Under the Oak Trees of Mamre Genesis 18

Under the Oak Trees of Mamre                                Genesis 18

 

We have journeyed long between wilderness sun and shade

dragging Terah’s great vision with God-promises to match.

The years of hope and despair

grind out my soul

like mortar and pestle.

Give it up, Abram.

It’s done.

No descendants like stars.

 

Three visitors. “Welcome!”

Hospitality is survival out here.

“Get the flour, knead the bread old woman!”

“All of you who are mine –

kill the calf, smooth the cheese,

the richness of life on offer. Now!”

Earthly feast for heavenly presence.

Our poverty disguised.

 

I hobble.

A craggy old, baggy old

sack of bones

shrivelled by Hagar’s derision.

Hollowness remembered daily

in the shadow of her strapping young boy.

 

“Sarai will bear you a child”, the strangers said,

“before the year is out”.

 

I couldn’t help the laughter.

Beyond dry bitterness

an ironic splutter.

 

And so we laid together

like two open halves of a late summer peach,

drizzled with honey and juicy sweetness.

Just two old people

who love each other still.

 

Legacy for  generations.

 

Sharonne Price

March 2018

 

 

Esau

Esau

There is no fiat for forgiveness.
It emerges timid as a wintry dawn
after a threadbare night
when anger’s cobbling
can hold no more.

There is no period on forgiveness.
It must keep on and on.
Esau outstretches with open embrace,
and longs for trust entwined again.

There is knowing in the touching.
Still Jacob turns away
loaded with Laban’s possessions,
limping with Bethel blessing.

So the first-born picks up the old cloak of guilt and sorrow
and measures his twin in the cloud of dust.

In this journey of grace,
forgiveness strains forward yet again
and relinquishes winning.
Embrace may be warmth enough.

Sharonne Price