Lenten Promise

                                                        by Chris Giroux   

In my more optimistic moods,

I like to think

Hester Prynne could find some small comforts

in Ash Wednesday,

a day when a choosing (if not chosen) people,

minister and ministered,

the sinned against and sinning,

elect to wear that black smudge of a cross,

a communal mark of Cain,

a signal of exile and isolation

carrying the potential of

humility,

sacrifice,

atonement,

at-one-ment.

 

For on this day,

as the priest raises besmirched thumb to forehead,

mourners

instinctively pause,

bow,

glance earthward,

to avoid stray specks of dust

and the parched memories

of the huzzahs and hosannas, open palms, and swaying bodies

of a passion week

some three-quarters of a year prior.

 

Yet,

the more receptive

glean that these potential planks in the eye,

these splinters in the soul,

these charred remainders,

exist in a world where

earthly pressures transform carbon,

perpetual drippings render stalactite palaces,

and the merest of freshwater irritants,

in a darkened sea of night swimmers and egg-white oysters,

yield Pearls.

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