Questions To Mary- A Poem
This year, our Christmas card was a stamp of Mary. Megan challenged me (Lance) to write a poem for the card. To be honest I was a bit reluctant, but after a nights sleep I got excited about the challenge. Megan has a much higher opinion of my poetry than I do. But sometimes you just have to trust your wife knows something about you that that you may not know about yourself 😉
Admittedly, the poem is a bit darker. Yet, I couldn’t help but think how hard it was for Mary to be the misunderstood mother to a misunderstood Messiah. We see her story through the lens of the joy filled resurrection. She was living a normal life then was thrown into a life altering situation that is mostly dark history for us, but to her quite real and all consuming. I’m not convinced Mary had any foreknowledge of what was coming. She didn’t know she would be fleeing to Egypt or she would have left sooner, but this also shows her deep trust in the Yahweh and the equally deep character that made God choose her to hold this incredible responsibility. I mean, look at all the art we see about Mary. She looks so happy and gentle all the time, but it had to be super stressful at times.
I was keenly aware that I was walking along side the song “Mary Did You Know?,” but I wanted to reflect more on the human aspect rather than the salvation aspect of the untold story of Mary’s experience and really, our human existence is full of suffering. I have to assume that Mary had more than her fair share. I find, in the evangelical world of which I live and work, we often find it quite difficult to reflect on suffering without changing the subject or shifting in our seats uncomfortably. We often say something like “the Lord is in charge” or “joy comes in the morning.” To be honest, this has come into sharp focus for me as I have had to deal with my own pain of the war in Ukraine as well as have no good answer for my suffering Ukrainian friends.
However, in reflecting on Mary and her entangled story with Jesus, I am reminded that suffering is not the end. Even with all the difficulty, we are able to look at her story through the lens of the resurrection and see God’s faithfulness to a helpless baby that happened to be the savior of the world and taken care of by an ordinary young woman and carpenter of not so ordinary character. They must have had an absolutely wild ride of a life. Can’t wait to ask all my questions to Mary face to face some day.
I hope you enjoy.
Questions to Mary
From the beginning to very end, You were there, it is written Painful joy at birth, With death, grief stricken Your story so pivotal Impossible to comprehend Without it my life Or most of it would wholly upend But wow! Mother of the Son of God What a noble, grand title. Pray, let me tone down the reverence And ponder for a while Was the angel's visit enough To endure the shame of scandal? "Adultery" shadowing Joseph's gaze, Was it more than you could handle? Did you tell your father all, did he too have a dream to understand? Or being blight on the family name, Did anger burn, rage quiver in his hand? All the pictures I have seen Show you happy in the stable But was there any angst you felt As animals shared your table? When at His face you gazed As brand new mothers do, Did you recognize any features Did He look at all like you? In the silence, then the crying In the middle of the night, Did you find it frustrating When He wouldn't latch just right? Were you ok with the rabble, Brought by Jesus birth Strange foreigners from afar Shepherds smelling of animal and earth. When news came to Egypt Of all the young ones slain; In agony of friend's children, Did you feel at least partly to blame? As a toddler did He play? Did He grope for things absurdly, Or was He more refined, mannerisms other worldly? What about when you rebuked Him, Like that one time at the temple? Did He always give it back, Or in understanding was he gentle? Better than the rest, you knew him Thirty years living in your shadow Darkness, is this time for us For you only to intimately know But you seemed to have a clue With the lack of wedding wine. So was young Jesus like other boys, Or was his housework divine? When his purpose became public And he stayed away from home Did you feel left out, forgotten, When with misfits he would roam? I wonder, was it painful As Jesus pointed to others While you waited for Him outside, He asking who is my mother, my brothers? When you saw him on the cross, Did pain-filled doubt creep inside? "Blessed are you" now a joke Because messiahs can't have died. From joyful promise of messiah Hope growing in your womb, To bringing once joyful spices For anointing the dead in a tomb. I guess what I am asking, If I may be so bold, Were you like the rest of us? Or was there deeper faith to hold? The Mother of the Son of God The more I look, the more I see A pain filled journey for you Meant a grace filled life for me. Did you know this from the start? In the middle, did you get a clue? Was there a post-grave visit, A tender moment meant just for two? Even though no answers given To my questions of you and Son, You were picked for a reason All I can say is, job well done.