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  • Gabriel’s Oboe – and why only the occasional composition should be called “glorious”


    Gabriels oboe I saw The Mission the year it was released, and still remember my first hearing of the soundtrack, and the glorious Gabriel's Oboe. I was once told by someone who knows a bit about writing that the word "glorious" is too overused, and now a cheapened word. Well, yes it can be. And a lazy word, a flattering exaggeration, a way of investing importance in something relatively mediocre by invoking a vaguely heavenly glow. But Gabriel's Oboe on its first hearing was glorious, and hundreds of subsequent hearings have only confirmed that for The Mission, Morricone composed a musical score that is heartbreakingly congruent with the tragic story of a priest for whom glory only came through martyrdom.


    Mission The Mission
    remains a potent and subversive statement of the perilous connections between church and state, faith and empire, prayer and politics – because mission is itself an ambiguous word. If the Church has a mission, so has the state. The word mission is used of an army incursion, a diplomatic service, a task delegated by a higher authority. And in the film, there is a collision of missions, an encounter between the Gospel and the Empire, a fatal meeting between the priest carrying the gold sunburst Ostensorium surmounted by a cross out of the burning mission church, and the lead musket balls that tear the life from his body. And all of this haunted by the aching melody of Gabriel's Oboe, and a film score redolent with the gift of genius.

    The popularity of Gabriel's Oboe made it inevitable someone would want to put words to it. Written by Chiara Ferrau, and first performed by Sarah Brightman, the lyrics (English translation below) convey the aching longing of humanity for a different and better world, a humanity more humane and a world more just, and a wistful yearning for cities warmed by the winds of peace. And the singer confesses this is all in the imagination – but the music is not wistful and resigned – what makes Gabriel's Oboe such an emotionally subversive experience is a melody that weaves together our deepest longings and highest aspirations as human beings, and composes them into imagined possibilities and resilient hopefulness. I suppose that's what is meant by saying the piece is inspired….and glorious.


    51YrDUC23SL._SL500_AA300_ All the above reflection is because I've just ordered the double CD (will wait for Christmas for the DVD) of Morricone's recent Vienna Concert.  I'm familiar with a number of other Morricone scores. There's an apparent incongruence between some of his music and the films that engendered them. The spaghetti westerns of Clint Eastwood are bleak, violent, enjoyably cynical, and minimally moral, other than the blunt and dubious morality of vengeance in the shape of a poncho wearing gunfighter who gives the really bad people their come-uppance. Yet in for example, "The Good the Bad and the Ugly", some of the soundtrack is haunting, even tender, while other tracks even 40 years on have a menacing edge that bears comparison with the best of contemporary cinema music. The versatility and imagination of Morricone has produced for cinema goers unforgettable music – and for music lovers some of the finest compositions of the last 50 years.  The music of Gabriel's Oboe, and the lyrics translated below, are still for me the pinnacle of cinematic musical interpretation.

    In my imagination I see a just world,

    Everyone lives in peace and in honesty there.


    I dream of souls that are always free,


    Like the clouds that fly,


    Full of humanity in the depths of the soul.


    In my imagination I see a bright world,


    Even the night is less dark there.


    I dream of souls that are always free,


    Like clouds that fly.


    In my imagination there exists a warm wind,


    That breathes on the cities, like a friend.


    I dream of souls that are always free,


    Like clouds that fly,


    Full of humanity in the depths of the soul.

    Hurry up with my CDs!!

  • A week of Enjoyment – A Confession and an Explanation

    This is the first post at the beginning of Enjoyment Week.
    This is an idea I've had for some time to counteract a recently diagnosed
    tendency to slow onset grumpiness, a condition that is not specific to me but which is like a virus, reaching epidemic status and from which the church seems to have no immunity.

    The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace (and
    six others). But joy comes second only after love. Enjoy is an
    interesting  word – from old French, "to take pleasure in" – like
    diving into deep water and swimming, so being immersed in pleasure,
    reveling happily in the environment that is our life and in which we live our days.

