Fiat


by Karen Edmiston

You said that we would have a child

So I, with love, welcomed new life

and smiled with each wave and sea

of morning sickness,

caught up in this miracle-to-be.

“For You, Lord,” I said,

and offered each tiny suffering

as a gift to Thee,

incomparable to the gift of life

You were giving to me.

And so I reeled, stunned and shaken,

at my baby's death.

Forsaken.

Anger rose

and built a case

against misinterpreted signs of Grace.

I was so wrong –

“Here is a child,” You said,

or so I thought.

But my arms are empty, bereft.

There is nothing left of my trust when I listen for Your Voice.

How can I trust when I was so wrong?

How will I again be strong?

I quiet myself and turn to You,

O Ancient Beauty ever new…

I ask You, my truest and deepest Love,

for an answer, some comfort, a sign from above.

There is silence, and my tears…

tears of a mother's grieving love.

Then, in Your Kindness, Your encompassing Love,

You embrace me and speak:

the words from above flow through an earthen vessel.

A man of God who listens to me, and tells me I can —

I must — dare trust, for all is as it should be.

The mystery that is my child is in Your Hands,

Your Sacred Heart.

The part I play is to surrender and be free.

When next I quiet myself to pray,

“My Grace is sufficient for you,” You say,

“For My power is made perfect in weakness.”

The words play again and again in my mind,

like a record left to skip…

they rip into the core of my grief

and leave me no choice but to drop to my knees

and offer You my child.

Oh, heal my heart, Lord, bitter and spent,

Be perfect in my weakness,

my Pearl of great price.

Though I offer it, Lord, imperfectly and poorly,

my life is Yours.

Let Your Grace suffice.

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