of new lands, the huge inflow of imported goods and wealth from the new world, the growth of political and royal power across Europe, there was a wealth of raw material for Herbert to explore, and much of that raw material was gold.

    In pursuit of wealth and its accompanying wealth Herbert saw, with remarkable prescience, a moral reversal, a theological sacrilege, indeed a structural rebellion against the Creator. Wealth now rules the world, not humanity. Human life is possessed by the need to possess, and when that happens inhumanity follows. The last three lines expose the human and moral outcome of making the pursuit and possession of wealth the primary driving force of human community, of political economy and of social organisation. 

    Putting money in its place would be a demanding Lenten objective. I am writing this in the midst of one of the greatest crises in our lifetime. The ludicrous behaviour that strips supermarket shelves as a form of self-protection is another dark side of avarice, the proof that what we want to possess may come to possess us. Who would ever have thought a main news story would be police acting on a tip off and stopping a large van full of stolen toilet rolls! (hence the photo above)

    So perhaps even the brilliance of a Harvard Professor Emerita, should be supplemented by some reflection on the real world of deals, profit, accumulation, self-interest, wealth creation and distribution. And then some study of Herbert's tireless research into the propensity of the human heart to corruption and sin. When people stockpile toilet rolls, empty the shelves of hand sanitiser, fill the garage with pasta, and all of this without thought of other people, then Herbert's poem is bang on the money! (See what I did there!)

  • Time to match our praying to our mood, our circumstances, and the way the world is…. Lent Day 25

    Herbert beattie

    This is the second post in this series that considers Prayer I. It was scripted thirty years ago by Alistair Beattie, and given to me as a gift. I had read Herbert's sonnet at a church service and Alistair thought it one of the most profound descriptions of prayer he had ever heard or read. So one night our door bell rang and when I went to the door there was Alistair, carrying a large envelope and apologising for turning up unannounced! This parchment is a treasure because of what lies behind Alistair's art.  

    Alistair taught himself calligraphy while in a Japanese concentration camp. Amongst the other prisoners was Laurens Van Der Post, whose writings he admired and with whom he had corresponded after the war. Alistair was one of the finest calligraphers, and amongst other commissions he was the official scribe for the University of Aberdeen's Honorary Doctoral parchments. 

    As we go through Lent, and this has been the strangest Lent in my lifetime, I have posted a daily reflection on one of Herbert's poems. I posted a picture of this script on Facebook three years ago; it came up as a FB memory today. None of us imagined in March 2017 what would befall our world in March 2020. As we all come to terms with social distancing, isolation, and the anxiety and distress of a disease that threatens so many, we need more than bland reassurances, however well meant. On the other hand we also need more than the conveyor belt of media reportage that holds us fascinated by our own fears, and threatens to undermine resolve and hopefulness. 

    Herbert's poem doesn't tell us how to pray or when to pray. It doesn't even tell us what prayer is. Instead he creates a word kaleidoscope of all the possibilities of prayer. As only a few examples of Herbert's imaginative tour of the human heart, the world and the universe: the banquet of the Eucharist, God's breath and human breath in reciprocal blessing, or an engine of complaint and lament against the Almighty when life falls apart, or music that is made up of an infinity of possibilities, the ordinary words that bring heaven into daily living, the life blood of the soul.

    It's hard not to listen to the news. Our own anxieties, our distress for others, our hopes of a turning point, our hunger to understand what is happening and how best to look after ourselves and others. All of that. But it may be helpful to come away after listening and read George Herbert's sonnet, which inspired Alistair who suffered far more than he ever spoke about, to write out in near perfect script, this catena of invitations to pray.

    Herbert is not prescriptive, telling us what prayer is. Given the endless diversity of human experience and the variety of experiences that fill the human heart, Herbert offers prayer descriptions for each heart and for any occasion. 

    To read Prayer I after the news from Italy, or after the daily news briefing from the Prime Minister flanked by experts whose decisions will affect our lives, means we have to take a deep breath, and look for a way to process the news that doesn't just distil it into further anxiety. The "Christ side-piercing spear" forces us to think of suffering and woundedness, but for Herbert out of the wounds of Christ flows redemptive love and God-purposed hope. "Engine against the Almightie" dares us to complain to God, yes and even to rage against the way the world is.

