Rev. Amy Petrie Shaw. |
There
are some poems that your heart leaps to embrace because they say exactly what you want to say, but better than you can. Poems like that do not even have to be technically good—although it helps immeasurably if they are. The danger,
of course, is that you may simply be reinforcing
your own bias, entering once again the modern
echo chamber from which there is sometimes no escape. That Tea Party zealot or Trump fanatic might well read some raging rhyme and shout Amen! sure that its irrefutable truth with beat the devil. At least, hopefully, we
can recognize the trap and avoid its deepest pitfalls.
Last
week a poem by Amy Petrie Shaw, the Minister of the Lake Country Unitarian Universalist Church in Hartland, Wisconsin
became as viral as is possible for a wordy post with no cute
graphic meme in the small world of
UU’s. I guess it spoke to a lot of us. Poet
ministers or ministers who sometimes
write verse—there is a difference in self-conception and intent—can
be adept at this kind effort. Think of it as
economical sermonizing. In gifted hands, and Rev. Shaw from the evidence
of this poem seems to have them, it by-passes
self-righteous hectoring or dry didactics.
Shaw's congregation, the Lake County Unitarian Universalist Church in Hartland, Wisconsin. |
Rev.
Shaw is a Northern Kentucky University
graduate in English, with a minor in Women’s Studies and an Area of Concentration in Psychology. She earned her Master of Divinity degree from Meadville Lombard Theological School in
May of 2013, and was the winner of
the 2013 Roberta Nelson Prize in
Religious Education.
She
and her husband, Brian, live in
Hartland—surely a town in a pivotal ideological battleground state
with the most symbolic name possible. They share
a house with their cats, Dippy and Nike. They love the sense of community and warmth they have found there.
Shaw
came to ministry after a career as a
college professor and nurse executive, specializing in facility
restructuring and crisis management.
She is a gifted preacher, with
special skills working with children and young adults.
In
her spare time, Shaw is an artist
and writer. She plays the guitar, builds
dollhouses, and has been even engaged
in (competitive tomahawk throwing.
She is fascinated by computers and digital literacy, and is a power-user
of programs ranging from Adobe Photoshop CS5 to Movie Maker and Microsoft Publisher.
Amy
and Brian have two grown children
and three grandchildren, all of whom
live near London, England.
The poem which drew my attention was untitled on the internet. We’ll just call it by its first line. |
If
I Ask You to Tell Me About Your Faith
If I ask you to
tell me about your faith,
and you tell me
who it required you to harm today,
I don’t want to
know any more.
If you are proud
that today your god
called you to
make sure that this couple did not have a wedding cake.
And that 14 year
old trans-boy couldn’t use any bathroom safely,
I don’t want to
know any more.
If you worked
hard so
that people knew
that your god found this one foul
and that one
unacceptable,
if you spent
your day judging the sins
of everyone that
you met
so that you
could list all the reasons that your god wanted you
to turn them
away,
(don’t dare to
tell me the pain you caused will save them)
I don’t want to
know anymore.
If you made sure
to vote so that
the full time
minimum wage worker couldn’t support her family
and that none of
your tax money went to feed
the dad with 8
children and no job,
if you worked
hard so that Muslims and Sikhs
and even
Buddhists were afraid to practice their own religion
in your country
which is also their country,
if you declared
that is was only right to turn away
anyone
who didn’t have
the right papers
or the right
language,
to pass by on
the other side of the road
and to look away
from their pain and their blood,
I don’t want to
know anymore.
I don’t want to
know about a god so small that it rejoices
in pain.
If I ask you
about your god, and you cannot tell me
one person
that you fed
today,
one person that
you clothed
one person that
you helped to find a way forward
out of darkness
into light,
one person who
can never repay you
but you did it
anyway—I don’t want to know anymore.
I will know you
by what you have done for the least of us all.
So tell me. Can
you tell me about your faith?
—Amy
Petrie Shaw
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