Return to St. Thomas

Here we are, with four children, at late Mass,
   The nave a bloated hull of tin, the cross
   Dangling from double chains, its weight of loss
Moored in midair as listing decades pass.
A few gray heads, behind, recall a past
   When the bright sharded window cast its gloss
   On pews packed full: however time’s waves toss
The Church, it’d bear its people to the last.

That’s not the obvious lesson it once seemed,
   As I turn toward strange faces offering peace,
   And fail to find those who were borne with me
Through all the sacraments, those taught to see,
   In every fall, love’s chance to be redeemed,
   Never thinking all prayer might simply cease.

—James Matthew Wilson

Photo by Nheyob via Creative Commons. Image cropped. 

Next
YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

Leave Joy Alone

Ephraim Radner

C S. Lewis has never been my favorite Christian writer. I admit this sheepishly, given his stature.…

Why Homeschool?

Brian Patrick Eha

My father used to quiz us at the kitchen table, my older brother and me, during dinner.…

Song of Thanksgiving 

Richard Bratby

The Catholic Beethovenby nicholas chongoxford university, 336 pages, $99 On the cover of ­Nicholas Chong’s new book,…