Spiritual poetry
is some of the oldest poetry known. Some 75 percent of the Old Testament is written in poetic form, and the
Psalms are written entirely in poetic form. In fact, five books – Job Psalms,
Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Solomon – are known as the poetical
books.
This genre of
poetry continues to be popular today. Poets like Malcolm
Guite, Mark Jarman, Luci
Shaw, and Wendell Berry have written spiritual poems, and faith
infuses their poetry generally. While spiritual poems are often characterized
by praise, this isn’t the only way they are written. Three recent collections
demonstrate some of the different ways that faith can be written as poetry.
Ben Palpant |
Sojourner
Songs is poet Ben Palpant’s second collection of poetry;
his first, A
Small Cup of Light: a drink in the desert was published in 2014. He
began writing poetry as a result of a health collapse some years ago; he began
writing poetry as a way to explore the idea of “suffering in the presence of a
living God.” A Small Cup of Light was
praised by a number of Christian writers and theologians, including J.I. Packer, the author
of Knowing
God.
In his new
collection of 59 poems, Palpant includes many that serve as meditations on
scripture. In fact, not only does he include the references, he also includes a
section in the book that reprints the scriptures cited as well. Most of the
references are from the Old Testament.
This one,
inspired by Isaiah 30:15-25, includes a number of proverbs, ostensibly “notes
from a prophet” but the prophet , in this case, is the poet.
At the Still Point
I carry a
satchel
stuffed with
notes from a prophet.
I read each,
one at a time,
on lonesome
nights,
under darkening
skies.
“Fear multiplies
exponentially
with each glance
over the
shoulder.”
“He who runs
shall get
trampled
by fear’s
phantoms.”
“He who fears
shall be like
one standing naked
and alone in an
open field.”
“He who seeks
salvation
must turn and
run toward fear.”
“He who clings
to the still
point
of the turning
wheel
shall be saved.”
So now I sit
with my satchel
and rest until
morning.
I wait
and watch
for the dawn
here,
at the still
point
of this whirling
wheel.
Sojourner Songs
is a lovely collection. The individual poems sound intimately familiar, because
we are all sojourners in this life, all waiting and watching at “the still
point of this whirling wheel.”
Brandon Hadley |
Spiritual poems
don’t have to be tied to specific Bible references. Most of the 52 poems in Poems
from the Wilderness by Brandon
Hadley, in fact, do not have specific Bible references, and yet they are no
less faith-based than ones that do.
Hadley ‘s poems
speak from the wilderness, another way of describing our sojourn in the earthly
life. His subjects range from the seasons and times of the day to human love,
Lake Michigan, and Don Quixote. Many of them, however, read like psalms, such
as this one.
Breathless
What a road
That I have
travelled thus far
The sorrow I
have born
To come to this
place
To find friend
and lover
Who takes me as
I am
Who brings no
expectation
Or wants to
change who I am
To laugh when I
am goofy
To bring a
gleaming smile
To my somber
face
I had long-lost
hope
That I could
have all this
Amazed and
Astonished
I am left
breathless
After traveling
a road in sorrow, a kind of desert, the poet meets a friend and lover who accepts
him as he is – which could also describe meeting God for the first time. Poems from the Wilderness is a
collection of poems about hope.
Zach Czaia |
In some ways, Saint
Paul Lives Here (In Minnesota) by Zach
Czaia seems more recognizable as a contemporary collection of poetry than
many spiritual poetry collections. And yet it is infused with faith, and with
the all-too-human emotions of anger and doubt. One hears the voice of the
psalmist and the prophet, praising and questioning, shaking a fist and
confessing weakness and sin.
The 41 poems
cover a range of topics, not the least being the priest child abuse scandals
that shook the Catholic Church to its foundations. In several of the poems,
Czaia wrestles with what happened and his knowing an involved priest like Jacob
wrestles with the angel in the Book of Genesis. The poet won’t let go, and
while he’s not been a victim he wrestles with even naming one abuser, as if
naming would humanize him.
Other poems address
such subjects as the poets William Blake, W.H. Auden, and Dante; teaching in
public schools; relationships with family; and biblical subjects such Jesus’
death, Peter’s wife, the Garden of Gethsemane, and this meditation on a
specific Bible verse.
john chapter thirteen verse eight
unless i wash you
unless i wash
unless i
wish for more
than is given
than is allotted
than has been
swept gathered
to measure overflowing
that has been
imagined—
bodies torn in
villages on land on
sea heads of a character hammered
through daisies
unless i ask for
this
way this
possibility of the meeting
of a gaze a face
i don’t see
the eyes bleary
face smudged from poor
use misuse abuse
the winters long
unless i wash
this face
wash it with
hands trembling
slow tender
tracing across the scored face
unless i
break in the sun till the sun breaks down
unless
little lorax
with his whisper
unless your song
profane as well as
holy
lying long not dying windily
then
your body that
cradle of
regret-baby
hoping to become promise-man
will be
disappointed will inherit
nothing
Saint Paul Lives Here is a moving, thought-provoking
collection.
These three
works are a few examples of spiritual poetry – meditations on scripture; mediations
without scriptural references; and coming to grips with the contradictions and
doubts associated with faith and the church.
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