February 25, 2024
On this second Sunday of Lent, I turn once again from meditating on a daily quotation to rest in the quiet of Sabbath with this poem.
Dawn Prayer
Let my prayer be the geese
whose honking rises
in raucous praise;
let it be the black-capped chickadee,
chitting in the bare limbs of the hickory,
the pin-points of light sprinkled
across the lake’s placid face
where fog rises like incense
around two fishermen, silent, somber
awaiting a gift from the depths
of the slow-awakening waters.
Let my prayer be my partner
settling himself with a holy sigh
on the porch chair near me,
the scent of his coffee a sacred aroma.
Let me say “yes” to the gray-striped tabby
curled in a glow of sun spot, the rise
and fall of his furred side
as rhythmic as chant.
Let my prayer be each tawny-tinged leaf
that releases itself
to settle on fallow ground
and let it be the waft of smoke
from a neighbor’s fire that drifts
like angels’ wings
through the screened windows.
Let my prayer arise
like this very silence
and be acceptable:
a wordless worship.
(c) Rosemary McMahan
Photo credit: Rosemary McMahan

Lovely. 🌻
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Your restful poem paints an observant picture with words. It begged to be read again. Peaceful.
Debora
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My Sabbath prayer was lifted by eagles tumbling in a mating dance and hawks in rapt attention on bare branches, noticing the warm winds expanding the open water, and the swans in their serene, almost there movement on that open water. And it is good.
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I wish I lived near the water. ♥
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