    Or from another perspective, "Church bells beyond the stars heard" is a deeply poignant image just now for Christians who tomorrow will not be in church. That will bring its own spiritual disorientation and yet another level of loneliness. But God is still there, this is still a God-loved world. And while we might be a bit dubious about God dwelling beyond the stars, just remember that Herbert was well aware that God's presence transcends time and space. He was writing poetry not physics!

    What Prayer I helps us do is match our praying to our mood, our circumstances, the way the world is, and not to worry about what God thinks! Those last two words; no we won't have answers to everything. Perplexity, anxiety, anger, negativity keep playing their menacing music. But in all our thinking and praying, Herbert brings us at last to the more modest hope, that when all of this is done, there will be "something understood." 

    This delicate piece of art, scripted by Alistair Beattie, has begun to fade. Life changes us, and sometimes we go through experiences that are trans-formative for us and for the world around us. The ink on my poem is fading, but the words that were written have truths that don't fade, and that can help us find ways of bringing together our broken world, our breaking hearts, and the God who first gave us breath.   

  • Your life is hid with Christ in God…. Lent day 24

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    'Colossians 3:3'

                  Our life is hid with Christ in God.
     
          My words and thoughts do both express this notion,
           That  Life  hath with the sun a double motion.
           The  first  Is  straight, and our diurnal friend,
           The  other  Hid,  and doth obliquely bend.
           One life is wrapped In flesh, & and tends to earth:
           The other winds towards Him, whose happy birth
           Taught me to live here so,    That  still one eye
           Should aim and shoot at that which Is on high:
           Quitting    with   daily    labour   all    My pleasure,
           To    gain   at   harvest    an    eternal     Treasure.
     
    In the 17th Century this verse must have been a trigger for a type-setters migraine. We are so used to multiple fonts, print software and graphic designs, we have little conception of how to produce different font sizes, italics, bold face using only lead characters on fixed print plates. And with no cut and paste, edit or delete!
     
    The complex process of printing this poem mirrors the complexity of its content and the cleverness of the poet in creating the diagonal of the (paraphrased) biblical text. The actual text as Herbert read it in his Bible reads,
    "If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above,
    where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God. …
    For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God."
     
    The text is embedded, 'hid' in the verse, but emphasised in the printing. It means each line is stitched together with the Christocentric emphasis which occupies the centre of the poem, lines five and six "In Him". One of Herbert's familiar puns makes the point explicit: sun/Son. Just as the sun sets and rises, to the Son becomes incarnate and crucified, then risen and ascended. And the Christiian follows the same trajectory 
     
    So for the Christian reader, where is the centre of the Christian life? What trajectory does daily life follow? What is the aim and goal of existence? Herbert's answer is that we live every day on two levels, different but inextricably linked. We live in ordinary time, daily duties, within the limits of human effort and achievement. But there is a double movement in every Christian's existence, 'one is wrapt in flesh', the embodied person getting on with human life with all its vicissitudes, while the other is hid and 'doth obliquely bend', like a diagonal, as does the text in the poem. 
     
    But how does all this work? Well first, we get on with life, wrapt in flesh and tending towards the earth; we get our hands dirty while trying to make the world better; every day the journey goes on, step by step; we love and laugh, weep and struggle, in companionship or loneliness. When it goes well we rejoice, when it doesn't we still try to get on with it, sometimes hopeful, sometimes not so much. 
     
    But in bold italics across the lines that make up the poetry of our lives, "your life is hid with Christ in God." Herbert has produced a poem for those who don't think they're very good at this Christian thing. And that's true especially for those most aware of the two levels on which we live our lives. We try to get on with life here and now, but with an eye on Christ as the one whose life is both our hope and our location.
     
    Herbert goes to some technical trouble as a poet to point Christians to their ultimate, eternal and secure location "in Christ", as the source of their hope, while we each seek to make all we can of our earthly, embodied existence in time and place, now and here.    
     
