Tuesday, December 23, 2025

A Bright New Dawn

Morning   noon and night  even on the demanded day

of rest

                 the wanderers arrive   exhausted and afraid

the soldiers see nothing  but pleasure in spitting fear

into their eyes

                            We sing the glory of this beaten down

place

          as if the hero who  was prophesized  

still rules our paths with care

                                                     But only

the most willfully blind can sing those songs

when the invaders claim our heartbeats 

as the rhythm with which to dance their control


Count them

                       each arrival must be captured

in the ledger from which our sustenance 

is calculated

                        So when he stood here

asking for shelter before she fell into

the road   covered with shame   trembling

to force our gaze away from her swollen

womb

               I stopped   for just long enough

to exhale my well-adapted mindless trance

and took them to the stable


ii.

We are the inheritors of dust

the cracked  dried branches of a tree

that has forgotten how to bear fruit

                                                          We

do not sing the promises shouted

so long ago

                          We are here only to discard

every thought of a bright new dawn


She could be heard everywhere

groaning out something more than struggle


It was not 

                   until the young men

crowded into the door   demanding

to see  a child

                         that I heard

how odd my breath was sounding


We went in

                    the young ones pushing

past me

              more hungry than the mules

and oxen in the stable

                                    falling against

each other

                 staring   staring  until frozen

with their long- unrequited hunger


They let their eyes  feast upon

the child

               resting in the hay

13 comments:

  1. Felt this poem as much as read it. A tenderness here that refuses to look away from cruelty or fear, and that honesty moved me deeply. The moment of stopping, of breaking the trance and choosing a small, human act of mercy, felt achingly real. Throughout it all, sensing the universal Christ everywhere in creation, the human incarnation of God expanding the gift of divine love beyond boundaries and expectation. The ending unsettled and reverent at once, holding hunger, vulnerability, and fragile hope together. Grateful for a poem that sees so clearly and invites us to see and love more fully.

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  2. This poem belies a sense of expectation of a witness and the dread fear of the betrayal of that witness.

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  3. Thanks Joseph. Thought provoking as I always expect.

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  4. Joseph,
    So warm and reassuring to read this in a time when “We sing the glory of this beaten down
    place.”
    Thank you.

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  5. What struck me most was the description of hunger. The hunger of the world for true unity and peace. Thank you for this Christmas poem. Joy to the World!

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  6. This poem brings forth the humble humanity of the experience of the events. Thank you for sharing.

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  7. Beautiful and powerful. Better with each reading.

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  8. Breathtakingly beautiful! Merry Christmas to one of God's faithful servants.

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  9. Thanks for the experience of reading and feeling this Christmas expression! So much more nourishing than the shouts and murmurs of Yule that surround and envelope me and my flailing spirit. There may be an answer here to my question about just how is my God, my YHWH, sustaining me? In everything? While (so the Sage says) God protects me from nothing.

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  10. Thank you again for healing and challenging us. Merry Christmas! The stable may look different but the pregnant mother has still arrived.

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  11. My dearest Joseph,

    Have been letting this poem sink in since Christmas night when we finished opening presents with 98-year-old Audrey and her dementia and 78-year-old Michael with his special learning needs. They are so lucky to be loved and we to be loved by them with no ledgers of recognition from terrifying ICE eyes or from bombs falling over Nigeria.

    This poem goes so far backwards, back to the ledgers in the holds of the ships, in the offices of cotton plantations, to the ledger of constitutionally denied independence, and to all the false reconstructions since Martin.

    It looks forward to young ones, who have somehow awakened from the nightmare of assimilations to hear the old prophesies, to dance in the circle of kinship, after being able to hear the groaning out something more than struggle everywhere.

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  12. Thanks always for sharing your creative writing! Enjoyed reading the poem in the quiet of the night, while savoring every magical moment of the Christmas season.

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  13. Thank you, Fr. Joseph for the poem. I hope you are doing well. Happy New Year!

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