i saw Jesus in him

i don't know his name
i've not seen him before or since
he arrived silently
backpack on his shoulders

tentative steps
looking around to see if
his presence would be allowed

he walked quietly
not tiptoeing but with no sound
he looked deeply 
seeming enchanted 
by stained glass windows

full circle
 around
then he arrived 
at the foot of the cross
he stood in silence

"Father, forgive them
for they know not
what they do."

he remained standing 
transfixed
as a poem began to be read
he sat for a moment
before he continued
exploring the part he had
not yet seen

he left on still silent feet
but paused again
at the foot of the cross
marked himself 
with the familiar sign
and continued on his way

some might have questioned
did he belong
but i know who i saw that day
a neighbour seeking
and i saw Jesus in him
A photo of a rough wooden cross set up on the dias in front of a wooden altar in an Anglican church. There is a trio of stained glass windows behind and organ pipes visible on either side.

Written on Good Friday 2023, during our time of meditation on the seven last words from the cross. I was tempted to take a photo, but even from the back, his coat was distinctive. Instead I wrote these words to ensure I would remember.

Photo credit: karencee (c) 2021

More Light than Darkness

once i knew everything
i needed to know
about the source of light and love

   
then i would have been
bewildered by those
who paused to celebrate
the summer solstice

today i sat in silence
with my face turned
toward the sun
and simply breathed
  
now i have more questions
than answers
but this i know for certain


more hope than doubt
more love than fear
more trust than cynicism
more peace than hate
more acceptance than despair
more grace than judgment
more light than darkness
   
that is worth breathing in
that is worth celebrating
no matter how you
understand the source

Happy Solstice!

Originally written on the Summer Solstice, June 20, 2012 and published on the blog I had back then.

What Name Do You Call?

Clouds at sunset
once i called you Jesus
with that word, i could relate to you
safe, knowable
baby in a manager
willing sacrifice
Spirit seemed so far away
untouchable, distant
Father was the angry god
i could never hope to satisfy

one day i wished more for mystery
a god i could not contain
Spirit became the name i called
ever-present, intimately intertwined
yet other in every possible way
Jesus, still when comfort needed
but Father rarely spoken
afraid i’d disappoint

in wonder i remember
moment of discovery
the day i learned to call you Father
arms open, reaching out to embrace
holding me close in love
unashamed of how broken i felt
Father offering everything i lacked
three-in-one, i knew you then
knowable mystery accepting
me in love

those words now leave me tangled
web of hurt, anger, bitterness
i try to call your name
but my voice will not speak
those words i once used
my heart contracts
the walls close in
once familiar names
my life no longer knows you
the face i see reflected
lacks truth of who you are
of who i am in you
i need a new word
but who am i to name
the source of all creation

each day i sit in silence
whispering a single word
seeking, trying to find the one
that encompasses and draws us together
Ruah, Breath, i seek to draw you in
Creator, most easily recognized
your handiwork surrounds me
i sit with you in stillness
but still you feel unknown
i breathe
inhale, exhale
pause, repeat
in the space carved out
my heart feels a new name
so clear the word seems spoken in my ear

Beloved

i pause, my breath held close
Beloved, name and invitation
in one simple word
i cannot comprehend
you call me Beloved
at the core of my being
you invite me to intimacy
to be yours
to call you my own
Beloved you are all i have known
more than i can yet comprehend
reminder of the beauty
i have let slip away
lost in waves of anger and pain
Beloved offers comfort, understanding
growth to some thing more
Beloved demands no striving
offers rest and ease
encouragement to grow deeper
bolder, stronger
Beloved knows
I am enough
sunlight on the water

Written in September 2012 and previously published on blog I had then, several years after I’d walked away from church (but clearly not faith) and several years before I’d figured out I was queer.

Today, a conversation with a friend about the phrase he often uses in prayer “the God of so many names” made me of think it. Reading it again before sharing it with that friend reminded me of a truth I’d known but have allowed to get buried.

And yet … (Maundy Thursday 2017)

The altar stripped bare
each piece carefully and thoughtfully removed
layers peeled away
harsh, barren surfaces
and yet ...

The light dimmed
The sanctuary in near darkness
and yet ...

I cannot look away
I long to stand up
to walk out the door
to return to the life
I'd chosen away from
all of this
and yet ...

As my soul is stripped bare
tears of anger and bitterness
of regret and heartbreak
stream slowly down my cheeks
and yet ...

I cannot look away
I long to stay and never leave
this moment
and yet ...