    But does joy
    refer to a preferred disposition?

    Is enjoyment a way we choose of seeing and responding to
    the world?

    Or should such an intense word as joy be reserved only for
    those occasional bursts of extraordinary pleasure we can't predict and make happen?

    Can joy, and
    enjoyment, be an act of will, something we set out to feel, a habit to
    be formed?

    Or is joy a gift that sometimes comes unexpectedly and
    unbidden as gift and surprise?

    Enjoyment surely can't be a constant
    state – a life of unmitigated joy would self-destruct from an excess of
    sameness and exhausted emotions! 

    Still.
    I do think that joy and enjoyment have some moral content. Is there not in
    all of us, an obligation to look on life without sourness, to be
    receptive to gift, to detect and reject those first negative impulses
    that once welcomed become complaint, and before long distill into
    bitterness, or worse still reduce to concentrated cynicism?

    En-joy-ment – to be on
    the side of joy, to opt into fun and laughter as an affirmation of what
    is good for us, and good for others. Because selfish joy is an
    oxymoron. The connections between celebration and community, between
    enjoyment and wellbeing, between laughter and contentment, humour and humanity, are not coincidental – they are creative links between the life we are given and the lives of others.


    Donna Dove So a week of enjoyment means finding and making en-joy-ment in my own life; and making and giving en-joy-ment in the lives of others. And the week I've chosen for this experiment is the first week back at work after a long holiday. So if enjoyment is something we can make happen, for ourselves and for others, this might be a good week to try and prove it. One other thought.

    There is a mini-lexicon of words that cluster around enjoyment, and are spiritually if not semantically related, and which if not the same thing, each contribute to that same inner sense of en-joy-ment.

    You can even do a fibonnaci poem about them – just for the enjoyment of it :))

    Gift

    Praise

    Laughter

    Gratitude

    Appreciation

    Achievement and encouragement

    Plus. The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience,

    kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self control. Live by the Spirit – and enjoy!

    Part Mary Oliver's poem Meadowlark Sings and I Greet Him in Return, helps get the sense of all this:

    Meadowlark, when you sing it's as if

    you lay your yellow breast upon mine and say

    hello, hello, and are we not

    of one family, in our delight of life?

    You sing, I listen.

  • Wolfhart Pannenberg, God’s Patience and a Honda Jazz


    41YRbVsP98L._SL500_AA300_ Every few years or so I've tried to make time to read through a full blown systematic theology. This is not a novel form of intellectual masochism, but an intentional obedience to the call of God to a discipleship of the intellect. Sure, there are some writers who seem to make it harder than it needs to be. But the recognised theologians, the big names, the substantial presences on the theological stage, are far too important to the life of the church and the mind of its leaders to be sidelined by an arrogant laziness disguised as intellectual modesty. And those same substantial presences are far, far too important to be ignored, neglected or despised by those of us called to preach, to care, to serve the church, to build the Body of Christ, and to do so thoughtfully, reverently and from a foundation more durable and adaptable than the latest time limited pragmatic programmes geared to ecclesial renewal of one form or another.

    Which is why over the years I've sat in the study chair, fastened the seat-belt, adjusted the mirrors to give better vision, checked I had enough fuel (chai tea and Hovis digested biscuits the current preferred combination ), gripped the book with both hands, and started to read. Half an hour a day eventually gets it done. Which is how I come to be at page 438 of Wolfhart Pannenberg's volume 1. And this post was born when I read his theological reflection on the patience of God. Pannenberg is not easy to read, but…


    EN59GOP_I01 No wait. First let me tell you about the other night. I took a long run in the new car, a Honda Jazz with which I am inordinately pleased. We went into Lewis
    Grassic Gibbon country – Cairn O Mount, Auchenblae, and Arbuthnott. For a while we sat
    at the view point on Cairn O Mount and admired a huge vista of
    countryside through heavy rain accompanied by shafts of bright sunshine
    framed in a vivid half rainbow. It's wild,
    miles of heather moorland and mountain, but sloping into green uplands
    and fields towards the Mearns.

