TFR Home Page | Contents | Prev. Page | Next Page | Comments |
Luke I’m wondering what it would be like to be one of these shepherds out in some field at night, with a flock of sheep in the dark where all there is is a rustle of wool and bleating-- I’m wondering why sheep don’t sleep in this dream; the other shepherds are out cold, the fire has dwindled to coals and I’m up in a tight spiral of insomnia, too tired to get up and toss another log on the fire, not really tending to the flock at all-- these four-legged alarm clocks, who rather than blissfully jumping by one-by-one, carrying me off into the land of serene sleep, woke me in the first place. I realize I’m tired of being a shepherd where there is no quitting time, the clothes are coarse wool, sandals of dried leather that bring out a blister every spring. Suddenly-- the author of my dream writes-- there is a host of heaven-- a cacophony of shooting stars, I imagine, with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir singing in the background, bright lights in my blood-shot eyes, and somewhere overhead a virtuoso trumpeter is playing reveille, annunciating an awakening of other proportions. I’m wide-eyed, shaking from the core more than the cold turn of night-- all I can remember is that waterfall voice rumbling "Do not be afraid," like standing on a fault line in another dream with the ground-- the very ground-- shaking, having faith that this earth still holds me in the palm of its hand. 12 Mar 04 Cf. Luke 2:8-14 © Copyright 2004, E. Granger-Happ, All Rights Reserved. Contents - Lent, 2004 |
© Copyright 1997, 2024, The Fairfield Review Inc., All Rights Reserved.
Document last modified on: 03/21/2004