I've never felt so broken
and yet so completely whole
so lost beyond hope
and yet so relentlessly found
so without a single word to speak
and yet so full of truth undeniable
a mainly black and white photo of the front of the sanctuary at St. John the Divine Anglican Church. 
There are three dark arched windows. There is some light illuminating a shrouded cross. All other furnishings have been removed from the altar below.
Photo credit: Karen C – Maundy Thursday at St. John the Divine Anglican Church

I wrote this in on Maundy Thursday in 2017 and first shared it on the blog I had on Maundy Thursday in 2018.

For my friend, when I don’t know what to pray

God I don't know what to pray
Let's be honest I'm out of practice
At anything more than saying 
Someone's name
Imagining them held in light
Surrounded by love
But maybe that's enough
You already know more 
Than my words can express

So rather than fussing over
My lack of words
I'll light a candle
And say the name of my friend
Over and over and over again
With tears in my eyes
For the hurt they are holding

Trusting you to bring them comfort
To wrap them in a blanket of love
     Held safe amidst the heaviness of loss
To protect their heart
     Yet stay soft enough to care
To make space for their grief
     While giving strength for the work ahead
To remind them they are not to blame
     For the results of senseless violence
To bring gentle light into the darkness
     When it threatens to overwhelm
To encourage them in their desire
     For making the world a better place
To help them know they are enough just as they are
     And what they do matters even if it feels like it didn't 

Excavating Faith

I need to try, I need to make an attempt
to put into words, to even come close to describing
how it feels, what it means, to be able to begin
to reclaim part of my journey set aside
left behind, because it felt no longer mine

it belonged to someone I no longer was
the good little baptist girl
both the one who only pretended belief hoping to belong
and the one who truly believed, who chose her path 
who followed a calling, who made that her life
how could it belong to me, the queer me, the one know I am now

so I did what I do best, compartmentalize it away
(forty years of practice, it is my default coping skill)
out of my story like it never was real
like my story of faith began 
the day I walked my queer self back into a church
drastically different from what I'd known
drawn by a longing I didn't understand, didn't want, and couldn't ignore

any other option hurt too much, too complicated
too confusing, too tied up in an understanding of faith 
that calls me heretic, unrepentant sinner, damned to hell
for learning to love who I was created to be, who I always was
for not being able to tick the required boxes of belief
for being unapologetically queer

problem is those parts of my journey have shaped me
they inform who I am, what I believe
they've left scars that make me hesitant to trust, to engage
some from bad theology, some from my conscious choice
to cut myself off from my history and put that part of my life
back into a closet

but then ... music and a way of being church that feels familiar 
brings unexpected tears, a longing for something I miss?
this church so different, not in form, but in practice
this place, this choir, this priest welcomes
all of you always - no hiding required 

then ... unpacking boxes moved more than once
paper and books and music from a lifetime long past 
much let go, it no longer serves, definitely doesn't spark joy
but at the piano not touched in years
too tied up with the life no longer mine
I wander through the song books
fingers touch keys stumbling at first but finding confidence

tears stream, voice breaks, fingers cease their motion
the same lyrics that spoke before speak more loudly now
God knew the truth of who I was when I had no conscious clue
the words that showed me truth then still show me truth now
that I was known and loved before I knew myself

my queer self hidden but there and known and loved
in the me pretending to believe
in the me following a calling to serve
in the me who thought that part of life gone, never to return
it's still mine but I hear the words differently now
it's easier to hear when you're not hiding

I explore more, give myself permission to connect
to try an expression of faith closer to what I knew before
it's terrifying, but there is being known, being seen for who I am
there is welcome and compassion and people who understand
I breathe more deeply than in the six years since I found my way back to faith
more fully than I have in the ten years since I wrote my way out of the closet the first time

Six years ago on a Saturday night Christmas Eve, I accidentally found my way home
Six years later on another Saturday night Christmas Eve, I found my way home again
on four separate paths
one for the part of me that was Pastor Karen to my kiddos now long grown to adulthood
one that feels like the home where I found my own faith the first time
one for the part of me that revels in worship contemporary and free
one that is home where my queer self found faith again

maybe I don't need those from earlier in my journey to accept who I am now
though some have and I am grateful for that grace
maybe I need to give myself permission to be all of who I am 
not only as queer me
but as queer me whose journey of faith looks like more than one single path

It’s taken me since Christmas Eve to put this into something that feels close to capturing the shift that’s been happening.

With much gratitude to those who have been pastors, guides, mentors and friends along the path in all of its parts. There are too many to name, but some, both recent and so very not recent, need special mention for their part in my faith journey over the years and especially in these last few months.

To Devona, to my Spring Garden family back in the day (John, Rick, Margaret and Blake), to Wilkie, to Gene, to Shannon and Brian, to my St. John’s home now (Alastair, Patrick, Gillian, Kevin, Bill, Ruth, Stephanie and John), to Daniel, to Matt and the Monday night crew.