    Now. Reading Panneberg's theology can sometimes be a similar experience to looking at a challenging rough landscape under dark skies, in heavy rain that reduces visibility. But just as often there are shafts of bright sunlight, a partial rainbow and moments of transfigured thought and intellectual epiphany. Here's one of them, from pages 438-9:

    "Barth said of patience that it is present 'where space and time are given with a definite intention, where freedom is allowed in expectation of a response' (CD, II/1, 408). Patience leaves to others space for their own existence and time for the unfolding of their own being. If it is not the enforced patience of those who impotently watch the course of events but the patience of the powerful who can intervene in what happens but refrains from doing so, and if the patience is shown to his own creatures, then it is a form of the love that lets the creatures have their own existence.  God's patience then, is neither indifferent tolerance nor an impotent but brave endurance of circumstances that cannot  be altered. It is an element of the creative love that wills the existence of creatures. It waits for the response of creatures in which they fulfill their destiny."

    Patience as love restraining power in order to allow freedom. So patience as the self-limitation that allows space, time and opportunity for the other to grow. And patience therefore as an active form of passivity, an intentional self-imposed limitation which gives permission and trusts the other to be and to become. As a vision of how God is willfully implicated in the life of his creation, Pannenberg's theology of divine patience suggests that in God the three cardinal virtues of faith hope and love have their divine counterpart. The faithfulness, hopefulness and love of God guaranteeing that creation will not forever be in bondage to futility, but in Christ will be brought to fulfilment in the end, and however long it takes, it will not wear out the patience of the God.

  • Jimmy Reid – the best Scottish MP we never had.


    Reid Over the past forty years,
    Jimmy Reid has been one of Scotland's most important voices. That voice first came to prominence in the early 1970's during the standoff between the Conservative Heath Government and the workers at the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders. And that's when I first heard it, and have listened to it ever since with critical affection. I was young, I had already been a shop steward and local representative for the Transport and General Workers' Union while working at Mayfield Brickwork. So when he stood before the massed union meeting and laid down the rules of engagement, I remember the electrifying impact of the Scottish language being used in the vernacular, with rhetorical power and moral force. "There will be no hooliganism; there will be no vandalism; there will be nae bevvying. The world is watching…and it's our responsibility to conduct ourselves responsibly and with dignity and with maturity." And they did.

    Two tributes, one by Tony Benn and one by a worker who was an apprentice in 1971,  sum up Jimmy Reid – "classic self-educated working class intellectual of moral principle", and "a leader you could like, who was on your side and who had the big ideas." It's hard to over-estimate the impact of this working class intellectual, who was the equal in intelligence and ethical passion of any of the more elitist figures with whom he argued and bargained in the struggle to save jobs, livelihood and communities. Because it was Jimmy Reid who understood long before the Thatcher government's attack on the mining industry, that long established local industry is the cohesive that makes community possible. And he understood the corrosive effect of unemployment on human dignity and morale, and the hopelessness felt by workers who heard in the clang of shut factory gates, the slamming shut of their own and their families' life opportunities.


    Beethoven A few years after the UCS dispute, Jimmy Reid was on a TV programme which explored the influences and circumstances that had shaped his world-view. Asked about his favourite piece of music, this self educated working class shop steward chose the final choral movement of Beethoven's 9th Symphony. Why? Because it celebrated the joy of human existence, presented a vision of humanity living in harmony, and by the use of human voices co-operating with an orchestra, showed the radical connectedness of human aspirations with human industry. As a working class lad myself, that was my first introduction to Beethoven's symphonies – so even then, Reid was expanding the minds of those who heard him.

    Asked then about what made him such a passionate union member he referred to his brief stint as a 16 year old in a stockbroker's office. There he saw figures that showed wealthy people making more money in a single share transaction, than his own father could have earned several lifetimes over. I suspect today he would be accused of the politics of envy – but then the prophet Amos might have been accused of the same, and his response echoed the values and vision of Reid's political passion – "let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an everflowing stream."


