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This poem tells the story of Easter through the perspective of Mary Magdalene |
There is an essence about this silent spring morning that feels to me different, as though somewhere hidden within the cool, dewy sunlight shone a secret that I ought to know. I enter the garden, which smells overly sweet, and laden with flowers too bright to match with the pain that darkens my heart burdened with sorrow and fright. The grief washes o’er me; I am there once again; to my knees on the soft grass I fall. The man on the cross that desolate day was my Savior, the Lord of all. The soldiers arrest him, condemn him to death for wicked lies and fallacy. They crown him with thorns and tear off his clothes, let him stand for the whole world to see. On his bruised, bleeding shoulders they then press a beam of the cruelest rough, splintery wood. He accepts his undeserved fate with patience, as only he could. This inhumane torture procures an uncommon response from Jesus, harshly crushed ‘neath the weight. His eyes, richly dark, seek me out in the crowd. Shining from them is sweetness, not hate. His mother, Mary, who stands beside me can no longer restrain her tears. Though she is silent, the large drops of sadness convey clearly her faith--and her fears. The long line processes, marching on with a devotion true and free. We stop at last atop a high hill, the last hill, Calvary. The soldiers bid Jesus to lie down on the cross, and humbly he obeys. The nail pierces his flesh; the sky starts to weep on this, the most dreadful of days. They are now nearly finished; the cross stands upright. At its foot we gather to stand. Above us our good, gentle Jesus looks down and, wincing, points with his right hand. Bound, of course, by the nails though he is his message is simple and clear. He speaks to his mother so low and so soft that I must strain to hear: “Woman,” he says, gazing at his mother, then his disciple, “behold, your son.” “Behold, your mother,” he says to John. With those words, his work is done. Slowly, slowly creeps the time as Jesus writhes in pain. Mingled with our falling tears blood and sweat drip like the rain. At last he takes one final breath and raises his eyes to the sky. “Father, into your hands I commend my spirit!”- his last words, a dying cry. At that moment, sheer blackness envelopes the earth, the crowd fades and starts slowly away. “Surely, this man was the Son of God,” I hear a soldier say. The mist of my memory disappears as I survey the tomb to see-- the stone is gone! they’ve taken him! “Oh, Lord, where could he be?” I hear light footsteps approach behind me, the gardener, I know. “Lady, why are you crying?” he asks. I divulge my tale of woe. “They’ve taken my Lord,” I confess in tears, turning to face the man. “Do you know where they’ve placed him?” I ask, as clearly as I can. A timbre in his voice distracts me; I begin to realize that something is different about this man and I lift my tear-filled eyes. “Teacher!” is my joyful shout as again to my knees I fall for standing before me is the man who is risen my Savior, the Lord of all. ~Adapted from the Gospels of Matthew and Luke |