Christmas tide

The cathedral glows with red and green and gold,
Waiting for the candles and the surpliced choir
And the people who will wash through its doors
These festive days and nights.
Their first Christmas for new canons and new Christians,
Tentative, joyful, amazed by splendour.
Their last Christmas for those who will move away
And for those whose death-day waits all unknown
Hidden in the new year that is to come.
And the tide of absences, the much-missed:
John whose wife faces the first Christmas of widowhood,
Jane who can’t find a carer to push her to church,
Jack who’s found a better shelter in jail
Than the wet waterfront.
In among the crowding strangers and the old friends they all come.
This human tide washes through the ancient building
For a day, a week, for forty years,
Finding a home here, a place to root down into God.

But the old stones know: everyone passes
Like the flower of the field.
Over the centuries the human tide
Has washed in and out, heavy with sorrows,
Bubbling with joy, awed into wonder.
This is the place where the fragile, the fleeting
Touches hands with eternity, and once a year
Remembers the truth: nothing is lost in God.
Not a butterfly, not an old man’s vanished memory,
Not a loving glance or act of kindness.
The candles in the winter dark remind us:
In endless light the lost tides shall return
And be made whole. All passing generations
Are held safe in God’s love, for ever.
The undefended baby in the manger shows:
There is no need for fear. This is the true nature
Of the Light beyond light, the Maker of the world:
A love that reaches out and never threatens.
Where all tides end he waits with endless joy.

 

tRuth 2019

 

All names are pseudonyms

 

image © portsmouthcathedral.org.uk

End of term

The head chorister’s tears fall
As he bids farewell to ruff and surplice,
To seven years of music-making,
Half his life,
As he bids farewell to his boyhood.
First loss, piercing yet sweet to look back upon,
The happiness of days chock-full of meaning.
He has learned now: all things pass.
May he learn also: that which is eternal
Can never be lost, but abides forever.
Broadened horizons for the young man he will be
Will bring new blessings, passing yet eternal.

 

tRuth 2019

 

image © Chris Beckett/ flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Advent

Tempest: the gnawing gale
Drives the rough sleepers from the seafront,
Sleet splinters flying on the wind’s wail.

Tempus fugit: time flees fast,
Drains away and is gone through fingers
That cling to be safe, cling to what cannot last.

Temper: a sword for its purpose is tried,
And a soul for its truth: what justice from you
For those who have nowhere to bide?

Tempus fugit: time runs out like the sand
When He comes who made time and asks
His searching question of those upon either hand.

 

tRuth 2018

 

image © Robin Stott cc-by-sa/2.0/ http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2160484

 

Communion

This moment is beyond time
Where you are enthroned
On the praises of Israel,
And I am rapt in wonder,
Held in union beyond expression.
You entered the tabernacle of time
To display your glory:
In each moment’s monstrance you radiate
Holiness, mercy, grace;
There is no time where you do not dwell.
You display your glory
In each encounter, each irradiated face:
These the tent of your abiding,
For which you framed the spun silk
Of cause and effect:
Time’s glittering web.

 

tRuth 2016

image copyright tRuth http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/