Of All Saints, and One

Dancing, in mind at least, toward a stage of untested embrace—
    Virginal spirits grasped in the shared, unexpected spectacle
             Of one season’s end, and another’s hesitant birth.
  The familiar overture of early winter, glimpsed for a moment
           By eyes that found delight in a scene of colliding awe,
       Of wonder wrapped at the heart of such commonness.
              A place and time of grace, if in its ordinary face;
                   Should we await another? A radiant scene,
                   Freighted with patient miracles; obscured
                          Only for those without eyes to see:
     A stubborn season’s embrace of its own natured demise.
                  Shadows pressing ahead of hastening night,
                       Bearers of brittle silences, descending
  With neither courtesy nor contempt upon grasses and fields
          Below, announcing the end of this reluctant vision.
          Yet greet it we must with comprehending defiance,
Without the residue of resentment toward what must and will be.
        Birth, on winter’s other side, must yield to ordinary death
                          Before rising into dancing convergence,
        When again the last will be first, and the silenced speak.

Mark S. Burrows

Photo by Jan Huber on Unsplash. Image cropped.

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

When Worship Becomes Theater

Carl R. Trueman

The current interest in the church and the sacred is cause for celebration, as Christianity offers the…

Creating U.S. Catholicism

Gerard V. Bradley

In 1928, Undersecretary of State William R. Castle Jr. wrote about “by far the most important Roman…

Southern Baptists Contra Mundum

Andrew T. Walker

The most famous Southern Baptist statesman of his generation, Adrian Rogers, remarked at the Southern Baptist Convention…