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Showing posts with label religions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religions. Show all posts

Sunday, April 27, 2025

A FEW THOUGHTS AFTER THE PASSING OF POPE FRANCIS

by Terri Kirby Erickson




My maternal grandmother, widowed for years, 
was a small, quiet woman who drank a cup 
of Sanka in the late afternoons and took naps. 
I cannot picture her feeling comfortable in her
parents’ primitive Baptist church what with all 
the shouting and dire warnings of damnation.
She rebelled against it at some point, became
a Presbyterian whose members know how to sit
silently in their pews and listen to the preacher 
talk about estate planning and heavenly rewards. 
My mother, also a Presbyterian, and my father, 
a Lutheran, settled on a Methodist compromise. 
But after my brother died, Mom said her prayers 
to Mother Mary more than God, often holding 
one of the many rosaries Catholic charities sent 
her in return for contributions. Not a Catholic, 
she didn’t know what to do with them, but liked 
the feel of the beads in her hands, the weight 
of the cross. I have my mother’s rosaries now 
and some of my own, one of which was blessed 
by the pope. His image is everywhere since his 
death, front and center on the news. But the clip 
that moved me was of Pope Francis and a boy 
who wanted to ask him a question yet was too
afraid to speak. Then the pope said whisper it 
into my ear, his expression so tender, so full of 
goodness and mercy, it unclenched a fist in my 
chest that I did not know was there. This must 
be how my grandmother felt when hell was no 
longer mentioned, and why my mother prayed 
to Mary, who knew the pain of losing a son.




Terri Kirby Erickson is the author of seven full-length collections of poetry, including Night Talks: New & Selected Poems (Press 53), which was a finalist for (general) poetry in the International Book Awards and the Best Book Awards. Her work has appeared in a wide variety of literary journals, anthologies, magazines, and newspapers, including “American Life in Poetry,” Asheville Poetry Review, Atlanta Review, JAMA, ONE ART, Poetry Foundation, Rattle, The SUN, The Writer’s Almanac, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Verse Daily, and many more. Among her numerous awards are the Joy Harjo Poetry Prize, Nautilus Silver Book Award, Tennessee Williams Poetry Prize, and the Annals of Internal Medicine Poetry Prize. She lives in North Carolina.

Friday, July 01, 2022

FOOTBALL GODS ABOUND

by Gary Lark


The Supreme Court said Monday that a Washington state school district violated the First Amendment rights of a high school football coach when he lost his job after praying at the 50-yard line after games. "The Constitution and the best of our traditions counsel mutual respect and tolerance, not censorship and suppression, for religious and nonreligious views alike," Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote in the majority opinion.


After the thunder and dash
we have the coach
and his batch of Evangelicals
kneeling at the fifty yard line.

The Wiccan folks are on one twenty
and Muslims on the other.

Down by the east goalposts
there's an Indigenous circle
seeking guidance with peyote.

Over to the west Jains
are trying to avoid the ants.

Sikhs and Jews are having a debate
about the shape of the field.

Eleven Buddhists are chanting
on the east thirty,
Hindus claim the west.

On the track three Mothers
Against Drunk Driving
have given up and are passing a bottle.

The Eckankar crowd are setting up
near the concession stand.

The Crips and the Bloods
are sharing a joint with Spinoza
in the bleachers.

There's a street preacher
practicing his quick draw
when the lights go out.


Gary Lark’s most recent collections are Easter Creek (Main Street Rag), Daybreak on the Water (Flowstone Press), and Ordinary Gravity (Airlie Press). His work has appeared in Beloit Poetry Journal, Catamaran, Rattle, Sky Island, and others.

Thursday, June 16, 2022

GRUMPY OLD WHITE MEN

by Jeremy Szuder
Man Looking Down his Glasses is a drawing by CSA Images at Fine Art America


The grumpy old white men 
walk the avenues of this village
at nine in the morning.

I’m washing my children’s clothes,
their ballet tights and 
their Taekwondo robes.

I push past the dinosaur days
of primal, guttural instincts and
oversized pickup trucks,

I push past leering elder stares
at beautiful black women who
stand in line just ahead of me

in our stodgy old banks, cashing
checks and filling up on rolls
of quarters.

I replace stickers that I’ve stuck,
on signposts and mailboxes,
removed because the old time 

religions didn't like my artwork.
The riptide of hatred is lost
as I push hard against the attempt

at stirring unforgiving waters.
And I look at my reflection in
the windows of these shops,

and I’m the same pigment as
these gravediggers are—
these Polo shirts and these mad,

sad, unfaithful souls.

