Thursday, April 17, 2025

A Poem for Maundy Thursday

Here we are at Maundy Thursday again, the Thursday in Holy Week that celebrates Jesus' last meal before the crucifixion.  I've celebrated in a variety of ways through the years.  Today I'll head down to Spartanburg (South Carolina) to teach, then I'll come home, and we'll go across a different mountain to be with Faith Lutheran Church in Bristol, Tennessee, where I will preach and preside.  It's a busy life, but a good one.

Blogging time is short this morning, so let me post an older poem. I wrote it years ago, I wrote it when my flight was delayed by hours and hours on Maundy Thursday at the Atlanta airport. As I observed the airport and thought about the ancient holiday and my home church, the poem practically wrote itself.  It was published in College English.



Maundy Thursday at Hartsfield


We long for Celestial food, or at least to leave our earthbound
selves behind, but it is not to be. The airport shuts
down as late thunderstorms sweep across the south.
I resign myself to spending Maundy Thursday in the airport.

One of a minority who even knows the meaning of Maundy,
I roam restlessly. I cannot even approximate
a Last Supper—the only food to be had is fast
and disgusting. I think of that distant
Passover, the Last Supper that transformed
us into a Eucharistic people.

A distant outpost of a vast empire, teeming
with a variety of humans, all hurrying
and keeping our heads down: Jerusalem or the modern
airport? I watch my fellow humans, notice
the hunger in their faces, their haunted feet,
so in need of love and water.

I watch Spring Breakers and athletes and moms
and gnarled elders and unattached children, all racing
through their earthly days, hurtling through time,
crossing continents, without any rituals to ground
them. I think of Christ’s radical
agenda: homelessness, care, and listening,
ignoring rules that made no sense,
making scarce resources stretch,
food eaten on the run, a community hunted
by their own and by the alien government.
I miss my own church, by now gathered in a dark
sanctuary, participating in ancient rituals
we don’t fully understand, looking for that thin
place between the sacred and the every day.

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