Untitled – December 6, 2022

I remember
with crystal clarity
the moment I knew
not broken just
Queer

years of feeling
not enough
unknown, afraid
no matter how hard I tried
still somehow
not right, not who I should be

I'd found my way out
out of the world inside the closet
I didn't know I was living in

I know now I'm not
inherently broken
but years of broken
sinful humanity
years of so broken
Jesus had to die
to make me worthy of love
so broken ...

it leaves scars

scars I ignore
or try to forget
or pretend don't exist
until ...

someone speaks truth
about the brokenness of
theology that hates and fears

something shifts
just a tiny bit
but enough I can feel
enough I can breathe more fully

---------------------

With gratitude to the person who told me: “The broken ones are those who fear so much they hate. … I hope you continue to heal from being treated like you were broken by people who are broken; and finding peace and joy in being all that you are.”

Most of the time I know what the title is for something I’ve written, but not for this one. Maybe it has no name because I didn’t plan to write, but I also couldn’t ignore the need to put pen to paper and capture what felt like an almost imperceptible shift that mattered in ways I’m not sure I have words yet to express.

The Price of Hate

I wanted to do this
In my own time
To wait until I was ready
Until I had the answers
Rather than questions
I’m still asking myself

I wanted to do this
When I felt secure
To wait until I’d talked
With those I owe
Deep levels of trust
To share face to face
Or at least Skype to Skype

I wanted to do this
After I’d told my family
To wait until the perfect moment
Had revealed itself
And I was ready for
Every potential response

I wanted to do this
When I knew how to explain
Forty years of truth
Buried so deep
All I knew was brokenness

There is an awkwardness in
Maintaining silence
My safety net of procrastination
Wrapped tightly
Trying to contain the
Chaos of rediscovery

But something happened

Ten thousand children
Thrown away
And my silence feels like complicity
My safety net of waiting
Feels wrapped around my throat
Taking away my breath
Cutting off the words I ache to speak

There is no right time
I may never be ready
I may never be able to explain
There is only the moment now
And in this moment
My safety net must unravel
Else I lose the ability to speak

Heart broken

Ten thousand children
That’s how much some people hate
People who also claim belief in a god
Whose very scriptures teach
Love your neighbour as yourself
Care for orphans and widows
In their distress

Ten thousand children
Starving and in need
Support ripped out from
Under their precious lives
An act of hate
Called righteousness
In the name of protecting
Orthodoxy
From the scourge
Of homosexuality

How can people
Called to be like the god they claim
Who has named himself Love
Hate us at such a price to
Ten thousand children

Tears fall as words flow
Years of learning
Straight was right
Queer was sin
My heart breaks
Am I the only one
Who feels the stab of
Soul-crushing guilt
As if my existence
Is somehow to blame for
Ten thousand children
Dropped in a heartbeat of hatred
When one organization
Makes the tiniest movement
Towards acknowledging our rights
As human beings
Created in the image
Of the divine

This is also the price of hate
But unlike ten thousand children
I have a choice
I will not pay their price
I will not take on that guilt
Being queer does not
Equal broken
Nor does it mean excluded
From the faith of my childhood

I will stand up
I will proudly claim my truth
I will meet their fear
With love
For myself
For the world around me
Even for those who hate
Together may we stand in the gap
For ten thousand innocent children

—–

If you haven’t heard about what happened that caused ten thousand children to lose their sponsors through World Vision in the United States because a powerful group of people who call themselves Christians decided fighting against gay rights was more important than caring for the most vulnerable among us, you can read the details here, here or here, just to point you to a few.

I already sponsor a child through Compassion Canada whom I plan to continue sponsoring until she ages out of the program. I am pondering sponsoring another child through World Vision Canada which follows Canadian laws regarding non-discrimination.

—–

I first posted this poem on my blog [yes, the name of that blog used to be here but now it’s not] on April 7, 2014. Sharing the post on facebook was my coming out. I am so grateful for the love and support I have received from family and friends.

Whisper Hope

music
something magical
in the combination
of melody and words
draws me back
time and again
faith I have known
since childhood
whispered unwillingly
back into life

the theology and
version of community
I once longed for
now leave me
at best, discomforted
and apathetic
at worst, hurt, angry
and once again broken

but in the silence
filled with more than
notes and lines on a page
I am drawn back
to the possibility of belief
to the remembrance
of comfort found
in dark places
of the savage beast
of despair and unworthiness
soothed into contentment
and acceptance

perhaps somewhere
a new understanding
of community is forming
within a theology
of love lived out loud
embracing queerness
and diversity
as expressions of wholeness
not brokenness
in need of rescue

someday may I find it
and learn to sing again
for now, may I allow
the song to whisper hope

Not Crying on Sundays

——-

Begun at a Steve Bell concert in December 2013.

Artwork inspired by Same Love by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis featuring Mary Lambert.