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Holy Week: Prayer That Pierces

Holy Week: Prayer That Pierces

Update: 2025-04-14
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Now, in Passiontide, Christ becomes all the more visibly, our companion. We walk with him and see him face and overcome our own worst fears, we see him take on, in us and for us, the pain the frailty, the fear the failure, and the death itself that haunt and shadow our life. We stay with him through his Good Friday as he stays with us through ours, so that when Easter dawns we also share with him, and he bestows abundantly on us, the new life and light which death can never overcome and swallow for it, indeed has overcome and swallowed up death. In this section we will pay particular attention to Gethsemane and the agony in the garden, through a sequence of four linked poems, starting with Herbert’s poem ‘The Agony’, and moving then to Rowan Williams’ poem ‘Gethsemane’ which has the same setting and draws on Herbert’s poem. This is followed by two Hopkins’ poems that also seem to be in close contact with the Rowan Williams poem. All four poems turn on the press and pressure, of Gethsemane understood as an oil press, releasing God’s mercy into the world.


Resuming our pilgrimage together through Lent, and using my book The Word in the Wilderness, I am once again posting recordings of my reading all this week’s poems, together with the texts of the poems themselves.


You can hear me read the poem by clicking on the title.


But we begin, on Sunday with Edwin Muir’s beautiful poem, The Incarnate One.


The windless northern surge, the sea-gull’s scream,


And Calvin’s kirk crowning the barren brae.


I think of Giotto the Tuscan shepherd’s dream,


Christ, man and creature in their inner day.


How could our race betray


The Image, and the Incarnate One unmake


Who chose this form and fashion for our sake?


 


The Word made flesh here is made word again


A word made word in flourish and arrogant crook.


See there King Calvin with his iron pen,


And God three angry letters in a book,


And there the logical hook


On which the Mystery is impaled and bent


Into an ideological argument.


 


There’s better gospel in man’s natural tongue,


And truer sight was theirs outside the Law


Who saw the far side of the Cross among


The archaic peoples in their ancient awe,


In ignorant wonder saw


The wooden cross-tree on the bare hillside,


Not knowing that there a God suffered and died.


 


The fleshless word, growing, will bring us down,


Pagan and Christian man alike will fall,


The auguries say, the white and black and brown,


The merry and the sad, theorist, lover, all


Invisibly will fall:


Abstract calamity, save for those who can


Build their cold empire on the abstract man.


 


A soft breeze stirs and all my thoughts are blown


Far out to sea and lost. Yet I know well


The bloodless word will battle for its own


Invisibly in brain and nerve and cell.


The generations tell


Their personal tale: the One has far to go


Past the mirages and the murdering snow.


 


MONDAY


Golgotha   John Heath-Stubbs


In the middle of the world, in the centre


Of the polluted heart of man, a midden;


A stake stemmed in the rubbish


 


From lipless jaws, Adam’s skull


Gasped up through the garbage:


‘I lie in the discarded dross of history,


Ground down again to the red dust,


The obliterated image. Create me.’


From lips cracked with thirst, the voice


That sounded once over the billows of chaos


When the royal banners advanced,


replied through the smother of dark:


‘All is accomplished, all is made new, and look-


All things, once more, are good.’


Then, with a loud cry, exhaled His spirit.


 


TUESDAY


The Agony   George Herbert


Philosophers have measur’d mountains,


Fathom’d the depths of seas, of states and kings;


Walk’d with a staff to heav’n and traced fountains:


But there are two vast, spacious thins,


The which to measure it doth more behove;


Yet few there are that sound them, ‒ Sin and Love.


 


Who would know Sin, let him repair


Unto Mount Olivet; there shall he see


A Man so wrung with pains, that all His hair,


His skin, His garments bloody be.


Sin is that press and vice, which forceth pain


To hunt his cruel food through ev’ry vein.


 


Who knows not Love, let him assay


And taste that juice which, on the cross, a pike


Did set again abroach; then let him say


If ever he did taste the like,


Love is that liquor sweet and most divine,


Which my God feels as blood, but I as wine.


 


WEDNESDAY


Gethsemane   Rowan Williams


Who said that trees grow easily

compared with us? What if the bright

bare load that pushes down on them

insisted that they spread and bowed

and pleated back on themselves and cracked

and hunched? Light dropping like a palm

levelling the ground, backwards and forwards?


Across the valley are the other witnesses

of two millennia, the broad stones

packed by the hand of God, bristling

with little messages to fill the cracks.

As the light falls and flattens what grows

on these hills, the fault lines dart and spread,

there is room to say something, quick and tight.

Into the trees’ clefts, then, do we push

our folded words, thick as thumbs?

somewhere inside the ancient bark, a voice

has been before us, pushed the densest word

of all, abba, and left it to be collected by

w

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Holy Week: Prayer That Pierces

Holy Week: Prayer That Pierces

Malcolm Guite