Emmaus in Summer
Posted: July 29, 2013 | Author: Mike Christie | Filed under: Bible, Faith | Tags: Dorothee Soelle, Emmaus, John Dominic Crossan, social justice | 2 Comments“Emmaus never happened. Emmaus always happens.”
— John Dominic Crossan, Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography
I have written much about Emmaus, though I normally reserve my comments for Easter. However, as I’ve mentioned, I have been taking the online course Soelle in Summer focusing on the work of Dorothee Soelle and facilitated by the marvelous Jane Redmont. Jane posted a poem by Soelle on Emmaus, which I reproduce below. It triggered a strong response from me, as the Emmaus story usually does. Here are the comments I made on the post, slightly edited.
The Emmaus story touches and moves me at more levels and in more ways than any other passage in the Bible. I have blogged about it many times. I’m always disappointed that it shows up in the Lectionary for Sunday morning only once in the 3-year cycle (Year A – Matthew, which is odd). Yes, I know it’s there for Easter evening every year.
So I was struck by Soelle’s taking that passage and interweaving it with images of social justice denied, and then suggesting that Cleopas and companion (probably his wife) were walking away from the “city of their hope” to where, as we might say today, the grass is (or rather, seems) greener. Yet they turn back to Jerusalem, their “city of their hope” when the meet the Christ.
Powerful.
I need to come back to this poem and spend some more time with it.
Here is the poem:
Song on the road to emmaus
So long we have been walking
away from the city of our hope
to a village where life is said to be better
Hadn’t we thought
we could overcome fear
the fear of the old pieceworker
that she’ll have to take sick leave
the fear of the turkish girl
that she’ll be deported
the fear of the haunted neurotic
that he’ll be committed
forever
So long we have been walking
in the same wrong direction
away from the city of our hope
to the village where there’s supposed to be water
Hadn’t we thought
we were free and could liberate
all those poor devils
the working man’s child held back and punished
in school
the adolescent on his motorbike
sent to the wrong work
for life
the deaf and dumb
in the wrong country
at the wrong time
silenced by working
a lifetime
for bread alone
So long we have been walking
in the same direction
away from the city
where our hope is still buried
Then we met someone
who shared his bread with us
who showed us the new water
here in the city of our hope
I am the water
you are the water
he is the water
she is the water
Then we turned around and went
back to the city of our buried hope
up to jerusalem
He who brought water is with us
he who brought bread is with us
we shall find the water
we shall be the water
I am the water of life
you are the water of life
we are the water of life
we shall find the water
we shall be the water
Dorothee Soelle
Revolutionary Patience (Orbis, 1977)
pp. 46-48