Theopoetics, The Language of God, and a Life Captured in God's World

Theopoetics and the Language of God

   Perhaps imagination and poetry is more effective for communicating than the modern tools of interpretation? This is the basis for some studies under the label of Theopoetics. I wrote a book of poetry titled Theopoetics as an outlet for my theology in relation to my experiences. My book Everyday Thoughts includes a poem before each of the essays. A poem precedes or follows most of the blogs on my website. My theological leanings are influenced by the dialectics of Kierkegaard who was inclined to the poetic as part of his philosophical and theological genius.

    The experience that has most impacted my life (at this point) is the dissolution of a settled life brought on by the mental decline of my first wife. Within the next decade, she would abandon our marriage to return to the Philippines and live the conflicted life of a vagabond.  In time, COPD and Myeloma cancer would slowly deprive her of independence and culminate in her passing.

   I had married her when I was a youngster serving (an odd word for military activity) in the U.S.M.C.  In my youthful and enthusiastic driven evangelical faith, handing out Bibles to young women trafficked into bars seemed like a normal response to the horrific activities brought on by the presence of the U.S. Empire in the Philippines. My first conversation with her was an effort to help her find Christ and escape the life she was captured in. I chose to provide a collection of stories from that time interspersed around nonviolent readings of violent texts in my book Theological Adventures.  

    During her absence, I faced the struggles of hip replacement surgeries; first my right and then the left hip. a knee surgery, and a septoplasty on my nose. These events led to some downtime from all the busy activities that can fill a life. I began writing poetry out of a therapeutic need for my own wellness. I bracketed off my entire book Interpretive Adventures with the first and last half of a poem.

   At 61 years of age, life looked dismal. I was sitting in a big house filled with memories. My children were adults with lives and children of their own. Sitting around all secure and waiting on something, was, well, simply not compatible with the person I had been for most of my life. I sold my home and took the money and moved to the Philippines.  After numerous trips to the Philippines over the years the adventure of it all was still resonating in my heart.

    In God’s good providence my life was blessed with love and an intelligent, beautiful woman. Our relationship led to the writing of numerous love poems. At this point, poetry is filling my life. Although the academic study of scripture and theology has its contribution for understanding and talking about God in the world, there is more. Without the tools of modern hermeneutics - Kierkegaard’s writings had taught and stimulated my mind about God and the world, more than worrying about, for example, the insights and absurdities of source criticism, or the subjective decisions over textual criticism. 

    Poetry is God’s language. Prophets turn Spirit into Word. Poets turn spirit into words. The dismissal of the aesthetic as a living part of language has turned the academic enterprise of biblical studies and theology into a language more at home with lawyers than poets.

    Poems are stories without all the details of a narrative. Of course, we know Jesus was a storyteller. The prophets wrote whereas Jesus did not. Stories are easier to remember than a lengthy poetic diatribe. The writer of Job accomplishes a lengthy poetic diatribe within the context of a story. The story is easily recalled but the Joban poetry must be memorized for recall.

    Jesus left us nothing written by the finger of God but a story of his writing in the sand. The most poetic pieces of scripture are all Christological; e.g. John 1:1-18 and Colossians 1:15-20 and Philippians 2:6-11.  It is notable that Moses destroyed the tablets written by the finger of God. Jesus’ stories appeal to the heart and conflict with legal authority.

   Proclaiming the person and life of Jesus is an exercise in poetic imagination. How else can anyone communicate the stilling of a storm, the touch of a bleeding woman, the halting of a funeral procession to raise a son from the dead, or the quaking of the heavens at the death of a man with arms outstretched to forgive those who murdered him?

    Paul’s letter writing is sat within the context of his life and addresses various occasions when his teaching and correction is needed. His advice, guidelines, and commands are all subjective in relation to the choices we have when applying them to the present. Aw, but the poetry of his life is exceptional! Who among us has met a man like Paul? It is my conviction that Paul was chosen to replace Jesus’ short-lived life to be an exemplar of the Christian faith.

