sometimes I wonder
if Mary breastfed Jesus.
if she cried out when he bit her
or if she sobbed when he would not latch.
and sometimes I wonder
if this is all too vulgar
to ask in a church
full of men
without milk stains on their shirts
or coconut oil on their breasts
preaching from pulpits off limits to the Mother of God.
but then i think of feeding Jesus,
birthing Jesus,
the expulsion of blood
and smell of sweat,
the salt of a mother’s tears
onto the soft head of the Salt of the Earth,
feeling lonely
and tired
hungry
annoyed
overwhelmed
loving
and i think,
if the vulgarity of birth is not
honestly preached
by men who carry power but not burden,
who carry privilege but not labor,
who carry authority but not submission,
then it should not be preached at all.
because the real scandal of the Birth of God
lies in the cracked nipples of a
14 year old
and not in the sermons of ministers
who say women
are too delicate
to lead.
A friend used to bug me to join his men’s group. He stopped after I told him the world was a frigging men’s group. He didn’t really get my point. Maybe I’ll join and bring this poem with me. He probably still wouldn’t get it though.
But for now, Merry Christmas and peace to you all.
Wishing you, “Tenderness for the past, courage for the present, hope for the future”. -Agnes M. Pahro
Why do we think Mary was meek and mild? She agreed to have a child out of wedlock in defiance of her culture. She sang a song of liberation and freedom for the oppressed and unjustly treated. She made a rough journey through to Bethlehem when heavily pregnant while riding on a donkey. Then another journey to Africa(Egypt) with an infant. A rebel mother who gave birth to a rebel son.