Tell her to tie up her
hair. Come tell me all the things that you are telling her now – here, where I am
standing, where you should expect to find me in my mother’s house. Here where
I’ll be long hours after you’re gone, caressing the pot in my hand. Not your
flesh, but a bowl of clay made to be filled and emptied and washed for you. Jesus,
we are not all unbridled. Don’t you see that what I now do, I do for you? Pouring
out costly oil where there is no witness, here, in the kitchen – washing your
plate, not your feet. Catching at words through the doorway as they fall from
your lips to the floor where she sits. Come, Lord Jesus. Come. Put your hands
in the warm, soapy water next to mine and make my sacrifice holy.
“God uses broken things. It takes broken soil to produce a crop, broken clouds to give rain, broken grain to give bread, broken bread to give strength. It is the broken alabaster box that gives forth perfume.” ~ Vance Havner
Wednesday, 14 November 2012
FOR MARTHA
What she said was, Lord,
tell her to help me – but what she meant was, God, could you just look at me
once? Not at her, adoring, draped in her hair and a reckless perfume that
expunges, with one tilt of her hand, the redolent tang of salt herring with
soft roes, that I soaked overnight, skinned and filleted; the fat smell of the
lamb I roasted with sweet paprika, juniper berries and dill; the sharp note of spring
onions, that I trimmed and finely chopped; the pressed out aromas of garlic, olive
oil and freshly ground pepper; cabbage leaves that I blanched; radishes, that I
peeled and grated; cracked wheat, that I washed and soaked overnight; cinnamon
quills; honey; cloves; pomegranate syrup; lemon rind, that I grated; almonds,
pistachios, hazelnuts, that I roasted, broke, crushed for you.
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2 comments:
I cried. Thank you for putting it to words, I am a Martha.
And you are so beautiful. I've always been more of a 'let your hair down' kind of girl, lol. I'm so glad it spoke to you.
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