Listening to Lent — Every Stone Shall Cry

barnlight

1. A stable lamp is lighted
whose glow shall wake the sky;
the stars shall bend their voices,
and every stone shall cry.
And every stone shall cry,
and straw like gold shall shine;
a barn shall harbour heaven,
a stall become a shrine.

2. This child through David’s city
shall ride in triumph by;
the palm shall strew its branches,
and every stone shall cry.
And every stone shall cry,
though heavy, dull and dumb,
and lie within the roadway
to pave his kingdom come.

3. Yet he shall be forsaken,
and yielded up to die;
the sky shall groan and darken,
and every stone shall cry.
And every stone shall cry
for gifts of love abused;
God’s blood upon the spearhead,
God’s blood again refused.

4. But now, as at the ending,
the low is lifted high;
the stars shall bend their voices,
and every stone shall cry.
And every stone shall cry
in praises of the child
by whose descent among us
the worlds are reconciled.
~Richard Wilbur

 

Feeling heavy, dull and dumb,
I could be convinced
I’m no more than a simple rock
among a multitude of rocks~
inconsequential and immobile,
trod upon and paved over,
forgettable and forgotten.

I could believe
there exists no pulse
in my stony heart.

I could believe
I am incapable of love
if I turn away
from a God descending to walk
on the same humble ground where I lie.

Yet even the low are lifted high by His descent–
every stone,
even the dumb and lifeless,
shall cry out in community with Him,
even the silent will find a voice to praise.

Even my own voice,
meager and anemic,
shall be heard.

Even a barn can harbor heaven,
straw a bed of spun gold,
a stall becomes a shrine.

I am no longer forgotten.
In fact, never forgotten.
So hard to reconcile,
if the stones and barn and stalls
have known all along,
so should I.

 

3 thoughts on “Listening to Lent — Every Stone Shall Cry

  1. Emily,

    Today’s post is most appropriate for Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week for Christians.

    Wilbur’s poem beautifully traces our salvation history from Jesus’ birth in a barn to the Easter (Paschal) Triduum that we will celebrate this week — his reconciling, redeeming death cruelly nailed to a cross, followed by His glorious Resurrection three days later.

    Your plaintive comments, especially referencing stones and rocks, touched me greatly in its humble acknowledgement of our human condition.

    I wanted to carry the metaphorical use of rocks and stones a bit further for my own interest and found a few Scripture references that I found pertinent:

    Psalm 18: 2
    Isaiah 51: 1
    Daniel 2: 44-45
    Matthew 16: 18 (perhaps the most familiar to us)
    1 Peter 2: 4-5

    Thank you, Emily.

    Like

  2. Thank you for your calm contemplative prose. Although I live in a large metropolis, your words brings me back to childhood when life was simpler and more in touch with nature and creation. We need the lenten season to remind us of what is important.

    Like

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