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Page 35
“A Prayer at the Edges of Morning”
Julia Watkins
Davidson, North Carolina
We have ridden waves of spectacular promise,
spreading our cloaks,
singing your praise,
shouting for salvation.
We have assimilated along paths that didn’t push back,
denying any acquaintance,
calling for crucifixion,
gawking at death.
Mesmerized by progress projected against a backdrop
of desperate longing and all we might have gained,
we fell straight in step
with what we wanted
the movement to be.
Now it is dark,
the edges of morning
barely breaking
against a horizon
punctuated by a
heavy tomb.
Our ears still ringing with the viral din
of sanctuaries
as power brokers,
as social clubs,
as status symbols,
we seek the stillness
of a garden before dawn,
where a woman’s voice,
once barely distinguishable
in the crowd,
now echoes alone
with confusion and grief,
wonder and hope.
Page 36
Journal for Preachers
So as the sun begins its westward arc, meet us in the cool clearing of all we have lost and all we fear we will, and grant us the courage to linger with what we cannot fathom, no matter how we try,
that when love intercepts us at the graveside and looks us straight in the eye, we would recognize and remember how clear the calling by name, how urgent the living anew.
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