I Will Sing of the Freedom
(“Always
give thanks for all things to God the Father in the name of our Lord
Jesus Christ.” Ephesians 5:20)
It
was sometimes the precise language that bothered me,
like
indigestion after too many doughnuts. I cannot seriously
thank God
for detention camps and quarantined families.
thank God
for detention camps and quarantined families.
And
to offer gratitude in the name of the authorities who put them there;
who
do not see the dark-haired mothers scorched upon the road of
escape,
who refuse to hear the broken candles of prayers cut off before the answer
who refuse to hear the broken candles of prayers cut off before the answer
who
defy the cries of wrinkled notes with grandparent's phone numbers
scribble inside.
You
tell me to give thanks, and I will, for families with such life that
dare our borders
for refuge and asylum from the eardrum-splitting violence of their own homes,
their kindred villages, to seek a hand to help them across the border
to air with less smoke and more invitations to join the
purple majesties and and golden grains. No one told them
for refuge and asylum from the eardrum-splitting violence of their own homes,
their kindred villages, to seek a hand to help them across the border
to air with less smoke and more invitations to join the
purple majesties and and golden grains. No one told them
half-way
through their journey
that
families no longer matter in the land they heard was free.
I
will give thanks for mother and fathers, for older brothers and
sisters,
for baby girls and boys. I will utter praise for the progeny of the Father
who come to our borders and scale the wall if the must, to find just a speck
of justice on
the other side of the fences.
for baby girls and boys. I will utter praise for the progeny of the Father
who come to our borders and scale the wall if the must, to find just a speck
of justice on
the other side of the fences.
I
will sing of the freedom seekers, I will write the songs that urge
them on.
I will thank the Father who loves them forward, the Son, the refugee whose long
and ancient Days are full of families who sought a better home, a greater city,
a place where a woman could decide, right or wrong; and where a man could choose,
up or down; until the seeds took root or the boss cut the check
I will thank the Father who loves them forward, the Son, the refugee whose long
and ancient Days are full of families who sought a better home, a greater city,
a place where a woman could decide, right or wrong; and where a man could choose,
up or down; until the seeds took root or the boss cut the check
or
until the new land of their sojourn
joined the song and thanked the Father of Life
for the spice, the dance, the song, and perchance,
the greater nation that opens its heart to families
like our families
that once upon a time
joined the song and thanked the Father of Life
for the spice, the dance, the song, and perchance,
the greater nation that opens its heart to families
like our families
that once upon a time
placed
uncertain feet upon the shores of an experimental nation
that hard-pressed, learned the love of freedom as slowly as a toddler
following its mother home.
that hard-pressed, learned the love of freedom as slowly as a toddler
following its mother home.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Feel free to comment, I'm always always interested, and so are others.