Poem Sunday, week 2. Thinking today about love, and courageous love - not just romantic, but embodied, incarnational. The kind of love that makes you break down all of the boundaries that have been set between the world as it is and the world as it should be. The kind of love that makes you walk on water.
The Truelove,
by David Whyte
There is a faith in loving fiercelythe one who is rightfully yours,especially if you havewaited years and especiallyif part of you never believedyou could deserve thisloved and beckoning handheld out to you this way.I am thinking of faith nowand the testaments of lonelinessand what we feel we areworthy of in this world.Years ago in the HebridesI remember an old manwho walked every morningon the grey stonesto the shore of the baying seals,who would press his hatto his chest in the blusteringsalt wind and say his prayerto the turbulent Jesushidden in the water,and I think of the storyof the storm and everyonewaking and seeingthe distantyet familiar figurefar across the watercalling to them,and how we are allpreparing for thatabrupt wakingand that calling,and that momentwe have to say yes,except it willnot come so grandly,so Biblically,but more subtlyand intimately in the faceof the one you knowyou have to love,so that when we finally step out of the boattoward them, we findeverything holdsus, and confirmsour courage, and if you wantedto drown you could,but you don'tbecause finallyafter all the struggleand all the years,you don't want to any more,you've simply had enoughof drowningand you want to live and youwant to love and you willwalk across any territoryand any darkness,however fluid and howeverdangerous, to take theone hand you knowbelongs in yours.
From The House of Belonging
Hey Jess,
ReplyDeleteThank you for this one. I bawl when I read it. I love it. It gives voice to my experience of stepping out and of particular belonging. Thank you.
This summer, God said to me "BE BOLD in my boldness. BE TRUE in my truth. LOVE FIERCELY in my more than sufficient love." I've never heard anyone use the phrase "love fiercely" until this poem. :)