A Poem in the Light

About the Samaritan Woman 

and her meeting with Jesus at the well, where she was drawing water.
There is a moment I would like to hold up,
A point of light that has pierced the eye of my heart.
I know that I will have to be satisfied with walking around it,
as it is not the kind of thing that can be pinned down.
Here it is:
That Jesus saw her,
and when that dawned on her,
she was never the same.
In the light of His countenance she was undone,
unwound from her syndrome, wounded with eternity.
In a moment her desire was turned inside out, transfigured.
What possessed her now could no longer be her fragmented,
meandering and wandering ways,
but His seeing of her, and beyond all that she had been,
His showing her and freely offering her
what He knew she had always desired,
beyond her own knowing.
He was not looking at her askance to cast her down.
He was not rebuking her or taunting her,
not dwelling on her miserable failures.
In His knowing, He was turning a light on in her,
springing her out of prison.
The miracle is that she saw HIM,
and so, extricated from her shame,
shot full of wonder and expectation,
she bounded with joy into the town to share this news,
that she had found a man–the seventh one–
that knew her as she had never been known.

Christ God, my Lord and Savior,
I see that you come to me as to that woman,
that you can open my eyes and my heart as you did hers.
You offer me yourself even today
in the cup of Your Life.
As I approach and partake, may the light of Your Presence
pour into the dark well of my confused passions,
a provision of the Living Water
now and unto the ages of ages. Amen

The poem is by an Orthodox woman, Jane McElroy, a member of our congregation. I have enjoyed her poetry for several years now. She is posting on her blog from time to time. I have added it to the blogroll, or it may be found here. 

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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One response to “A Poem in the Light”

  1. Damaris Avatar
    Damaris

    Please thank the author for this beautiful poem. As a poster to your previous entry mentioned, the amazing thing is not just that we know God but that we are KNOWN by God.

    C.S. Lewis, in perhaps his greatest book, has his character say something like, “How can we ask to see the gods face to face till we have faces?” We demand to see God, but more miraculous than any blazing manifestation of divine power is that we are seen by Him.

    I haven’t put this well. The poem and “Till We Have Faces” do a much better job, not to mention Psalm 139.

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