There’s Nothing Random About Poetry or Faith

by Marcus Goodyear on January 29, 2010

Twig art

When L. L. Barkat first pitched the concept for Random Acts of Poetry, I was hesitant. I did not want our network to become like poetry.com or the other vanity poetry sites where people put sentences into lines and call them poetry. L. L. reassured me that we could encourage people to love poetry, we could highlight the good poets, we could love them for wanting to write poetry, and gradually they would learn how to write good poetry.

Since I adore poetry, it didn’t take much to convince me. So Random Acts of Poetry debuted on October 17, 2008.

For me, poetry is the secular route to faith concepts. When I spend time with my atheist and agnostic friends, they can be intimidated by my faith. I try to downplay it sometimes, not out of shame, but out of courtesy to them. They know I’m Christian and know they are welcome to ask about my faith at any time.

Mostly, though, we talk about good food and good drink and good movies and good games and good poetry.

Mostly, our faith conversations are mediated through these other mundane things.

For instance, on my first visit to New York, I had one agenda. I wanted to walk across the Brooklyn Bridge, stop in the middle and read “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” out loud. Weird, I know. Since I didn’t have a copy of the poem, we went to the Strand Bookstore to buy a copy of Whitman’s Leaves of Grass. Then we found a bench on the middle of the bridge. We sat down. It seemed like all of New York was rushing past on foot or underneath in their cars and cabs and even ferries.

This will sound melodramatic, but it is true. That moment remains one of the most powerful moments of my life.

Whitman’s confession in part six became my confession: “The dark threw its patches down upon me also, /… / I am he who knew what it was to be evil.”

Then, part seven overwhelmed me. Whitman writes,

Closer yet I approach you,
What thought you have of me now, I had as much of you–I laid in my stores in advance,
I consider’d long and seriously of you before you were born.

I’m not really a mystic, though sometimes I pretend to aspire to mysticism. On that day, those lines felt mystical. They are not specifically Christian, but they are true. They remind us that the world is bigger than what we see and feel and know.

Some people don’t believe in God, but they can believe in poetry.

Left at that, poetry becomes just another idol, just another false promise that life can have meaning in verse or success or prestige or print.

But poetry is a good thing to believe in. Like Scott Cairns often says, poets speak the language of prophecy. No wonder I was so intimidated at Laity Lodge this weekend, surrounded by some of the best Christian poets in the US: Luci Shaw, Jeanine Hathaway, Julia Kasdorf, Jeanne Murray Walker, Anne Overstreet, and Eugene Peterson. (I wish everyone in the network could have been there.)

These people are poets, sure, but they are also sometimes prophets. They also sometimes tell us the things we know to be true, but we don’t want to hear.

And there is nothing random about it.

ALL RAP PARTICIPANTS
Glynn’s Scout and Jem, that Night
A Simple Country Girl’s Miss Jo
Sunrise Sister’s Claire
Karen’s Slave Child
Linda’s Little Girl
Monica’s The Judge’s Wife
nAncY’s Mr. Putter and Tabby
Cindy’s A Prayer for You is a Prayer for Me
Claire’s Into You
Tweetspeak Poetry’s Tara and Birds (This is just one of a whole set that came from a great party. Check ‘em out. :)
Stephanie’s Between Storms
Bina’s Weekend Prayer
Corrine’s Flickering Flame
Laura’s Night Sky
bkmackenzie’s Walk with Me
Milton’s I’m not proud to be an american
Hope4Today’s Day’s End
Joelle’s Prayer Bowl for Haiti
Nancy’s Why Poetry Matters Today
Kathleen’s Little Red Riding Hood
Fred’s Creed

Post written by Marcus Goodyear. Photo by Elizabeth O. Weller. Used with permission.

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{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

Sam Van Eman January 29, 2010 at 8:53 am

Marcus, I like the vine twig for the photo. Its first-glance appearance is one of randomness but its second-glance reality is that of seeking and grasping and telling – all eluded to in your post.

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Glynn January 29, 2010 at 9:27 am

Marcus. I only started writing poetry late last spring, although I’d read it for a long , long time (it’s the speech writer in me — the same love of language and fitting words and ideas together into something new, or trying to, anyway). And the more I write, the more I’m come to see what I’m writing as an act of faith — like prophecy, like worship, like teaching, like encouragement, like all those other gifts God uses for His kingdom.

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Erin January 29, 2010 at 9:53 am

I love poetry. I wrote my first poem when I was nine years old. It is the way my soul speaks. :)

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Maureen January 29, 2010 at 10:39 am

If you have ever heard Thomas Moore speak about and read poetry, you will understand how important poetry can be to our spiritual life. As Moore says and as I believe, poet after poet (Jane Hirshfield, Ann Sexton, W.S. Merwin, D.H. Lawrence, Joyce Rupp, John O’Donohue, so many others I could name) connects us to something profound, keeps alive sensitivity to the divine in life. Just think about Song of Songs! To be able to write poetry that moves people is a God-given gift.

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Jeff Goins January 29, 2010 at 11:23 am

Love this: “Some people don’t believe in God, but they can believe in poetry.”

And this: “[P]oetry is the secular route to faith concepts.”

Beauty is transcendent.

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nAncY January 29, 2010 at 12:59 pm

word
words
creation
God
power
good
man
words
good
evil
words
tounge
mind
Love
Jesus
word
power
words
Holy Spirit
word
words
heart
words
Love
man
tongue
hate
anger
guilt
words
power
forgiveness
words
espression
relate
word
words
hope
Love
words

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Monica Sharman January 29, 2010 at 2:26 pm

Yes, yes! Faith conversations happen best and most naturally through my life in poetry, dance, interests, common ground, . . .
I’m still learning this and wanting to live it.

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lorrie January 30, 2010 at 9:10 am

Love this last part…. Wonderful!!!

These people are poets, sure, but they are also sometimes prophets. They also sometimes tell us the things we know to be true, but we don’t want to hear.

And there is nothing random about it.

Reply

Bradley J. Moore January 30, 2010 at 5:25 pm

Great post, Marcus. Although I am not big into poetry, I certainly appreciate the art and beauty at its source. I love the story of your mystic moment on the Brooklyn Bridge reading Walt Whitman. I’ve had a few of those moments myself, though usually with music rather than poetry. Thanks to HCB (you, Nancy, Glynn, Maureen, LL, etc) for quietly luring me into the world of poetry, otherwise, who knows. I might have missed it altogether.

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Laura Boggess January 30, 2010 at 5:27 pm

What a beautiful picture I have in my mind of you sitting on the Brooklyn Bridge reading poetry. I like that, Marcus.

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Megan Willome January 30, 2010 at 9:55 pm

Wish I could’ve been on that bridge! Wasn’t it Joy Davidman who wrote about the way to God being through “Fairyland?”

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Chris Wiles February 3, 2010 at 8:59 pm

“poetry is the secular route to faith concepts”

YES. I think it was Bonhoeffer who said that we must learn to “speak in a secular way about God.” The arts are an excellent way to connect people to God, and the great thing about poetry is that unlike non-representational art, it means something specific.

Thanks for posting.

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Sally Ferguson February 13, 2010 at 7:04 pm

I have a greater appreciation for poetry by hearing your interpretation. It helps to make sense when explained…Thank you!

Reply

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