“If I knew that tomorrow was the end of the world, I would plant an apple tree today.” —attributed, probably incorrectly, to Martin Luther
Whether he really owns the aphorism,
or it belongs to someone else instead
(perhaps it’s a rabbinic witticism),
it sounds like something Luther might have said.
He understood that Yahweh had designed
Adam to be both gardener and priest
in order that humanity would find
work sacred every day, no labor least.
Earth creaks and wobbles on its ancient axis;
it always seems as if we’re near the end.
Now is our opportunity for praxis;
in planting redbud trees, I comprehend
how more time than I have, I cannot borrow
and that one day, there will be no tomorrow.
—Duane K. Caylor
Photo by Jay Sturner via Creative Commons. Image cropped.
Goodbye, Childless Elites
The U.S. birthrate has declined to record lows in recent years, well below population replacement rates. So…
P. D. James and Designer Parkas for Chihuahuas
P D. James’s detective novels, featuring Inspector Adam Dalgliesh of New Scotland Yard, are every bit as…
When No-Fault Divorce Turns Children into Commodities
I anticipate that the most controversial part of my forthcoming book, The Desecration of Man, will be…