    Yellowstone Memorial Day 2008 147 Of the obituaries so far written, The Guardian is not uncritical but is fair, admiring, and acknowledges the passing of a great man. Few individuals in the political or trade union arena have, over the last century "
    raised so many spirits, challenged so many assumptions or offered more vivid glimpses of a different social order." I hope someone takes on the significant task of writing an intellectual and social biography of Jimmy Reid. Communist, Labour, SNP – it's quite a cluster of political rosettes – but each move was principled and each cost him friendships and alliances. The title of his book describes what he loathed most – power without principles. He embodied Scottish working class culture at its best – a man with self-admitted faults, but a great man, a leader whose ethical principle and rhetorical power galvanised an industry and gave working people a respected and effective voice. He has been a background presence in my grown-up life, and his death marks the end of an era in Scottish trade union and political history. 

    Two examples of that respected and passionate voice –

    "From the very depth of my being, I challenge the
    right of any man or any group of men, in business or in government, to
    tell a fellow human being that he or she is expendable."

    And on the permissive society

    "When any society permits 1 million people to be unemployed, then yes, I am against such a permissive society."

  • Art as an alternative grammar and vocabulary for theology

    Over the summer I've been gradually updating some of the material of a module I'm teaching in Spring 2011. "Jesus Through the Centuries" is one of those modules that cries out for creative experiences of learning, encourages new approaches to reflection, explores radically different media for making theological statements, and allows each student to think more widely and deeply about who Jesus is. Film, painting, sculpture, music, poetry, and iconography provide rich and profound challenges to a theology that is often embedded, maybe at times imprisoned, by words.

    Part of the course I am developing relates to the incarnation. What I find remarkable is the concentration in the tradition on questions of how. How Jesus could be both God and human, and the sophisticated complexity of various formulations of words in an attempt to capture, contain and convey truth. It isn't that the how question is unimportant – just that it isn't the only question. And it isn't that I have a quarrel with words, I use them as fragments of attempted precision myself. But there are alternatives to words in the human impulse to portray and celebrate the great Johannine vision, 'the Word became flesh and dwelt among us'. So I've been looking rather closely at paintings of the incarnation, almost always centred on the image of Mary and the infant Jesus.


    Image_120400_v2_m56577569831174998 And while the infant is usually and naturally central in the painting, the mother is an equally crucial and essential image, expressed with reverent care, portrayed in intimate detail, flowing as a dominant presence around the infant. And what has surprised me, in my admittedly limited reading and study of a number of these paintings, is the extraordinary availability in painted art, of a different theological grammar and vocabulary.

    Now this is a thought I am developing, but as one example of what I am after – I have been studying the body language of the mother and what that might imply about the child. Especially the facial expression. Sad, serene, joyful, composed, in prayer eyes closed, in wonder eyes wide open, head bowed in adoration – or resignation…and so on.

    I came across the ink drawing of Rogier Van Der Weyden, now held at the Louvre. It is exquisite, a softly lined and shaded sketch that says more than any finished oil, a most beautiful theological statement of purity and feminine beauty, and while the head is bowed, the eyes are open, the face is strong, and her attention is focused off stage, contemplative yet concentrated. What is going on? Just
    as in film the look off-stage is towards that which the viewer cannot
    see, but must imagine through the facial expression of the actor, so in
    this sketch we have to imagine what it is she gazes at in that way.
    Artists know very well that facial expression and the focus of the eyes
    is deeply suggestive to the viewer's imagination.
    "The Head of the Virgin" is inclined towards …what? Depends whether this is before the annunciation, after it but before the birth, or after the child is born. Before the annunciation, a young woman thoughtful and composed; after the annunciation resigned to a future to which she willingly surrendered; after the birth, wonder, even adoration but qualified by an expression of sadness?

    And my question is – knowing the Christian story, and being familiar with the nativity  and birth narratives, and belonging to a Christian community of faith, what theological conclusions are drawn from that face, that attentiveness, that focus off-stage? And how important is our imagination as a nourishment of what we already believe, and an enrichment of how we think of Jesus? 