     
  • to believe in such a way that what is believed is performed, enacted, embodied. Lent Day 23

    The Wreath

    A wreathèd garland of deservèd praise,
    Of praise deservèd, unto Thee I give,
    I give to Thee, who knowest all my ways,
    My crooked winding ways, wherein I live,—
    Wherein I die, not live ; for life is straight,
    Straight as a line, and ever tends to Thee,
    To Thee, who art more far above deceit,
    Than deceit seems above simplicity.
    Give me simplicity, that I may live,
    So live and like, that I may know Thy ways,
    Know them and practise them: then shall I give
    For this poor wreath, give Thee a crown of praise.

    George-herbertThis is exactly the kind of poem that got Metaphysical Poets a bad name, unfairly I think. The complaint is usually about a poem that is too clever by half, weaving words through repetition, repeating the words at the end of a line almost exactly as the start of the next line. For example "deserved praise" becomes "of praise deserved", and while the repetition of words varies, the continuity of ideas is sustained. Just as flowers, leaves and greenery are woven around each other into a continuous, never ending circle.

    But Herbert knows what he is doing. He is using a conceit to weave into the poem the very idea that the words describe. He starts with "a wreathed garland", and ends with a "crown of praise", and between these two points where the circle joins in completion, is the circle of life, all his ways, his crooked winding ways. And, of course, Herbert knows that while his ways are crooked, life itself is a straight temporal line, that one way or another will lead to God.

    The contrasts of deceit and simplicity, crooked and straight, death and life, are set within a poem that has its own impetus, given extra momentum by the strong petition, "Give me simplicity".

    What makes Herbert such a theologically subtle poet is his self-awareness, first of his own crooked heart, and second of his heart's best aspirations; his heart is at worst devious and at best devout. He wants his life to bring praise to God, despite the failures in the live performance that is his life. To know and practice God's ways, is to make faith active, to love in word and deed, to believe in such a way that what is believed is performed, enacted, embodied.

    Helen Wilcox sums this poem up: "In the opposition between 'poor wreath' and 'crown', three main contrasts are at work: a poem versus a lived and practised life, the complexity of a 'winding wreath' versus the simplicity of a circular crown, and imperfect earthly achievement versus the perfection of heaven." 

    The entire collection of Herbert's poems tend in the direction of that last line. "Then shall I give
    For this poor wreath, give Thee a crown of praise". Christian experience, in all its ambiguity, vacillation and struggle, is a wreathed garland, our ways are often crooked and winding. But the heart is set in the right direction, and the underlying beat of the heart, is the longing to know and practise the ways of God, and at the end, to see the wreathed garland of an incomplete life, transformed into the perfect circular crown of praise.   

     

     

  • Wherefore with my utmost art I will sing thee. Lent Day 22

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    Praise II

    King of glory, King of peace,
    I will love Thee;
    and that love may never cease,
    I will move Thee.
    Thou hast granted my request,
    Thou hast heard me;
    Thou didst note my working breast,
    Thou hast spared me.

    Wherefore with my utmost art
    I will sing Thee,
    and the cream of all my heart
    I will bring Thee.
    Though my sins against me cried,
    Thou didst clear me;
    and alone, when they replied,
    Thou didst hear me.

    Sev'n whole days, not one in sev'n,
    I will praise Thee;
    in my heart, though not in heav'n,
    I can raise Thee.
    Small it is, in this poor sort
    to enroll Thee:
    e'en eternity's too short
    to extol Thee.

    Another of Herbert's poems slightly adapted for congregational hymn singing. T S Eliot praised Praise II for its 'masterly simplicity' and one of Herbert's best interpreters calls it a tour de force in imitation of biblical psalms. It's all of that, and more.

    The combination of glory and peace are titles of divine tension. Great power and great patience, visible majesty and surprising meekness, dazzling splendour and accommodating condescension, coalesce in the way God relates to human beings.

