Stormy sunset by Beren Hartless |
The book of
Hebrews tells us that the Son of God sustains all things by his powerful word
and we read in the gospel of Matthew that as the Saviour died, the whole of
creation shuddered.
In this poem, creation is given a voice.
1.
I am the Thorn
Torn from
the bare earth,
wrenched
from my roots,
I was broken
and bent.
Twisted into
a circlet,
stabbing all
who strike my slender spines.
I would
defend you, Lord, with my life.
Gladly I
crown your brow.
Sadly I
pierce your skin.
They used me
to mock you,
the failed
King of the Jews.
The victor
in the games wears a diadem of laurel.
You have
only me to wreathe your tortured brow.
But even the
Thorn can blossom.
Tomorrow, a
white flower will spring where your precious drops of blood have lain.
Discarded, I
will bear mute testimony to your kingly reign.
2.
I am the wood
Hewn from
the forest,
seasoned and
shaped in the carpenter’s shed,
Master, you
took and trimmed trees like me.
Lovingly,
you stroked the grain,
Fashioning
the wood with hands human and divine,
The Creator
re-creating.
Now all I
can do is to tear into your sides.
I wish your
carpenter hands could have planed me
and sanded
off the rough edges.
I hate
wounding your flayed skin
with my
slashing splinters.
Master of
the universe,
I am your
throne.
But this
throne is gilded with pain
and stained
with gore.
3.
I am the iron
Once, Lord,
you took me and held me.
I was a tool
in your hand.
I was the
iron chisel you worked the wood with.
Then, I was
your friend and companion,
watching
Joseph teach you to make and carve useful things for people to enjoy,
working
alongside you in your labour of creation.
Now I am
useless and worse than useless.
My every
atom shrieks in protest
as I am
hammered home,
nailing your
hands and feet to the wood.
Now I am breaking and tearing you,
but you
still hold and enfold me
in your
broken flesh and splintered bone.
“Father,
forgive them - they know not what they do.”
4.
I am the man
I am the
soldier, the traitor, false friend.
I am the
hater.
I laid
the wood on his shoulders,
nailed his
hands,
stripped him
and scourged him,
mocked with
the rest.
Mine are the hands which crushed the thorn upon Christ’s brow.
Mine are the
hands which hung him high on the tree.
Mine are the
hands which hammered home the nails of iron.
"Father, forgive."
B. I. Hartless
B. I. Hartless