  • Confessions of a Stationery Mug


    1576871487_01_PT01__SS400_SCLZZZZZZZ_V1140649280_ I'm a stationery mug.

    Not a stationary mug, i.e. someone who is both daft and immobile.

    No. A stationery mug, i.e. a liker of all the things you write with and write on.

    Sure. The computer, the printer and Microsoft Word produce high quality documents with a little help from my fingetips – but I still like to write some things, holding a pen or pencil or ink brush, physically forming the words, ink flowing from somewhere deep within the mind, through hand and pen, and leaving a trail of meaning on the paper.

    I own an expensive Waterman fountain pen which I use to write special letters and cards.

    I own an equally expensive Waterman ballpoint pen to impress others when I am attending those committees where others tap away at various electronic artefacts, for my part preferring a well crafted lacquered pen like the unrepentant Luddite I occasionally am.

    When it comes to what you write on, I like notebooks – especially A5 notebooks.


    Notebook So like the stationery mug I am, I was browsing in The Works and came across cloth covered, finely decorated, A5 notebooks with good quality paper, a couple of hundred pages, and at a ridiculous remainder price.

    In the big bookshops and other upmarket places that sell notebooks to the Journal writing public, you'd pay nearer £10 or more for a stitched quality notebook like these.

    So. £2.99 each.

    Stationery mug here buys 3 – one for my study desk in Westhill – one for my study desk at College, and one to replace whichever of these two gets filled first.

    And what gets written in them? Some of the stuff that eventually makes its way into Living Wittily; plus other footnotes and quotes from whatever is being read; ideas as they form slowly, take and then change shape, and evolve into understanding; and those frequent fleeting gifts of thought that unless written down are like the sparrow in the Celtic legend, that flies in one end of the barn and flies out the other, and is gone, its vanishing intimating the brevity of life!

    For years I've kept different kinds of what used to be called a Commonplace Book, a repository of what at different times has seemed apt, important, funny, significant, worth attending to, and to keep safe whatever is ( to coin a clumsy word) shareable, until the time comes to share it. Off to note down a thought I just had…..


  • A walk in the woods, an old scooter, and a dazzling dome 🙂

    Get-attachment.aspx

    Out for a walk and found this abandoned scooter. Probably the nearest I'll ever come to being a biker – don't have the gear though. The rusting remains would make an interesting garden feature with a couple of climbing plants around it. No idea how it got there, or why. Must be easier to dump an old scooter than taking it a mile into wooded countryside. Or was it stolen, dumped and never found? Something poignant about the skeleton of what used to be someone's pride and joy. Sorry about the shiny heid! A friend took the photo and was unable to cope with the challenge of bright light reflected from a shiny dome – or was the intelligent camera not intelligent enough 🙂 ?

    …………………..

    Fibonacci poems. Just to remind you – a fibonacci poem is one where each line contains the exact number of syllables of the two previous lines. The sequrence is therefore 1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34 and if you're feeling creative or silly, 55!

    Lament for a Scooter (Fibonacci)

    Lost?

    Dumped.

    Stolen?

    Rusted wreck.

    Someone's pride and joy.

    Scooter or show-off's chariot?

    How many miles were on the clock,
    each one wind-swept fun?

    Flaking metal withers slowly; grass
    and whin entwine, clothing with green the naked frame.

    Machinery meets botany, rust versus
    chlorophyll, inanimate detritus midst living fauna – fly dumping as perverse art
    form!

  • Dr Karen Woo – an Afghan tragedy.

    Dr WooDr Karen Woo was a wonderful human being. Like millions of others in this country I never heard of her until yesterday's news that she had been murdered by members of the Taliban. Founder of a medical aid charity, and clearly a woman of courage, compassion and generosity, her death leaves the world a much poorer place, and takes away from the Afghan people one of their most precious and essential helps – those who offer their skill, energy, time and professionalism for the care of ordinary Afghans. In remote villages as well as targeted cities, the Afghan people are caught in the vice-jaws of ideological conflict, and their suffering is immense, hard to report, and often brutal, summary and sudden.