    In Herbert's simple verses, the God who dwells in unapproachable light is being approached by someone whose praise is not fit for purpose, but it's all he has, and all he has he gives, his "utmost art." In these verses God is being approached in a 7/4 metre, like seven steps forward, four back, a rhythm of boldness followed by hesitation.

    Praise and love energise each other in this and other Herbert poems. Herbert promises "I will love thee". But love is fulfilled when reciprocated in a mutual exchange of affection, a virtuous circle of loving and being loved. 

    Praise is cheap if it remains verbal. However clever the verse, it's the heart that matters, and Herbert uses verse as the vehicle of love, the giving of his very best, the cream of the milk. Singing is one thing; bringing the heart is what makes the words live.

    As usual, and this is not a criticism, it is a liturgical and spiritual necessity, Herbert draws near to the King of Glory with trepidation because he can think of all kinds of reasons (sins) why he shouldn't dare. Equally we are unsurprised that God forgives, and what's more, silences the sins' arguments by ignoring them and listening instead to the sincere praise of Herbert's heart.

    So a hymn. Not to be sung only on Sundays, but seven days a week. The rhythm of time in weeks, is set against the last two lines. Herbert's utmost art, and the cream of his heart every day, are not enough, and likewise no amount of skill and energy do justice to the King of Glory and of Peace; 

    ev'n eternitie is too short

                         to extol thee.

    And in the penultimate line Herbert demonstrates the inadequacy of his utmost art by the deliberate faux pas of an eight metre line in a poem that has been 7/4 all the way through. What breaks the rhythm of verse, highlights the limits of eternity itself as sufficient to express fully the fullness of God's love. The entire purpose of the poem is "that love may never cease".

    One critic comments, this is "a poem about itself; Herbert praises God while discussing his ability to do so." I think that is true, with one slight correction. What Herbert discusses with God is his inability to praise God adequately on while on earth and with human limitations. Then he gives up entirely, even eternity is too short! So we do what we can. We praise God with our best, rejoicing that God is beyond all our praising. After all God is God; not a problem to be solved but one who invites love and relationship, the I-Thou that is the refrain throughout in the odd numbered lines.

    (The image is a photo of a tapestry of a stained glass window, worked freehand. The window is based on a Cezanne painting, worked by Roger Fry and titled Harvester.)  

     

  • I am bound, so far as it is in my power, to practice what I pray for. Lent Day 21

    Herbert

    This from Izaak Walton's life of George Herbert. It is quaint, rose tinted, and written by one of Herbert's least critical fans. But as an apocryphal story of what true Christian helpfulness is, it has its own way of pointing us in the right direction in helping those around us with consideration, compassion and companionship. Read it slowly; be patient with 17th Century leisurely tale-telling; and take time to ask what such a story asks of us during the current crisis we all face. 

    In another walk to Salisbury, he saw a poor man with a poorer horse, that was fallen under his load: they were both in distress, and needed present help; which Mr. Herbert perceiving, put off his canonical coat, and helped the poor man to unload, and after to load, his horse. The poor man blessed him for it, and he blessed the poor man; and was so like the Good Samaritan, that he gave him money to refresh both himself and his horse; and told him, "That if he loved himself he should be merciful to his beast."

    Thus he left the poor man; and at his coming to his musical friends at Salisbury, they began to wonder that Mr. George Herbert, which used to be so trim and clean, came into that company so soiled and discomposed:but he told them the occasion. And when one of the company told him, "He had disparaged himself by so dirty an employment," his answer was, "That the thought of what he had done would prove music to him at midnight; and that the omission of it would have upbraided and made discord in his conscience, whensoever he should pass by that place: for if I be bound to pray for all that be in distress, I am sure that I am bound, so far as it is in my power, to practice what I pray for. And though I do not wish for the like occasion every day, yet let me tell you, I would not willingly pass one day of my life without comforting a sad soul, or shewing mercy; and I praise God for this occasion. And now let’s tune our instruments." 

  • What a friend we have in Jesus, George Herbert Style. Lent Day 20

    DSC06112

     

    Unkindnesse

    Lord, make me coy and tender to offend:

    In friendship, first I think, if that agree,

                                      Which I intend,

                   Unto my friends intent and end.

