SERMONS FROM THIS WORLD: ENCOUNTERS WITH 'THIS WORLD AND BEYOND'

 







Sermons from this World





SERMONS FROM THIS WORLD




DURING THE TIME OF CRISIS IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

2025



ENCOUNTERS


WITH


THIS WORLD AND BEYOND: THE MARBURG SERMONS OF RUDOLF BULTMANN


1936-1950





BY JIM BODEEN




12 SECTIONS AND CODA with notes and acknowledgments



WINTER 2025




PREFACE



I say more: the just man justices;

Keeps gráce: thát keeps all his goings graces;

Acts in God’s eye what in God’s eye he is--

Christ. For Christ plays in ten thousand places,

Lovely in limbs, and lovely in eyes not his

Gerard Manley Hopkins, As Kingfishers Catch Fire


All things counter, original, spare, strange--


Gerard Manley Hopkins, Pied Beauty




At 13 years of age, in a large junior high school in Seattle, newly transplanted from rural North Dakota, my English teacher, Mr. Collins, had two obsessions, poetry and diagramming sentences. I earned my first D in his class, learning to diagram sentences. He also taught us William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience. The Lamb and The Tyger. They made sense to me. Later, but maybe even then, I would say to myself that I knew about these poems before we left North Dakota. These poems, along with the Chambered Nautilus, but these poems. I knew the cry from our family home, the old Victorian mansion where we lived rent-free because my father was manager of the Farmer’s Union grain elevator, the house located across from the Lutheran Church where I was baptized, and the church itself.


Tyger tyger burning bright. What the hammer! What the chain! In what furnace was thy brain?


And more, and all of it:


What immortal hand or eye


dare/could--


Which?


I knew that my house would be built of poetry and literature when I enlisted in the Army at 20, in 1965, in New Orleans. Wasn’t failure the point?


When that dark green bus went through the gate at Fort Ord, California, I asked myself, What have I done? The Army chaplain holding weekly classes for ones like me, never told me that it was his move that put me in with the medical service corps, but he did tell me that as a Lutheran chaplain, our church, his and mine, believed in the war.

These were the years 1965-1968.


Bultmann’s Marburg sermons compiled in the book This World and Beyond, contain sermons delivered between 1936-1950. I will not encounter Bultmann’s work until 1976.


Here’s William Blake again. Sitting in the English professor’s office one day, after the Army, back in school, newly married, I pull a small, beautifully bound on boards volume titled A Grief Observed by C. S. Lewis. It turns out that my professor had recently lost his wife in childbirth, and he was newly relocated, widowed, and the sole provider of two young children. Professor Don King would become my graduate adviser, my friend, and the godfather of our daughters. By the time I finished graduate school, part of me believed, or thought any way, all puffed-up, that I was C.S. Lewis.


I never let go of that woman who I had caused so much trouble for, and we were married three months after I had come home from Viet Nam in August of 1968. We had joined a church and the Icelandic pastor would introduce me to the prophets through Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel. He looked askance when I brought up C.S. Lewis. I couldn’t read the New Testament, or the Gospels. William Blake’s poems. They sounded like Jesus. Hosea and Amos--they spoke for me.


Somehow I found a course offered at Seattle University on the New Testament. When I inquired, they said, Yes, but. This is a 3-year program for priests and nuns in Vatican II. This before I told them I was Lutheran. There was a certain interest from the Jesuits at Seattle University in making this possible. When I told my wife about it, I would have to tell her there would be some pre-requisites. She would have to participate in the communications course, with me, on campus. It was a 3-year course. Everyone had doubts. My wife said, Three years?

I entered the 3-year program at Seattle University armed with C. S. Lewis. I would soon meet what I was looking for, the man who would open the New Testament for me, my Christology professor, Stanley Marrow, Iraqi, who would take me to Rudolf Bultmann.


This was in 1975. Fifty years later I’m reading Bultmann’s sermons from Marburg written between the years 1936-1950.


One day Stanley saw me reading at a table, remembering the look on my face during class. He asked me, Jim, What’s wrong? What you said today about C.S. Lewis. Jim, compared to Rudolf Bultmann, C. S. Lewis is an ant. Then, what does that make you? Jim, C. S. Lewis is a very great man.


Death and resurrection.


I have never told the Rudolf Bultmann story in a way that made sense.


I open these sermons during the time of the American crisis.


Jim Bodeen

February 2025










Kindness is always undeserved. And what rejoices man’s heart is precisely what he is given as a sheer gift, i.e. the bestowal of a gift which he has not deserved.


