Showing posts with label fire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fire. Show all posts

Monday, June 16, 2025

Small voice

Responding to 1 Kings 19

Haiku of hope



He's in deep trouble,

Elijah. Happens when you

stand against evil.


Jezebel the queen

sends word: Sort out your affairs;

tomorrow you die.


Elijah shoots through,

fleeing for his life. Frightened?

What do you reckon?


He left his servant

at Beer Sheba and headed

off into the bush.


After a day's march

he cried: Let me die, O Lord,

I have had enough!


He got up, ate, drank,

and travelled forty more days;

reaching mount Horeb.


In a cave God spoke:

Why have you come, Elijah?

They seek my life, Lord.


They turned from you, God,

they have pulled down your altars,

and killed your prophets.


Go to the entrance

of the cave. Watch; you will see,

your Lord passing by.


A great wind split rocks,

an earthquake shook the mountain,

and then came a fire.


Sheer silence followed.

In the silence God is found,

not in flash display.


Return Elijah;

it will be all right. Know this;

you are not alone.


© Ken Rookes 2025

Monday, December 2, 2024

God's Messenger comes

 Haiku for refining


God's messenger comes,

sent to make ready the way;

clearing obstacles.


The Lord whom you seek

will arrive without warning;

make yourselves ready.


He comes to make real

the ancient covenant, made

between God and us.


Not many can stand

before the Lord; not many

will be judged righteous.


Like refining fire

and soap turning wool to felt,

the Lord transforms us.


Like gold and silver

we all need to be refined;

purify us, God.


We must bring ourselves

as a righteous offering,

pleasing to the Lord.


© Ken Rookes 2024

Monday, May 13, 2024

Suddenly a roar!

 Pentecost haiku


Seven week had passed.

His friends were all together,

gathered in one place.


Suddenly a roar

of rushing wind filled the house;

tongues of flame, resting.


Filled with the Spirit,

their tongues were released, speaking

other languages.


Outside in the street

the crowd from many nations

hear in their own speech.


They’re from Galilee,

yet we understand, as they

speak of God’s power!


Some ask, What means this?

Others scoff, sneering: they’re drunk

on too much new wine.


Peter stands up, speaks:

It’s too early to be drunk;

only nine a.m!


In the prophet, Joel,

we read how God will pour God’s

Spirit on all flesh.


Young folk, old folk, slaves,

men and women; they shall dream

dreams and see visions.


It is coming near,

the Lord’s day; when all who call

on God’s name are saved.


© Ken Rookes 2024



Monday, May 22, 2023

Roaring wind sound

Haiku of wind and fire


On Pentecost Day

they were gathered in one place,

waiting and praying.


A roaring wind sound

filled the house, shaking them all

to their foundations.


Tongues of holy fire

dance through the air; alighting,

warming hearts and minds.


The Spirit arrives

to ignite love’s fire, bringing

tongues of ecstacy.


Spilling noisily

outside, diverse languages

commanding a crowd.


Folk from all nations

are puzzled, hearing the speech

in their own language.


We’re not drunk! Peter

counters. Rather God’s Spirit

has come upon us.


As Joel, the prophet,

spoke, God pours out God’s Spirit

on all humankind.


Men, women, young, old,

slave, free; the Spirit has come.

The Day has arrived!


These tongues are a sign,

one among many. Be saved:

call upon God’s name!


© Ken Rookes 2023

Monday, June 13, 2022

Sheer silence

 Haiku for the fearful


Fearful Elijah

receiving Jezebel’s threat,

decides to clear out.


Hiding in a cave

on the holy Mount Horeb

he hears God’s question.


I have done your will,

Lord, and my life is at risk,

so I ran away.


Stand on the mountain,

wait and watch, because the Lord

is about to pass.


In turn, a great wind,

an earthquake and fire surround;

God is not in them.


A sound of silence,

sheer and still, tells Elijah

that the Lord is here.


In silence, stillness,

mystery; God’s voice. Questions;

perhaps some answers.


The question is asked,

and answered. Return, Prophet,

and get on with it.


© Ken Rookes 2022

Monday, August 12, 2019

Fire on Earth

Haiku of urgency

He brought division,
surprised us all; we wanted
polite religion.

His words were crazy,
wild, disturbing our comfort,
not respectable.

Co-opting his words,
we made of them a program
of pious order.

If you want polite,
respectable and ordered,
you’d better leave now.

Your world is dying
and all you sing is pretty.
Don’t give me pretty.

Your world is dying,
open your eyes, can’t you see?
Time to do something.

Don’t give me love songs,
give me love’s revolution;
let me take the pain.


© Ken Rookes 2019

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Notre-Dame de Paris

Notre-Dame de Paris.

