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Tuesday, April 07, 2009

The Boy That Dreamed For Me

I watched a boy walking dreamingly in the rain yesterday, and my thoughts were drawn to the boyhood of the Crucified One.

The Boy That Dreamed For Me

He came,
came into this dark and dreamless world.
He came,
and, coming, grew to be a boy,
a boy among boys to play and learn,
though He is Lord of all.

He came,
and as a boy He learned and dreamed,
dreamed perhaps of things that He had made,
and things that he would bring to be,
and perhaps He dreamed of eternity.

He came.
He dreamed,
for boys are always filled with dreams,
and dreams give life to boyish play,
and teach the boyish mind to learn,
to grow in wisdom as the body grows,
to learn to be what every boy is called to be:
a man.

He came.
He dreamed.
He left behind the power that is His by right,
and grew, and dreamed, and grew and dreamed,
and did He dream perhaps of nails?
of blood and pain and death and death's dark grave?
of jeers of soldiers and of demons deep in Hell?
and did He dream of my deep sin?
did He see my face and know the price he'd pay for me?

He came.
He dreamed,
and, dreaming, maybe came to know,
as a boy who would become a man,
the things that He as God had known,
and in His boyish dreaming maybe pierced the veil,
and knew,
and saw what boys should never need to see,
and stretched His hands to do His Father's work,

and came,
and dreamed, that everlasting holy Boy,
and dreamed a death He died for me.

------------------------------------------------ed pacht

2 comments:

  1. Brilliant Ed, simply brilliant.

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  2. Thank you Ed for this poem. It touches on the heart (and this reader's heart) of our Lord's lonely salvific mission. And it touched my heart.

    I am sending along this Easter hymn (below) that I composed this past week. If you care to post this with my above comments, then do, but it is not necessary. I'm only sharing it with you as a response to your poem. Holy week focuses the mind and heart on the "heart" of the gospel. This was in part inspired by Phil. 2: 5-11.

    Jack

    Morning Light: an Easter hymn

    In the morning light
    Radiance of his face
    There in glory bright
    His shadow I can trace

    I bow down on bended knee
    I bow down, bow down before him

    He, my filthy rags
    Turned to garments white
    Thus my heart he freed
    From the soul’s dark night

    I bow down on bended knee
    I bow down, bow down before him

    Middle Refrain:
    Emptied himself, became a man
    Humbly served, poured out in love
    On the cross, he bore our sin
    His name now far above all

    When the evening comes
    And the night draws near
    Through his word he speaks
    Truth and grace I hear

    I bow down on bended knee
    I bow down, bow down before him
    2009 - Jack Miller

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