As We See Scott Cairns
January 1, 2003
Suppose the Holy One Whose Face We Seek
is not so much invisible as we
are ill equipped to apprehend his grave
proximity. Suppose our fixed attention
serves mostly to make evident the gap
dividing what is seen and what is here.
The Book there on the stand proves arduous
to open, entombed as it is in layers
of accretion, layers of gloss applied
to varied purposes, hardly any of them
laudable, so many, guarded ploys
to keep the terms quite still, predictable.
Which is why I'm drawn-to why I love-the way
the rabbis teach. I love the way they read-
opening The Book with reverence for what
they've found before, joy for what lies waiting.
I love the Word's ability to rise again
from chronic, homiletic burial.
Say the One is not so hidden as we
are kept by our own conjuncture blinking,
puzzled, leaning in without result. Let's say
the meek, the poor, the merciful all
suspect His hand despite the evidence.
Intent on what they touch, they see Him now.
Scott Cairns is Re:generation's contributing editor for poetry. "As We See" is reprinted from Philokalia: New and Selected Poems by permission of Zoo Press and the author.
Like the preview? To read this complete article and 20,006 more in the archive—JOIN NOW!
Easily find high-quality, well-researched materials that provide a Christian perspective on topics ranging from headlines to history.
Start using this invaluable tool TODAY for preparing your Bible studies, presentations, class lectures, sermons, meetings, and more.
|
It's easy and quick to join:
Brought to You by Christianity Today Int'l |  |
|
|