Sunday, June 26, 2022

Sign of the Dove

 


"Sign of the Dove"

I am a country chapel girl sitting in a magnificent cathedral

Waiting for a friend’s glorious ordination in which

By some extraordinary grace, I am reading a lectionary Scripture.

The service begins with pomp and pageantry all around:

Pipe organ and choir, vestments and chalices.

It seems so formal that I hope I don’t make a mistake

When I ascend to the lectern at my appointed time.


Then I see, at the front of the grand processional

A sign of divine grace that makes my heart leap:

A man in a robe swirling a beribboned pole  

With a white fabric dove swooping and bobbing 

Fluttering along wherever it will.

That dove is the sign of the Holy Spirit

Who is not at all tethered to a pole with a silken cord.


I instantly know in my own spirit that

The Holy Spirit moves where the Holy Spirit wants to move.

The Holy Spirit does what the Holy Spirit wants to do.

The Holy Spirit is not bound by human plans.

Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty!

The Holy Spirit sets me free to worship and love and serve

So I am filled to the fullness – alleluia!


I ascend to the lectern with confidence

To speak forth the Word of the Lord (Thanks be to God!)

With exuberance and joy among his holy saints

Knowing that the Holy Spirit who has led us all to this place

Is the Holy Spirit who still moves all around the world

Doing the mighty work of the Lord far beyond

All we could ask or even imagine – alleluia!


~~~~



This is a video of the dove on the pole during the recessional after the ordination. 

In my last poem, Echo of the Sacred Story,  I reflected on an Advent sermon by my dear friend Patricia Orlando. This newest poem is inspired by her ordination on May 22, 2022, at the same place, The Cathedral Church of St. Luke in downtown Orlando.



(In this photo, the people I recognize are Bishop Greg Brewer who is seated, Patricia in the white robe, and her husband Michael in the black suit.)

I was absolutely thrilled when Patricia asked me to read a lectionary passage at the service. She knows how much I love to do this at our "country chapel" which is actually at a retreat center overlooking a lake. Beyond that, though, it is just such huge honor for me to be chosen out of all of the people she could have picked. The Old Testament passage was read so marvelously by Dr. Jeff Frymire, professor of preaching at our own Asbury Theological Seminary. I was assigned to 1 Peter 5:1-11, which is about the responsibility of a pastor to serve a congregation with humility and grace. 


But I did feel nervous! I practiced before the service at the lectern and tried to listen carefully as they gave me liturgical instructions such as, "Bow to the verger before you start reading." Of course, I forgot that entirely once I got up there to do my thing. My mind was only on the Word, my friend, and the rest of the precious saints in the beautiful building. The video below begins when I start my reading.


So it was the dove on the pole -- and the glorious liberty of the Holy Spirit -- which set my mind at ease and reminded me why we were all really there: to worship and glorify the Lord, who is Spirit.



Apparently, the dove on the pole is often used during the season of Pentecost (which marks the descent of the Holy Spirit in Acts 2) in liturgical churches. This service was just before Pentecost, so I guess they broke theirs out early at the cathedral. The video above is from the recessional. Our small Episcopal chapel (below) had a dove on a much shorter pole on actual Pentecost Sunday.




A word about alleluia in my poem: I wrote this in there first because it seemed so fitting in worship, but then I realized that it's also an inside joke. In our liturgy, we don't say the usual alleluias during the season of Lent, saving it for Easter. But I'm a bit of a rebel, so most weeks I would still whisper it loudly at the regular spots, and Patricia would nudge me and whisper it back to me.


So, ALLELUIA! And congratulations, Mother Patricia!








Monday, March 28, 2022

Echo of the Sacred Story







In the resounding Echo of the Grandest Narrative,
Hear your own invitation to the Sacred Story.
Say along with the saints:
“Be it done to me according to your Word!”
Imagine and realize what this means:
What wonder and honor
To be an ambassador of grace and mercy
On a mission of redemption in this world!
Then be filled with joy in your eager heart,
For in this moment,
The God of Glory becomes bigger than the world around you
You will find your purpose or, shall we say, 
Your Purpose will find you
As you listen within the quiet and within the noise.
Listen for that echo!
Enter his Mansion of Joy:
Explore each doorway, gaze out each window,
Dwell in each new place you find,
And feast at each table, sharing the riches of the Word
Singing a Magnificat of praises with thanksgiving
And inviting others into the Sacred Story
Welcome home!

~~

I wrote this poem as a reflection of a sermon by Rev. Patricia Orlando, my dear friend and mentor. A transitional deacon awaiting her ordination as an Episcopal priest this spring, she is on the pastoral staff at the Cathedral of St. Luke in downtown Orlando. I visited there the Sunday before Christmas 2021 when she was preaching this message on the ministry and Magnificat of Mary. 


In some ways, this is a "found poem" since I wove in the words from the notes I scribbled on an offering envelope.



  



I usually write an Advent poem each year. This one would have been perfect for 2021, but I didn't write it until earlier this month. 

These words encourage me today as I contemplate where I fit in with the Grand Narrative, what my specific ministry is as I move forward. Echoing my poem, I know I am "an ambassador of grace and mercy on a mission of redemption in this world." I have always said that God leads me in unusual ways, with unexpected twists and turns. I continue to wait, work, and pray as he shows me what is next in my life. As this stained glass window reminds me, the Lord is my Shepherd and he leads me on the path. 



Grace and peace,
Virginia Knowles

You may also like to read some of my more recent Advent poems. 


At Church of the Incarnation (where I attend), we are studying the book Radical Hospitality: Benedict's Way of Love on Wednesday evenings. (We eat soup together first!) I read this poem during our breakout group at the last meeting. I wrote it many years ago, but it seems to fit not only with that study but with this current poem. Here's the link: Bella Sophia (Lady Wisdom Sets Her Table).






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