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’Missing God’
Friday 13th February 2015 @ 10:47 pm

Last week at a Chaplains Conference, Rev David Bruce (a dinner guest) read excerpts from the following poem, by the late Dennis ODriscoll … it has some lines that have stayed with me this week.

 

Enjoy for yourself.

 

MISSING GOD

 

His grace is no longer called for 

Before meals:

farmed fish multiply 

without His intercession. 

Bread production rises through 

disease–resistant grains devised 

scientifically to mitigate His faults. 

Yet, though we rebelled against Miss Him 

like adolescents, uplifted to see 

an oppressive father banished – 

a bearded hermit – to the desert, 

we confess to missing Him at times.

 

Miss Him during the civil wedding 

when, at the blossomy altar 

of the registrar’s desk, we wait in vain 

to be fed a line containing words 

like “everlasting” and “divine”.

 

Miss Him when the TV scientist 

explains the cosmos through equations, 

leaving our planet to revolve on its axis 

aimlessly, a wheel skidding in snow.

 

Miss Him when the radio catches a snatch 

of plainchant from some echoey priory; 

when the gospel choir raises its 

collective voice 

to ask Shall We Gather at the River? 

or the forces of the oratorio converge 

on I Know That My Redeemer Liveth 

and our contracted hearts lose a beat.

 

Miss Him when a choked voice 

at the crematorium recites the poem 

about fearing no more the heat of the sun.

 

Miss Him when we stand in judgement 

on a lank Crucifixion in an art museum, 

its stripe–like ribs testifying to rank.

 

Miss Him when the gamma–rays 

recorded on the satellite graph 

seem arranged into a celestial score, 

the music of the spheres, 

the Ave Verum Corpus of the observatory lab.

 

Miss Him when we stumble on the breast lump 

for the first time and an involuntary prayer escapes our lips;

when a shadow crosses our bodies on an x–ray screen;

when we receive a transfusion of foaming blood 

sacrificed anonymously to save life.

Miss Him when we call out His name 

spontaneously in awe or anger 

as a woman in the birth ward bawls 

her long–dead mother’s name.

 

Miss Him when the linen–covered 

dining table holds warm bread rolls, 

shiny glasses of red wine.

 

Miss Him when a dove swoops 

from the orange grove in a tourist village 

just as the monastery bell begins to take its toll.

 

Miss Him when our journey leads us 

under leaves of Gothic tracery, an arch 

of overlapping branches that meet 

like hands in Michelangelo’s creation.

 

Miss Him when, trudging past a church, 

we catch a residual blast of incense, 

a perfume on par with the fresh–baked loaf 

which Milosz compared to happiness.

 

Miss Him when our newly–decorated kitchen 

comes in Shaker–style and we order 

a matching set of Mother Ann Lee chairs.

 

Miss Him when we listen to the prophecy 

of astronomers that the visible galaxies 

will recede as the universe expands.

Miss Him the way an uncoupled glider 

riding the evening thermals 

misses its tug.

 

Miss Him, as the lovers shrugging 

shoulders outside the cheap hotel 

ponder what their next move should be.

 

Even feel nostalgic, odd days, 

for His Second Coming, 

like standing in the brick 

dome of a dovecote 

after the birds have flown

 


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