    The justification for her killing? She was, it was claimed, "an American spy" and "preaching Christianity". The hollow cynicism of such a claim, or the blind hatred and prejudice that formulates such an obscene rationale, exposes the nature of propaganda, ideology, media-controlled news flow, and above all the way we all invest our own perceptions with overwhelming certainty that we see clearly and we see truly. But whatever the perception and perspective, and whatever the truth claims – erroneous or accurate, there is no justification whatsoever for the execution of a young doctor and her colleagues.

    And those who live, whether by Christian or Muslim faith and ethics, will immediately, because instinctively, draw the same conclusion. This was an evil act. This is not the will of God according to the Scriptures of either faith tradition. There are few perceptions and perspectives more dangerous than those fueled by a religious tradition distorted into a rationale for killing those who are other – and whose otherness is itself reason for enmity, hatred, violence and death. The great tragedy of the last decade has been the hardened polarisation and then the dangerous collision of the extreme edges of two faith traditions which have so much in common, and also so much on which they differ. And the great tragedy for the Afghan people is that their country has become the place where, by proxy, ideological conflict is localised, and given a context within which military conflict can be deployed. Thus drones and smart-bombs, IED's and suicide bombs, become the grotesque exchanges and communications that constitute conversation between those who see the other as hated threat. And one of the millions of footnotes in this narrative of religious unholy war and terminal political enmity, is the very personal tragedy of a young gifted woman doctor, summarily executed by those for whom hate is a fundamental virtue – which is about as wrong as any human being can get.

    I recently read a novel about St Francis of Assisi – and his role as peacemaker between Christian crusaders and the Islamic peoples. And while there is tragic irony in the popularity of his prayer 'Lord make me an instrument of thy peace…." in a decade of such violent non-peace, that prayer should, along with the Lord's Prayer, be part of the daily liturgy of responsible Christians. I remain convinced, by Scripture and by the call of the Living Christ to the Church which is his body in the world, that the ministry of reconciliation, the mission of peacemaking, the discipleship of those who follow the Prince of Peace, is not to march triumphantly under a cross, but to stagger under the weight of the cross of a world's suffering as those who follow after Christ crucified, discovering, ever more profoundly, the meaning of the cross as the defining intersection of Divine Love and human sin, and that cross as the second-last word from God the peacemaker. Because the final word of the Christian gospel is "Christ is Risen!", and it is the Living Christ who carries on that same redemptive conciliation in our hate-shattered world, and through the ministry of his Body, the Church.

  • R S Thomas and the fragrance of God.


    DSCN0902

    Just
    to balance yesterday's quick overview of R S Thomas's poems in which I
    made quite a lot of his angularity, impatience with too easily won
    certainty, and his rigorous questioning of religion as mere comfort.
    There are times when RST wrote with a wistfulness and imaginative
    kindness about human longing and the elusiveness of God whose presence
    haunts us in each encounter with beauty, transient and fragile.

    The Flower

    I asked for riches.

    You gave me the earth, the sea,

                                      the immensity

    of the broad sky. I looked at them

    and learned I must withdraw

               to possess them. I gave my eyes

               and my ears, and dwelt

    in a soundless darkness

                                     in the shadow

               of your regard.

                                     The soul

               grew in me, filling me

    with its fragrance.

                              Men came

    to me from the four

              winds to hear me speak

              of the unseen flower by which

    I sat, whose roots were not

    in the soil, nor its petals the colour

    of the wild sea; that was

             its own species with its own

             sky over it, shot

    with the rainbow of your coming and going.

    R S Thomas, Collected Poems, 1945-1990, (London: Dent, 1993), 280

    (The photo was taken at the People's Palace on Glasgow Green – a Hibiscus in full but brief bloom).


