Mary Harwell Sayler loves writing, and
has published 30 books. She loves poetry. She loves encouraging other writers
and poets. But if there’s one thing she loves more than all of those, it’s the
God she believes in. Before she’s a writer, before she’s a poet, and before she’s
an encourager, Sayler is a woman of faith.
In Lost
in Faith: and poetry, her newest collection of 73 poems, Sayler combines
all of these attributes. She writes. She writes poetry. She praises. She
encourages. And she questions and sings
and hopes and struggles and she lives her life – a life of faith.
Her faith
shines through the poems, no matter what the subject – nature, the heavens, the
fall, Dante, adult coloring books, prayer, finding the bones of baby birds, a
church picnic, politics, a storm, doubt, reading (and sometimes struggling to
understand) Scripture, a cloud bank, and even an argument.
Flighting
Talking,
we stayed up too late,
knowing full
well that tiredness
would
awaken our next day.
So where
do we go from here?
Do we
resolve to speak promptly
of upset,
hurt, and anger, or never
to speak
at all of the carelessness
that mars
our better selves?
I, for
one, am weary
of trying
to arrange a perfect time,
a perfect
place for us to face our needs
and
longings, and yet I cannot bridge
the space
between your view and mine –
stark
cliffs from which to push
or plunge
and not resolve one thing.
Oh, for
wings
to fly
across the summit of ourselves:
the peaks
of our emotions, the depths
and
heights of love.
Is this
not our landscape, filled with
a wondrous
view? Is this not a reason
to go on
in faith,
headlong?
Oh, God, give us Your view.
Mary Harwell Sayler |
Her
published books include Living in the
Nature Poem, Faces in a Crowd, Outside Eden, Beach Songs & Wood Chimes: Poems for Children, Christian Writer’s Guide, Praise: Poems, and What the Bible Says About Love, among many others. She lives in
Florida.
In Lost in Faith: and poetry, Sayler’s
faith inspires and pours through her poems, but it doesn’t overwhelm them. They
express emotion, thinking, reflection, meditation, and joy – and occasionally
exuberance. The poems put the reader in mind of the psalms, and especially the
psalms of David – inviting, heartfelt, and simultaneously personal and
universal. She is indeed lost in faith.
Related:
What a wonderful review, Glynn! Thank you so much. May God continue to bless your good work in Christ.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the book! And yes what a wonderful review. Thank you for using your talent for His glory Mary😀👍
ReplyDeleteWhat a remarkable poem. I am going to have to order that book.... great review. Mary (and Glynn), you inspire!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Lori and Jody. May the poems be a blessing to you.
ReplyDelete