"Festival," by Brian Kershisnik |
I was reading this poem by Rilke called “Christ and the Children”
(“And like the flowers that shoot up galore / on early days in spring, / the
children flock to him, / while adults rarely mention his name. / For children
have been friends with him for long / and they hurry to the gate of his embrace.
/ A pale one says, ‘You surely are the grace / for which my mother daily lifts
her hands.’”) and then I looked up to see my children playing with the neighbor
children in a sprinkler—their eyes were all bright and shining and good, and I saw Christ in the children. I saw,
too, the other day while I was driving in my car a young girl—maybe ten years
old—summer-sunbrowned and riding her bicycle, making wild gestures with her
hands and sort of swinging her hair back and forth to make her friend behind
her laugh on her bicycle. I wished her future husband could see that
youthfulness, that exuberance. He will know her as a lovely young woman, but
not as a girl. I feel privileged to know my daughter as a girl.
But here’s the thing, I was thinking the other day of this
time a friend of mine called me to tell me that his daughter had been raped. I
went over to his house, and he cried into my arms, and said he had a fifty cent
solution, he had a fifty cent solution, and he shook in rage and grief, and I
laid my hands on his head to give him a blessing. What do you say at such a
time? Why do daughters get raped? Why do friends shake in my arms? How does
such darkness exist in a world that has shown itself to me so often in so much
splendor? How does one offer any real comfort, any real hope when you can’t fix
it, can’t take it back, can’t change the world? Well, God pours out love, which
is not always the same thing as healing. But it’s something, and it’s real.
My wife is downstairs right now, playing gently on the
piano: Pachelbel’s Canon. A song she learned because I love it and she loves
me. And I am reminded that one day the air will begin to shimmer and shake and
hum with a music that is not of this world. And a light will come from the
east, growing in intensity and brightness, causing the air to shake, to
undulate and roll, to swell and to sing. Causing the grass to reach and to sing
and the trees to shiver with music. And I will feel myself becoming lighter,
sorrow and heaviness melting away like snow in spring, will feel the joy I have
always known myself capable of, will look around to see others, to find
ourselves soaring through the air. To meet the Lord in the clouds, the
scripture says. A new song. We will come singing a new song. A song beyond
words but created with human voices. And the voices of others, of angels and
gods. I will know the words or the non-words, the motions of the mouth and the movement
of lungs even though I have never heard it, yet I know I have heard it. I was born
from this song, brought forth from this light. And the Lord will wipe away all
tears from off all eyes. There will be no more sorrow and no more death. I will
know as I am known. I will rise. The earth will become new. All things will be
new. All things. All things.