These grumpy old fools, scratching
at everyone else's eyes instead
of just conveniently staying home

with their curtains drawn and
their fearful guns cocked and 
loaded.


Jeremy Szuder (he/him) lives in a tiny apartment with his wife, two children and two cats. He works in the evenings in a very busy restaurant, standing behind a stove, a grill, fryers and heating lamps, happily listening to hours of hand selected music and conjuring ideas for new art and poetry in his head. When his working day ends and he enters his home in the wee hours, he likes to sit down with a glass of wine and record all the various words and images that bear fruit within his mind. Jeremy Szuder only sets the cage doors free when the work begins to pile up too high. In this life, Szuder makes no illusions of being a professional artist in any way, shape, or form.

Wednesday, September 16, 2020

WESTERN BLUEBIRDS, AMERICAN ROBINS

at the Peace & Justice 2020 (virtual) Fair (Vancouver, U.S.A.)


by Gwendolyn Morgan



Gwendolyn Morgan reads her poem in this video.



this is how it begins
first Light: cheerio song of Robins
loops of blue sky between stars
Eagle whistles before anyone wakes up
prayers in Arabic, Spanish, Hebrew
Chuukese, Cambodian, Russian, Swahili
100 languages spoken here as
the alphabet arcs toward aleph
alleluia of red-breasted Robins
golden dome of Sikh temple
Celtic Cross of Catholic, Presbyterian & Unity Church
Methodist or Lutheran hymns, so many Christians
the Bahá'í and UUs have every symbol represented
even the Pagans are putting peanut butter & raspberry jam
on whole wheat toast before you
who is putting honey on sopapillas, honeycrisp apples,
drinking Masala chai or sweet tea?
who has lost their homes due to fires?
looking at privilege:  who was evicted this week?
who was arrested?
Break it down like the U.S. census
the unmarked car outside the housing complex
“No solicitors” sign outside the apartment door
“I’m not soliciting” the ICE agent says
flashes a gold star or badge with implicit bias
scan the skin color, then license plate
drinking an Americano while they wait for you
Wait! this isn’t justice
the peace & justice fair is on Saturday every year
Sabbath day of rest for everyone
who goes to a synagogue or is Seventh Day
Rainbow Flags flying next to Black Lives Matter
upside down Americana
the Western Bluebirds gather at the river
singing their own prayers, plain song
1000 languages, songs of other species, intersectionality
the watershed of white fragility, white supremacy
unspoken privilege of having more than enough
when the child in front of you hasn’t had breakfast
no money in the purse for groceries, no savings account
no internet access, maybe a chrome book from school
with a sticker of a white llama on it
this child is hungry for more than justice
losing their breath for peace
this is how it begins.


Gwendolyn Morgan is a Pacific Northwest poet and artist who serves in interfaith Spiritual Care in a medical center in the midst of COVID19.  The Clark County Poet Laureate 2018-2020 in Washington State, her third book of poetry Before the Sun Rises is a Nautilus Silver Winner in Poetry. Gwendolyn and her spouse Judy A. Rose focused on poetry and music during a Winter 2020 Centrum Artist Residency. As a multiracial family in a multispecies watershed, they are committed to equity work and inclusion for all.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

UNSEASONABLE CLIMATE CHANGE

Poem by Charles Frederickson
Graphic by Saknarin Chinayote



Imploding lonesome planet soiled earthlings
Perverse intolerant misunderstandings amongst Christians
Jews Muslims Buddhists Hindus Sikhs
Praying to whatever god listens

12 days of Christmas solemn
Ramadan 28 Kwanzaa lasting 7
Hanukkah Menorah aglow 8 eventides
Overstuffed feasts celebratory tummy aches

Kwanzaa Swahili meaning harvest bounty
7 guiding Nguzo Saba principles
Umoja (unity) Ujima (responsibility) Imani
(faith) Kuumba (creativity) unmitigated joy

Hanukkah from Hebrew connoting dedication
Honors victorious revolt entering Jerusalem
Holy temple sanctified eternal flame
Oil lamp kindling black light

Ramadan most intensely worshipful time
Profoundly serious compassion giving charity
More about dependence than abstinence
Fasting from sunrise to sunset

O Tannenbaum emerald forest blighted
How lovely were your branches
Hoping faith recycled comfort bring
Resilient strength throughout New Year


 No Holds Bard Dr. Charles Frederickson and Mr. Saknarin Chinayote proudly present YouTube mini-movies @ YouTube – CharlesThai1 .