October 31, 2022

The Noise of Politics, by Walter Brueggemann

We watch as the jets fly in                                                               

     with the power people and

     the money people,

     the suits, the budgets, the billions.

 

We wonder about monetary policy
     because we are among the haves,
and about generosity
     because we care about the have-nots.

 

By slower modes we notice
   Lazarus and the poor arriving from Africa,
   and the beggars from Central Europe, and
   the throng of environmentalists
   with their vision of butterflies and oil
   of flowers and tanks
   of growing things and killing fields.

 

We wonder about peace and war,
     about ecology and development,
     about hope and entitlement.

 

We listen beyond jeering protesters and
     soaring jets and
   faintly we hear the mumbling of the crucified one,
   something about
     feeding the hungry
     and giving drink to the thirsty,
     about clothing the naked,
     and noticing the prisoners,
     more about the least and about holiness among them.

We are moved by the mumbles of the gospel,
   even while we are tenured in our privilege.

 

We are half ready to join the choir of hope,
half afraid things might change,
     and in a third half of our faith turning to you,
     and your outpouring love
     that works justice and
     that binds us each and all to one another.

 

So we pray amidst jeering protesters
     and soaring jets.
   Come by here and make new,
     even at some risk to our entitlements.

 



Walter Brueggemann. Prayers for a Privileged People (Nashville: Abingdon, 2008), pp. 21-22.

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