And I will wait upon the LORD, that hideth his face from the house of Jacob, and I will look for him. Isaiah 8:17


If you are looking for messages about the Europe Area Humanitarian Mission, go to http://stayinginfrankfurt.blogspot.de/

If you are looking for Old Testament Videos, go to
http://salemzion.org/new/index.php/resources/adult-institute-old-testament/



Wednesday, March 29, 2023

Easter Poetry and last class of the semester





















Art by Walter Rane 

Hi: just writing to say that today is the final Salem Stake Institute class for the semester: we'll start up again in the fall with the general epistles and the Book of Revelation.


I may be posting some powerpoints with audio between now and then: subscribe to my YouTube channel (Rebecca Holt Stay Youtube) to get automatic notifications.  That is also where you can find hundreds of past classes in video or audio formats.

Each day for the next week, I will be sending out emails of Easter poetry; these will also be posted to Facebook.
If you want to receive these by email, please let me know and I will add you to that list.


Today's poem is 
John 1:14

 by Jorge Luis Borges

 

This page will be no less a riddle

than those of My holy books

or those others repeated

by ignorant mouths

believing them the handiwork of a man,

not the Spirit’s dark mirrors.

I who am the Was, the Is, and the Is To Come

again condescend to the written word,

which is time in succession and no more than an emblem.

 

Who plays with a child plays with something

near and mysterious;

wanting once to play with My children,

I stood among them with awe and tenderness.

I was born of a womb

by an act of magic.

I lived under a spell, imprisoned in a body,

in the humbleness of a soul.

I knew memory,

that coin that’s never twice the same.

I knew hope and fear,

those twin faces of the uncertain future.

I knew wakefulness, sleep, dreams,

ignorance, the flesh,

reason’s roundabout labyrinths,

the friendship of men,

the blind devotion of dogs.

I was loved, understood, praised, and hung from a cross.

I drank My cup to the dregs.

My eyes saw what they had never seen—

night and its many stars.

I knew things smooth and gritty, uneven and rough,

the taste of honey and apple,

water in the throat of thirst,

the weight of metal in the hand,

the human voice, the sound of footsteps on the grass,

the smell of rain in Galilee,

the cry of birds on high.

I knew bitterness as well.

I have entrusted the writing of these words to a common man;

they will never be what I want to say

but only their shadow.

These signs are dropped from My eternity.

Let someone else write the poem, not he who is now its scribe.

Tomorrow I shall be a great tree in Asia,

or a tiger among tigers

preaching My law to the tiger’s woods.

Sometimes homesick, I think back

on the smell of that carpenter’s shop.

 

Translated from the Spanish by Norman Thomas di Giovanni

 

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