Rudolf Bultmann, This World and Beyond: The Marburg Sermons: 1936-1950


May 10, 1942






“Will any one of you, who has a servant ploughing or keeping sheep, say to him when he has come in from the field, ‘Come at once and sit down at table’? Will he not rather say to him, ‘Prepare supper for me, and gird yourself and serve me, till I eat and drink; and afterwards you shall eat and drink’? Does he thank the servant because he did what was commanded? So you also, when you have done all that is commanded you, say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done what was our duty.’”


St. Luke 17: 7-10




AROUSING TOTAL OPPOSITION: The Beginning


Down from the mountain, legs worn,

stretched and dry from leather boots,

Chafed muscles cry for lotion. Waking in bed,

the lost pencil for margin notes

in the library-loan book of Bultmann

sermons* on living room floor

under footstool. I get up to pee,

applying lotion while retrieving

the pencil. The old man must die,¨

Bonhoeffer says. Bultmann turning

the parable every possible way.

Workers in the vineyard,

can they not see God’s generosity?

Even when crops fail? Remembering

an old man talking about his pastor-

father, You were able to work, no!

Bultmann, too, like

a Navajo Blessingway Singer

from another world. Hozho.

And Tillich arrives in the mail.

Nothing can be hidden—It is always

reflected in the mirror in which nothing

can be concealed. My old pastor

brought you to me. Dear Paulus,

You learned men of crises

at my door, me, the worst of sinners

as Bonhoeffer says to seminarians,

common, a Dakota prairie dog.

How else to have hope?

The parable insists the vineyard owner speak.

Do you begrudge my generosity?

So many helping to understand.

Poverty written on my face. Bultmann ending

his sermon at the beginning,

August, 1942, with lines from the poet,

another Paul, Gerhardt, (the poets

at every trailhead with Bultmann),

We are guests at a strange hearth.

Too many houses have been built

in the forests. The cities are on fire.

Holderlin, C. F. Meyer, Rilke,

signs themselves, declarations

of suffering leading to grace.

Unarmed in a simple message.

Salve from poets rubbed

into an old man’s legs.

To be nothing here.


*Rudolf Bultmann, This World and the Beyond: Marburg Sermons, 1936-1950.




ANOTHER ANNIVERSARY POEM


Writing in the pew, after worship,

Bell Choir practicing, each pew draped

with handmade quilts sewn during the year,

Bart’s directing choir,

an artist himself, jazz pianist,

Karen is on the near end

closest to where I sit. Next Sunday

they will ring for the congregation.

They’re practicing, O Come, O Come,


Emmanuel. God with us in the pew.

It’s my dad’s middle name, never

used by him, but he could sign the E

with a flourish. Karen plays four bells

at the same time—G, A, A flat, B flat.

They’re talking back and forth now.

Bart is laughing. My Notebook’s open, along

with Bonhoeffer’s, Cost of Discipleship.

I’m three weeks living with his work


on the Beatitudes. I’ll never finish.

Blessed are the merciful. [May I die,

right here, Lord?] For they shall receive

mercy. Jesus speaking to his disciples,

Bonhoeffer reminds us. They have

renounced their own dignity. Bonhoeffer's

27 years old writing this. The same age

as Jimi* and Janis when they died.

The year is 1933. Bonhoeffer will be


hanged in 1945, at the age of 39,

the same age as Flannery O’Connor,

Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm.

It will be spring right before Allied

Liberation. The day will be the 9th

of April, sharing the same day

as my mother’s birthday. They’re

ringing again, the bells, Rejoice!

Rejoice! Bell ringers throwing


out the sounds with their arms.

The disciples have wed themselves

to the poor, the stranger, and the wronged.

They wear the clothes of shame

and dishonor. This is the beatitude,

great gift, given to me by my mother,

and I have passed it on to my children

who have wrapped others in mercy

for more than half a century. It’s


too much. I imagine my children

as bell ringers. Cowering before

their courage, I often find myself unable

to praise. I hear them most clearly

in Cannonball Adderley’s great

song, Mercy, released in 1964,

written by Joe Zawinul, Adderley’s

piano player—Austrian, by the way,

who often had to ride hidden


in the car driving in the South

during Jim Crow because everybody

but Ziwinul was black. Mercy, mercy, mercy,

how Adderley introduces the song. Often times

we’re not ready for adversity, he says,

Zawinul playing in the background.

Returning to hear the song on YouTube

over the years, is how I memorized

Adderley’s words, and his speaking


voice, repeating, Mercy, mercy, mercy.

Rhyme in adversity. Its marriage to trouble.

One time at Thanksgiving my sister drops

a bowl of olives, crying, Oh mercy me.

A granddaughter asks her why she said that.

