Nurturing Spirituality

sun_clouds3_500Speaking to the Heart: 100 Favorite Poems chosen and introduced by Sister Wendy Beckett, fulfills a long-felt need of mine: a book of poetry that deals with topics related to the Christian faith without being saccharine on the one hand or ungodly on the other. Instead, to quote Sister Wendy,

what we have here is a spiritual sense, something far wider and more elemental. There is religious poetry, with its defining religious vocabulary, but not much of it here. Just as I have always felt the essence of great painting was its spirituality, and that this applies as much to Degas’s ballet dancers as it does to Fra Angelico’s virgins, so is it true of poetry.
If the poet is not speaking from his own emotional depths to our own sense of freedom and strength of spirit, then this is not poetry to which I am attracted. (page 3)

Thankfully, she fulfills this requirement with much the same candor and depth that she did with her BBC television series on art. The book is divided into poems of Longing, Wonder, A Lighter Spirit, The Heavy Heart, Courage, Sorrow, Faith, Hope, Love, and Prayer. While all the poems are great, and will inspire on different occasions, there are a few that stand out for me after a first reading. Under Courage is Door by Robert Pinsky. While perhaps this is a sideways nod to Aldous Huxley’s famous book, Doors of Perception, it nonetheless covers interesting ground, as most Pinsky poetry does. One stanza in particular captures the way doors function as a metaphor for salvation.

Its four panels form a cross—the rood
Sign of suffering and redemption

A Broken Image, Thomas Blackburn’s poem in the section on Faith, is about a couple coming across a broken cross while hiking in the Alps, and how they take it home with them. The profound meaning of the cross, a symbol of salvation for humanity, and its representation of the love God has for each of us, is explored by the poet, as represented by the lines

This image explains nothing away,
And just by gazing into darkness
Is able to mean more than words can say.

Finally, there is Prayer, by John Burnside, ends the collection. Its line “Gold in the seams of my hands” effectively sums up the nature of the collection, our relationship with God, and the subject of the poem.

There are many others that are worth noting: Nativity Poem by Joseph Brodsky, The Snow Village by Glyn Maxwell, This Lunar Beauty by W. H. Auden. At $3.99, I encourage you to invest in poems whose “significance does not have to be puzzled out, but comes to us with an immediacy and a power that are the ultimate proof of what poetry can be.”

Nurturing Audio & Video

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Reflections to Consider

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Audio & Video

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Favorites

  • Best of EM Bounds on Prayer +

    This is a compilation of some of the writings by E.M. Bounds. I've read a fair amount of books on Read More
  • Prayer - Does it Make Any Difference, Philip Yancey +

    Contemporary classic that probes the meaning of prayer for 21st century believers, and provides extended, personal anecdotes from a wide Read More
  • Prayer, Ole Hallesby and Clarence J. Carlsen +

    This is a little known work which has a significant impact on those who read it. Read More
  • From Unceasing Thinking to Unceasing Prayer +

    Our minds are always active. We analyze, reflect, daydream, or dream. There is not a moment during the day or Read More
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Hidden Blessings

  • Introduction to The Death of Death..by JI Packer +

    INTRODUCTORY ESSAY ___ to John Owen's The Death Of Death in the Death of Christ ___ By J.I. Packer _________ Read More
  • An Interview with Os Guiness on the 25th Anniversary of Francis Schaeffer's Death-Justin Taylor, 2009 +

    Next week (May 15) will be the 25th anniversary of the death of Francis Schaeffer, who died in his home Read More
  • Fate Worse than Death? Julie Moore +

    Jephthah's unfortunatedaughterMy journey through the Bible, which, I'll admit, sometimes feels like a slog, uncovers some pretty crazy things. Read More
  • DEATH HAS BEEN SWALLOWED UP BY DEATH by Gavin Ortlund +

    Editors' note: This series explores key doctrines of the Christian faith and their practical ramifications for everyday life. Earlier in Read More
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