Grand reliquary;
centuries of prayers and tears
escape with the smoke.

© Ken Rookes 2019

Monday, January 7, 2019

High expectations


Haiku of anticipation

High expectations
reverberate through Judah:
has the time arrived?

The baptising man;
we’ve been waiting for so long,
could he be the one?

They put it to him:
Are you the Christ-Messiah?
He answered them: No!

I wash with water
baptising to cleanse your sin;
he is so much more.

He comes bringing fire
to fill you with the Spirit;
set your hearts ablaze.

When the candidates
had all been baptised by John,
Jesus himself comes.

As he is praying
the doors of heaven open
Spirit-dove descends.

Heaven’s voice is heard,
(whisper, thunder, who can say?)
My beloved Son!


© Ken Rookes 2019

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

I have come to bring fire!

A passage like this provides an opportunity for reflection on centres of powerful influence in our local communities. What are these gods? We need to name them. For some they will still be in families. Liberation will come as they learn to say no to family authorities, whether in real life outside or in the real life of the mind. Grace invites us to stand on our own two feet, to say No, to grow up, to be born again. If you touch on this, be prepared to ensure there is support for those who dare such a change. It can be lonely and painful.
For others the gods run them in their workplace or across the counters of commerce or in the obsessions of advertising. Gods are always bigger than particular people. This is about more than addressing individual loyalties. Ultimately it is about the vision of justice and peace for all which we celebrate in the feast of the eucharist. The radical inclusiveness of that meal and that vision is a fellowship of sacrifice in which we nourish ourselves from a broken and poured out life. Perhaps the best commentary on today’s passage is, indeed, the breaking of the bread.
http://wwwstaff.murdoch.edu.au/~loader/LkPentecost13.htm

Monday, May 13, 2013

Spirit

Spirit



Below the sun’s relentless rays
the red earth bakes hard,
loosens with the passing feet and hooves
of creatures, wild and domesticated;
becoming dust again. Human feet,
some clothed in boot and shoe for protection
from hot earth and its sharp and stony projections,
others toughened by their habitual nakedness,
add to the wear of the animals.
The soil holds life,
waiting patiently for water
from largely cloudless skies.
With rock and tree and hill it holds stories,
a spirit library waiting for the singing;
waiting for the voices.


The water, too, holds life.
Borne upon wind, sometimes gathering
in clouded configurations,
anticipating the moment
when the swirling eddies of pressured and rushing air
achieve the necessary imbalance
for the soil’s saturation.
Undreneath the dry sand of occasional river beds,
the ever-present but unseen waters
receive and welcome the probing roots of trees;
which gather moisture, mix it with sunlight,
and fashion it into life for leaf, insect, bird and lizard.
In the scorching sun the leaves release their own
fragrant life offering;
the sharp and cleansing eucalyptian scent
that tells of hope and renewal.


Majestic birds, darkened silhouettes
ascend and wheel. They ride heated currents,
created by the fiery sun
as it works upon rugged valleys and hills.
These were, in turn, wrought slowly
from layers of ancient rock by that same sun,
together with persistent wind
and occasional rain.
Mortal beings.
earth-bound, like the large birds that traverse
these sun-drenched plains,
observe the distant aerial manoeuvres with wonder,
and dream. A few,
kissed by this vision of freedom,
determine also to rise and to soar.


The oxide-red earth;
the unseen wind, sometimes gentle, sometimes wild;
fire from above and within;
water, cool and clear;
the human heart, dreaming and hopeful;
here creation and spirit meet
a necessary and joyous union,
for the fashioning of life and love.


© Ken Rookes 2013



Monday, December 10, 2012

Earth, wind, fire and water.



His words pelted indiscriminately
like a summer storm;
you couldn’t avoid getting soaked in his message.
John the crazy water-man
didn’t polish his words;
he left the edges pointy-sharp,
called the crowd a nest of snakes.
Some slithered away. They had come
to satisfy their curiosity,
have a laugh, and boast among their friends.
Others stayed and listened,
yearning for a speck of gold.
They copped the flaming derision
and reckoned it a fair price
as the prophet’s wave of abrasive words
crashed over them,
leaving them saturated, raw and gasping.
.
Sort yourselves out before somebody else does.
The promised one is coming,
so get yourselves ready.

The water-man talked of the advent
of a man consonant with the cosmos,
one who would embody the four elements
from which all creation
has been lovingly sculpted; and a fifth.
He will be present in and amongst earth’s dust,
bring fire to warm despondent hearts,
Spirit-wind to breathe life and hope,
and the water that alone can truly quench
the thirst inside us all.
And a fifth is eternity.

© 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...