Selma, AL
I am a reporter
Trying to find the words
To depict with blood stained lips
The modern day
Garden of Gethsemane before me
Hundreds of little Christ’s who are
Singing this little light of mine
Kneeling before white men
Let it shine
For a crown of thorns
Let it shine
Immanuel, the first in line
Let it shine.
I am a protester
Belief begetting belief
I press on
Like the woman who was bleeding for twelve years
this war has gone on far too long.
Among saints
my feet tire
yet my soul rests.
Jehovah Shammah, He goes before
In the gospel hymns we sing
in the offerings we lay at His feet:
security, prosperity, normalcy.
But that’s a hard truth to cling to
When my enemies
who I’m commanded to love,
Beat me to bleeding
abandon me to suffering
demean me to nothing.
Anger awakes
but hope fights tosing it to sleep
And I confess to the Great Almighty,
This-
This battle of my flesh and spirit
is the one killing me.
Because I want my hands to be bloody
but not from catching my fall on the street
And I make myself believe
that I’d rather sleep in a cell
than my own sheets
But instead this shield of faith goes before me
protecting me from my adversaries
But more importantly
protecting me from myself.
So I press on
behind Jehovah Shammah
Afflicted, but not crushed
perplexed but not driven to despair
persecuted but not forsaken
Struck down but not destroyed
on Christ the Solid Rock I stand
His life, death, and resurrection.
I am a white girl
My lament fifty years late
I don’t have the right to mourn
with the ache of fresh budding grief
For what does any of this mean to me?
For I have never felt the unceasing burn of my skin’s betrayal,
covering the internal body that makes me equal
with those who slay me
I’ve never been afraid of what a policeman’s hands could do to me
with their white man authority
And I only watch war through the safety of a screen
Remembering the taste of red iron from once upon a time
When I fell and broke my nose as a child
an injury fit for adolescence
unlike those I watched in black and white:
casualties of hate
branded on the skin of fellow Americans-
Hell, forget Americans,
Fellow HUMANS
From inhuman hands that must have been starved of holding.
But were they?
For I know they were raised by people like you and me
Mothers and fathers who went to church every Sunday
Gave their tithe,
Dressed their best,
So what was the difference?
I can’t help but feel sorry for them
Because they must not understand
That pivotal moment in the Garden of Eden
When Adam first opened his eyes,
Seeing his reflection in the ocean of living water,
Man made in His image,
Imago Dei.
I can’t help but feel sorry for them
Because the when they look down
They can only see skeletons,
Walking in the valley of the shadow of death
Their souls hardened
To the abundance of life found amidst creation.
I don’t know if I’ll ever comprehend it,
But I beg God,
By the grace of His spirit
To let me never fall into it-
That valley of bones my ancestors called home-
And by the grace of God,
I will never smell the stench of it.