Monday, September 16, 2024

Mid-month Mention: Rabbit Room and Poets

 


Perhaps a year ago, I stumbled upon the Rabbit Room Chinwag Facebook group. What a treat! Like-minded creatives and individuals who seek to honor God.

It was here I discovered a poem by Christopher Owen that I appreciate on many levels. I love the rhythm and sound. I appreciate the description of God's intention for His creation and for the glory He will assume when He returns to reclaim us for His kingdom. The poem is called, "This is Beginning to End." Follow the link to watch him recite it because it has a wonderful "spoken word" feel. I sometimes listen to the Button Poetry offerings when they come up on my Facebook feed. How I wish for a Christian equivalent! If there was one, Christopher Owen's poem would fit perfectly. I am with him in his desire for Christ to come quickly! We are waiting!

Randy Edwards is another poet from the Rabbit Room group. He often shares his poetry on his Backward Mutters blog (see the blog for the title's reference). Or find him on Instagram: @backward.mutters - Randy is the pastor of Grace Presbyterian Church in Kernersville, North Carolina. I immediately fell in love with the first poem I heard him recite, a poem about luck and grace, full of beautiful images with deep meanings:


When Craig Stapleton jumped
Into 8000 feet of space
He thought himself lucky
To do this thing he loved.
But when his parachute
Tangled and twirled?
He fell like some
Lafayette Escadrille
Shot down by the Red Baron.
If he was able to feel
(Let alone think)
More than terror, he knew
His luck had turned.
But when his backup did the same?
He knew it was for the worst,
That he must be the unluckiest
Skydiver on earth.
He hit the flat ground
Of California’s Central Valley
With a splat, doing around
30 miles an hour—
A field where the farmer
Had just tilled the earth
And thought himself the
Luckiest one around
To be catching the rain
At just the right time.
Where water soaked furrows
Swole the clods up like pillows.
When Craig came to his senses,
When he realized
The sound of that splat
Was just the mud? That
This man who’d fallen
In a death-spiral like a winged duck?
When he realized that
He had not died?
But in fact alive and had survived?
It was not Luck he thanked.
It was personal.
Now this don’t mean
Luck ain’t no thing,
Nor that he didn’t feel lucky.
True luck is like grace,
Is an unlooked for blessing
That breaks as a smile on a face
Breaks a fall of certain death
And gives you back
What you’d thought you’d lost
Or worse, had left.


For further exploration, here's an article about the harrowing 8000 foot skydiving fall that prompted this poem's contemplation.

Here's a link to a recitation of another Randy Edwards poem called "The Dragon's Mouth," based on Revelation 12:15. The focus of this year's Bible Study Fellowship is the book of Revelation. I will have to remember to share this poem during the week we discuss chapter 12.

I'm looking forward to hearing more from Christopher Owen and Randy Edwards!

2 comments:

twentystone said...

Wendy, thank you for the kind words. I'm so glad you enjoyed the poem!

Wendy Hill said...

Yes, Randy, I've been enjoying your poetry and your podcasts. Thanks so much!