Archive for Poetry

advent

 

Imagine perfection and He is there

 

It has been a blessed Advent season for me as I have been reminded again and again about the wonder of Christ’s arrival on earth. What has been even more exciting is to ponder His second coming. What a gift God has given us–the ability to imagine what it will look like and feel like when He returns and establishes His eternal Kingdom. To be able to go to that place and think of all the wondrous possibilities is truly a deep source of hope and comfort. He has not abandoned us. He will deliver us from evil. We will not always hurt and long and suffer.

He is coming again.

 

Maranatha…..Our Lord come

 

 

 

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Black Like Me

I recently read the book Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin. He was a journalist, and in his book, he recounts his personal experiences that occurred in late 1959 when he took pills to darken his pigmentation so he would appear African-American. He did this in order to fully understand what it is like for African Americans who faced intense racism and segregation. After making the transformation from white to black, he traveled to various cities in the South, the strongholds of racist ideology, and lived as a black man, all the while being personally persecuted by whites because of his color, and also fellowshipping with blacks and learning more about their challenges in a country dominated by whites.

Not only did his experiences reveal to him just how hateful white people could be towards blacks, but it also revealed to himself that he too had racism within him. Obviously, for a white man to undertake an endeavor such as he did, he was compassionate and concerned about blacks in America, but when he first saw himself in the mirror as a black man, he didn’t like the man that he saw. For him, this revealed that although he was willing and wanting to live integrated with Blacks, that underneath all his inclinations towards justice, he did posess the belief that, in and of themselves, whites were simply superior to Blacks. Griffin was disgusted by this racism he found in himself, but at least now able to confront it and combat it with truth.

After Griffin told his story and had many TV and newspaper interviews, he was treated with much hatred by some white racists. What’s interesting is how his experience as a black man continued to be relevant in the Civil Rights Movement. White leaders looking for social reform would often call on him so he could relay to them the black perspective on social and political matters. He found that he could speak truth about the racism and injustices to these white people, but if it were a black man saying the same things the whites would not have allowed themselves to hear or receive what was being communicated. For this reason, he played a pivotal role in the Civil Rights Movement: the black people trusted him because of what he had done, and the white people trusted him because he was white. Therefore, he was a bridge in a time before whites were ready to sit down together with blacks and talk out the issues.

I highly recommend this book. It challenges its reader to examine their own prejudices and stereotypes. In addition, as a white reader, I felt like it really helped me to understand some of the challenges that African- Americans have faced and continue to face in this country.

The title, Black Like Me, comes from a poem written by the famous African-American poet, Langston Hughes. The poem is titled “Dream Variation.” (Read the poem)

I’ll end with a quote from Griffin’s book. Soon after his transformation into a black man, he “learned within a very few hours that no one was judging me by my qualities as a human individual and everyone was judging me by my pigment. As soon as white men or women saw me, they automatically assumed I possessed a whole set of false characteristics (false not only to me but to all black men). They could not see me or any other black man as a human individual because they buried us under the garbage of their stereotyped view of us.”

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Poetry and the sky

Today the 10th graders and I began our poetry unit. I feel blessed to be able to teach about poetry and lead discussions that delve into the complex depth that poems contain. Poetry is extremely significant in my life as it is the way that I first came to believe in a Creator. I wrote a poem in college for a poetry class that left me with a revelation that we have been given this life by a Giver. It is called “sky”, and this online journal is named after it! The web address has the word “cielo” in it, which means both sky and heaven in Italian and Spanish. Since college, I have written many many poems, mostly about God and my incredible journey with him.

Here are some quotes that I found this week that resonated in my heart. Enjoy!

“Poetry is the music of the soul, and, above all, of great and feeling souls.” -Voltaire, French philosopher and writer

“Writing a poem is discovering.” -Robert Frost, American poet (1874-1963)

“Poetry is finer and more philosophical than history; for poetry expresses the universal, and history only the particular.” -Aristotle, Greek philosopher, scientist, and physician

“Painting is poetry that is seen rather than felt, and poetry is painting that is felt rather than seen.” -Leonardo da Vinci, Italian painter, architect, and engineer

“Poetry is thoughts that breathe, and words that burn.” -Thomas Gray, English poet (1716-1771)

“A poem begins as a lump in the throat, a sense of wrong, a homesickness, a lovesickness.” -Robert Frost

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