    I would not use a friend, as I use Thee.

     

    If any touch my friend, or his good name;

    It is my honour and my love to free

                                      His blasted fame

                    From the least spot or thought of blame.

    I could not use a friend, as I use Thee.

     

    My friend may spit upon my curious floore:

    Would he have gold? I lend it instantly;

                                   But let the poore,

                  And thou within them starve at doore.

    I cannot use a friend, as I use Thee.

     

    When that my friend pretendeth to a place,

    I quit my interest, and leave it free:

                                        But when thy grace

                       Sues for my heart, I thee displace,

    Nor would I use a friend, as I use Thee.

     

    Yet can a friend what thou hast done fulfill?

    O write in brasse, My God upon a tree

                                        His bloud did spill

                      Onely to purchase my good-will:

    Yet use I not my foes, as I use thee.

                          …………………………

    None of us like being used. That happens when someone uses us as a means to an end; that is, as a means, not an end. Respect for persons is basic in moral philosophy, teaching that the good person treats others as an end in themselves. A person is to be valued for who they are, not because of their usefulness. Utilitarianism in this negative sense treats the other person as a resource, to be valued in proportion to the contribution they make to my plans, ambitions, interests.

    Herbert recognises the moral wrongness of using someone. It is the opposite of love; it is relational utilitarianism. It shows itself in ingratitude for the countless gestures of friendship and affection that have been given on the understanding that friendship is reciprocal, an exchange of goods and goodwill, mutually expensive and mutually beneficial. 

    To all his other close friends Herbert shows that mutuality of respect, affection and generosity. But to the one he calls Lord, not so. Considerate, deferential, generous and always making allowances for all his other friends, even for rudeness like spitting on the floor, Herbert works hard at his friendships. Except this one. 

    Then, as often in his poems, Herbert uses a favourite pivot word in the last stanza. Yet. Despite the neglect, ingratitude, self-interest and unkindness Herbert has shown, the truth is even at his very best as a friend he can neither match nor repay what the Lord has done for him, as his friend. 

    He wants it engraved on brass, a process that requires a steel stylus with a diamond tip.

                                My God upon a tree

                                        His bloud did spill

                      Onely to purchase my good-will.

    With predictable penitence, Herbert looks to the cross and Christ's passion, and the price his friend paid for no other purpose than to win Herbert's heart and devotion and faithfulness, as a friend. He treats his enemies more generously than his Lord and friend. This last stanza recalls other lines from another poet: "but O my Friend, my Friend indeed / who at my need his life did spend."

    Once again Herbert compels his reader to overhear his sorrow at the spiritual deficit he has built up. And perhaps echoing in the background, Jesus' words convict him and push him towards a change of mind: "Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." 

  • Nothing we do is so insignificant that it cannot be made significant by why we do it. Lent day 19

    IMG_1320-1
    Herbert in less metaphysical mode. Not much comment needed here. Just three:
    1. Elixir is that which is transformed by the philosopher's stone, turning to gold whatever it touches. In the poem, the motive for every action, "for Thy sake"
    2. "Nothing is little in God's service: if it once have the honour of that Name it grows great instantly." (Herbert, The Country Parson).
    3. Drudgery divine is a precise definition of those disciplines and habits that form us and keep us who we are; not what we do but why, and for whom we do it.
     
    The Elixir
    Teach me, my God and King,
             In all things Thee to see,
    And what I do in anything
             To do it as for Thee.
     
             Not rudely, as a beast,
             To run into an action;
    But still to make Thee prepossest,
             And give it his perfection.
     
             A man that looks on glass,
             On it may stay his eye;
    Or if he pleaseth, through it pass,
             And then the heav'n espy.
     
             All may of Thee partake:
             Nothing can be so mean,
    Which with his tincture—"for Thy sake"—
             Will not grow bright and clean.
     
             A servant with this clause
             Makes drudgery divine:
    Who sweeps a room as for Thy laws,
             Makes that and th' action fine.
     
             This is the famous stone
             That turneth all to gold;
    For that which God doth touch and own
             Cannot for less be told.