  • R S Thomas, the Crucified God and the virtue of metaphysical humility


    1009551 Chris McIntosh is a fellow enthusiast for the poetry of R S Thomas. Indeed she is an RST pilgrim who recently went looking again for the haunts of the finest religious poet of the second half of the 20th Century (see her post for 17 July). She asked in her recent comment if I'd come upon Thomas's 1990 collection, Counterpoint, and confesses reluctance to write about them. And when you read them you can understand why the hesitation. Yet they are a remarkably important contribution to Christian thought, representing a voice too often muted in Christian spirituality. So at least some thoughts and initial reflections.

    Some of the poems in Counterpoint assert faith at its most interrogative, that is, to read them is to be interrogated, asked questions we'd rather not answer, but that won't go away. And for those who need certainty and not only assurance but chronic reassurance, some of them contain carpet pulling assertions that leave comfortable faith discomfited on the floor. And some of them contain that pastoral tenderness that was seldom sentimental, but understood and respected human fragility, shared that wistful longing to know, to really know, who God is and what God is about, in a world with so many hard and dangerous places, so many dark corners, so much that causes hurt.


    Vangogh-starry_night_edit Much of Thomas's poetry is therefore in the minor key, and much that would be called negative emotion is drawn into a vision of human existence where the negative has its positive counterpoint, and the minor anticipates the major, even when the major is indicated rather than intimated. To change the metaphor, Thomas's poetry, like Van Gogh's painting, acknowledged, even celebrated light, but against cobalt blue, implied menacing shadow, even in some paintings, impressions of unrelieved dullness or darkness. The contrast of dark and light, minor and major, despair and hope, doubt and faith, carefree joy and recurring sorrow, mirrors for Thomas the poet the task of Christian theology, which is not to explain away the negative, or deny it, or make such experience occasion for guilt. For Thomas any escapist or triumphalist theology lacks a sufficient metaphysical humility, claims more than is warranted by human experience, and simply leaves unaddressed by Christian theology those experiences inevitable in mortal existence, of ambiguity, of desolation, of existential ache for meaning, belonging and hope. You can't have Van Gogh without the cobalt blue – the starry night is glorious because as well as the swirling spheres of coarse brushed gold, there is the background of contrasting space, distance, darkness.

     
    Hubble-eagle-nebula-wide-field-04086y At times in the Counterpoint collection, there is a sense of a Christian holding on to faith by fingertips and precarious toe-holds. But taken as a whole they are poems of astonishing grasp, a profound Christian theology in which God is neither trivialised nor analysed, but acknowledged as the overwhelming Reality that permeates and penetrates a universe in which all human existence would otherwise be fleeting accident registering for nanoseconds in a story bleakly eternal. Thomas's poetry has as its theological sub-structure the Christian story. And the four suites of poems in Counterpoint demonstrate a soul that has learned metaphysical humility, not docility, not resignation, Thomas is not God's 'yes-man'; but in his questioning he will accept neither trite answers nor final negations. Because at the heart of Thomas's poetry, as the glowing core from which his creative energy was drawn, is the cross, the crucified Christ, the God who scandalises all theology by being born human, suffering, dying, and thus through love defiant in resurrection, contradicting the tendency of the universe to atrophy and die. Wherever else the universe is going, according to Thomas it will not outrun the grasping arms of the crucified God. Here is just one poem, whose last clause captures in six words, the eternally patient movement of God, outwards in Love, towards a recalcitrant but cherished creation.

    They set up their decoy

    in the Hebrew sunlight. What

    for? Did they expect

    death to come sooner

    to disprove his claim

    to be God's son? Who

    can shoot down God?

    Darkness arrived at midday, the shadow

    of whose wing? The blood

    ticked from the cross, but it was not

    their time it kept. It was no

    time at all, but the accompaniment

    to a face staring,

    as over the centuries

    it has stared, from unfathomable

    darkness into unfathomable light.

    R S Thomas, Collected Later Poems, (Bloodaxe, 2004), page 108.

    Four question marks in one poem. And those last six words. Van Gogh's starry night again?