Sunday, April 20, 2014

Christ the Gardener


Christ as a Gardener 
by Andrew Hudgins

The boxwoods planted in the park spelled LIVE.
I never noticed it until they died.
Before, the entwined green had smudged the word
unreadable. And when they take their own advice
again—come spring, come Easter—no one will know
a word is buried in the leaves. I love the way
that Mary thought her resurrected Lord
a gardener. It wasn’t just the broad-brimmed hat
and muddy robe that fooled her: he was that changed.
He looks across the unturned field, the riot
of unscathed grass, the smattering of wildflowers.
Before he can stop himself, he’s on his knees.
He roots up stubborn weeds, pinches the suckers,
deciding order here—what lives, what dies,
and how. But it goes deeper even than that. 
His hands burn and his bare feet smolder. He longs
to lie down inside the long, dew-moist furrows
and press his pierced side and his broken forehead
into the dirt. But he’s already done it—
passed through one death and out the other side.
He laughs. He kicks his bright spade in the earth
and turns it over. Spring flashes by, then harvest.
Beneath his feet, seeds dance into the air.
They rise, and he, not noticing, ascends
on midair steppingstones of dandelion,
of milkweed, thistle, cattail, and goldenrod.



1 comment:

  1. From Julian of Norwich,Ch 51
    "I watched,
    wondering what kind of work it might be
    that the servant would do.

    Then I understood that he [Christ] would do the greatest work and hardest
    toil that is — he would be a gardener;
    digging and ditching,
    straining and sweating,
    and turning over the earth,
    and seeking the depths,
    and watering the plants on time.
    And in this he would continue his labor
    and make sweet streams to run,
    and noble and plenteous fruits to spring, which he would bring before the lord and serve him therewith to his delight.

    Fr. John-Julian, OJN

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.