Showing posts with label Jordan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jordan. Show all posts

Monday, October 30, 2023

Let the wars begin

 Haiku to challenge the narrative


Story of wonder;

defying physics. Who knows

what really happened?


Joshua is told

that God will be with him, as

God was with Moses.


He is in command;

Joshua instruct the priests

at Jordan’s waters.


Selected leaders,

twelve, bear the Covenant’s Ark

across the Jordan.


Symbolic presence;

God will drive the foreigners

from their own country


Colonising God,

a most disturbing image;

should we accept it?


As their feet get wet

Jordan’s flow is arrested.

The people pass through.


The entire nation

crossed into the promised land.

Let the wars begin.

Monday, June 27, 2022

An unnamed slave girl

Haiku of restoration


An unnamed slave girl

speaks a word of healing hope

in a foreign land.


In Samaria,

a prophet dwells. He could cure

the master’s disease.


General Naaman

gathers his entourage, heads

south, to Israel.


With his king’s letter

he fronts Israel’s monarch,

who totally freaks.


Am I God, he asks,

to cure leprosy? Worried

he’s in for a fight.


Elisha’s informed;

sends word to the king. No probs;

send him here to me.


This man from afar

will learn that there’s a prophet

here in Israel.


Sends a message. Wash

in the Jordan, seven times;

you will be made clean.


He didn’t even

come out to see me! Naaman

is somewhat angry.


We’ve got good rivers

back at home! Take it easy,

his servants respond.


It’s a simple thing.

He told you: Wash, and be clean.

Why not have a go?


He is persuaded.

Seven times in the Jordan,

his flesh is restored.


© Ken Rookes 2022

Monday, January 1, 2018

My name is John

Haiku for beginning

Give me camel’s hair,
leather belt around my waist;
feed me with locusts.

Give me a loud voice
enough to shake foundations.
Feed me wild honey

Find me at the creek
with the rocks and croaking frogs.
Water is my home.

Put away your sins;
the darkness in your living.
Let’s wash it away.

Come and be baptised.
Show that you are eager, keen
to begin anew.

One comes after me.
He will do much more than I.
He brings the Spirit.

. . . .

He came from up north
to meet John at the Jordan.
Baptise me, comrade.

The heavens opened
with the voice of approval.
The Spirit came down.



© Ken Rookes 2018.

Monday, January 2, 2017

Needing to be baptised


Haiku for beginners

When he was ready
he travelled from Galilee,
south, to the Jordan.

There he came to John
with a baptism request.
John was reluctant.

You ask this of me,
I should be baptised by you;
the Baptist demurred.

Let it be so now,
Jesus answered. It's proper
and right to do this.

The river beckoned.
He sank beneath its surface,
finding his calling.

Emerging once more
from the darkness into light;
fills his lungs with life.

The white dove flies low,
with heaven's voice whispering:
this, then, is my son.


© Ken Rookes 2017

Monday, January 4, 2016

The heaven was opened

The opening of heaven,
by all accounts,
was not an every-day occurrence.
At Jesus' baptism, by John,
in the flowing waters of the Jordan,
this rare event,
(according to some ancient stories),
took place. On that occasion,
we are told, heaven's stately doors
swung wide on their ethereal hinges,
allowing the divine spirit to descend
and to mingle outrageously
with that which is human.

While the record may well be incomplete,
no mention is made
of their subsequent closure.


© Ken Rookes 2016

Come to the water


The water, it dances, it gurgles and flows,
it sings alleluia, new life it bestows.
It sweeps over rapids, around unseen bends,
to vistas surprising and landscapes of friends.

This river, it eddies, it catches us all
in long graceful turnings; love’s generous swirl.
This water lives deeply, our thirst, it is quenched;
our bodies are freshened, our souls they are cleansed.

The Spirit is given, she hovers and cries
delights in the dreamings and aches with the sighs.
Surrender to the water, and hear Jesus' call
to be a disciple, and a servant to all.

Some are wrinkled from birth, some are wrinkled with age;
Hey, come to the water; whatever your page!
Drink freely, my sister, my brother, my friend;
drink deep from the fountain, of grace without end.

The water is justice, the water is peace;
it saturates living, its strivings won’t cease
Let none withhold water, the Spirit commands;
unite in one body and fulfil love's demands.



© 2016 Ken Rookes

Can be sung to the tune St Denio,
Together in Song 143, AHB 80

I have reworked this from an older poem/song. The original was suited to an actual baptism, this has a more general use, such as for the Baptism of Jesus, this coming Sunday. I think it has been markedly improved.



Monday, December 3, 2012

… and Lysanias was ruler of Abilene.





Luke understood
that every story has a context,
that historical and cultural settings shift
and shape the meaning of a life.
Unconcerned with the trivialities
of diet and apparel, the gospel teller
identifies emperor and rulers
before presenting us with cousin John,
son of Zechariah and Elizabeth, who steps
outrageously from among the rocky hills.
He will preside, for a season,
over Jordan’s troubled waters.
The Baptiser, so-called, spoke
with the courage and recklessness
of Isaiah, Micah, Jeremiah
and all the others,
who, centuries long-past,
had been foolish enough to listen to,
and believe, the divine word.
The world, into which John
intruded his annoying message,
was wounded, tear-washed and bound.
Its dwellers had long accepted
the prevailing necessity of fear,
greed and suspicion, never guessing
that there might be an alternative.
Much like us.

The Baptiser called for mountains
and hills to be levelled,
and winding roads and tracks
to be made smooth and straight.
He warned all of us less than perfect people
to straighten out our twistings and evasions;
to prepare ourselves for something new.
A new someone who might just come
to drive a crazy cosmic bulldozer
through the obstacles of human living;
and then will come the grace.

© Ken Rookes 2012

It's all about grace

Haiku responding to 1 Timothy 1:12-17 It's all about grace. The writer shows gratitude for new life in Christ. Listing his...