     Remember Paul the murderous religious zealot whose life was interrupted by the risen Lord to face life filled with hardship. Remember Paul the man with a revelation so embedded in his soul that he was unable to communicate all he had heard. I’m sure the problem was people’s inability to hear. Remember Paul he tried to be like Jesus.  Yes, we need some poetry to communicate the life of Paul. The goal of interpreting Paul’s letters is to hear his heart not to follow his guidelines as absolute rules. Hear the man, Paul who was weighted with a call and gifted with grace. The poetry that is his life is where God is found.

     Theopoetics is a word that acknowledges the search for God includes the aesthetic in our ethical efforts and religious claims about God and the world. The world is an ugly place of greed and avarice, of lust and desire, of war and murder, of idolatry and God’s absence; mercy is always beautiful. If you want to find God in the text, in the world, always look for mercy. Learn to hear the poets who bemoan the suffering of injustice, of loss, of tragedy, of a world without forgiveness for the weak, the oppressed, who are the victims of the powerful.

    We are not fit to rule over one another. We must learn to hear the voice of God that speaks ‘today’.  We must learn to find the beauty of God’s children greeting refugees, learning to speak in other tongues to communicate with Asians, Latinos, Europeans, those pesky Americans, and those who do not know the language of God. The earth is the Lord’s and all we’ve done is devise a way to atomize life. We have left a historical trail of self-destructive activity. 

    I will offer three poems that are my theopoetic efforts to speak the language of God.

 

   For the Sake of Order

 

Ordering the World

 

Ordering the World

at what cost?

Humanity’s altar of order

Sacrificing one another

Only the guilty die

There are no victims

When Lord Order Speaks

 

Loving the mess of humanity

Order must be sacrificed

Victims are always innocent

Jesus crucified by Lord Order

 

All the religious rally

Righteous fools

In love with brutal messiahs

Torah no longer a teacher

 license for Slaughter

 

All the political rally

Powerful and Rich

All the fools follow

Legal-violence

 

Crowds of Untruth

Reason Lost

God Murdered

All for Lord Order

 

When the Killing Starts

Order’s Vengeance

Humanity’s Madness

Civil society births a Holocaust

 

Piled Bodies

Pyramids of Skulls

The poor weep

History again

 

 

The Beautiful Imprisonment

 

Defining Beauty

 

Beauty and Shame

Irredeemably Incompatible

Beauty and Oppression

Victimage is always evil

 

The shallow beauty of appearances

Accompanied with smiling faces

In the eyes of the wise

Beauty can be Ugly

 

Beauty alone is an unethical power

An irreligious desire

To Love Beauty is Darkness

A prison for fools

 

A Beautiful Soul

Who can find?

Hiding behind Age

Looking like a thrift store

Bearing the scars of Love for the unwanted

 

Wearing a smile cleansed with tears

Living a life unrecognized by the beautiful

Her Jewelry a bracelet

Made by a leper

 

A Beautiful Soul

Who can find?

A self- effacing Apostle

Dressed like a pauper

Bearing scars for denying the appearances of power

 

Wearing the burden of wisdom

Living a life of imprisonment

His adorning His voice

Gravelly from truth telling

 

 

Life

 

Somewhere between a primal scream and unfulfilled longing - humanity lives.

Living with tears and a smile - feeling everything.

Longing for love and understanding - always alone.

Being, person, individuality calls forth the dawn of a new day

meeting the interconnectedness of all creation

the challenge of all brings forth the night,

the need for rest.

Life must surrender to the rhythm of grace ready to fill creation.

The creative rupture of Imago Dei breathing

Speech, insight, love,

 facing finiteness

Learning to live

I see him, but not yet

The black hole of nothingness calls

poisoning existence

pushed into a bout with a monster

Don’t fight dance with the eternal triad

Faith Hope and Love