She says, We laugh so we don’t have

to cry, Baby. Mercy. It’s the joke that hides

our treasure. The way Jesus says, Price paid.

The way Karen rings four bells.



*Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin both died in 1970.


[Why wouldn’t I invite the man to my table, the one who opened the New Testament to me? Why wouldn’t I invite him to my table? He was the one who has been ploughing the field for ones like me

for half a century. jb]



LET ME SEE IF I CAN SAY IT FOR MYSELF


            Lines for Rudolf Bultmann



My country is in crisis and so am I.


Blessed by family, I am surrounded by books and art.

Karen and I—60 years knowing, 56 married.

You met her in the anniversary poem.

Sit with us. My son-in-law

made the Gathering sign

and the crosses come from El Salvador,

the ones over this table.


Of the twenty-two sermons in the book,

This World and Beyond, by Rudolf Bultmann,

I have written them into 12 sections. Why 12?

There are 12 apostles, yes.

But there are more than 12 apostles

inside these pages. There are 12 steps

in the Alcoholics Anonymous program,

too, aren’t there. There are. And there

are more than 12 alcoholics inside

these pages, too. The poet, Lucille Clifton,

who is here, was born with 12 toes.

Twenty-two sermons, 12 sections.

More than one world, too.


May my prayers for these pages

include 22 petitions and one prayer

for each of the 12 sermons.

But there are 22 sermons.

Correct. There are 22 sermons.

There are grandchildren, too.

Beautiful children, children

also in crisis. My grandchildren.

There are poems for the grandchildren here.

The poems for the grandchildren

show them in their beauty,

in the before of what’s coming.

Not all of them are mine.

None of the grandchildren are mine.


All of the grandchildren are here.

Not all of the poems for grandchildren are here.

All of the grandchildren, none of the grandchildren.

This is the part that I can say, Let the poems be written.

This is the part where what can be said

and what can’t be said is said like this.

When you meet Josh you meet them all.

When you meet Samantha you meet them all.

When you meet Deanna you meet them all.

You meet them all when you meet Katie.


Some of this is about saying what can’t be said.

All of the children are at risk.

It is beyond my understanding to contemplate

a world of children who do not have poems

written for them. It is that simple.


The man who wrote these twenty-two sermons

during the years 1936-1950, Rudolf Bultmann,

found a way through crisis. That this book

has come into my hands at this time,

is a blessing for one such as me,

one who was given the beyond

as a country boy at a young age.

A man living in crisis, a crisis

he didn’t always recognize.

A man who knew he could never

get there on his own.

A man whose country is in crisis.

And all these children. All of these

grandchildren. They’re all his.

None of them are his.






“...to stand already at the terminal point of this age. For such a one true prayer is already

a reality. But the promise of the gift of prayer is preceded by the promise of the gift of joy, of a joy ‘which no one will take from us.’. This implies a joy which is no longer threatened by the world, because the believer is as it were already removed from the world and has overcome it, as is suggested in the first letter of John: ‘This is the victory that overcomes the world, our faith’.” (5:4)


Rudolf Bultmann, This World and Beyond: The Marburg Sermons: 1936-1950


May 30, 1943






“So you have sorrow now, but I will see you again and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you.”


St. John 16: 22.


I. THE SERMONS THAT MATTER


    In all this, have we been speaking of a remote past, which may be

    of interest to us but which fundamentally no longer concerns us?

            --Rudolf Bultmann, June 7, 1936


Driving down Fruitvale to have

my tires checked by Russ at Tires U-Save,

in the Honda Fit, three days,

three sermons into Bultmann’s


Marburg Sermons, This World

And the Beyond, 1936-1950,

twenty-one sermons, available

to me by way of Inter-library Loan


from the local public library,

I pull off to the shoulder of the road

after failing to steer safely

writing in my notebook,


Mostly, I just breathe,

holding this book, relieved,

(still in dis-belief) at what

I hold, I’m holding these sermons!


They’re in my hands.

This confirmation. These 50 years.

Afraid that I’ll lose it

before getting to the air machine


and the life of my tires.

There. Now I can drive again,

turn into traffic, arriving.

Sitting in the waiting room,


cold, two doors opening,

closing, in and out of the shop

workers, seated in the plastic

and aluminum chair, notebook


and sermons bound and not

remaindered, Bultmann writes,

This is the critical advent question.

He is with his students and colleagues,


with them, in their language, ahead

of them yes, but in hearing distance.

1936. It is January 11, 2025.

Here, there has been an election.


Bultmann cites the poet, The story of our days,

he has been reading forgotten poems

of Karl Immermann, gazing into evening,

and lo, beyond our time to guide


our children’s course, the story

of our days, our age’s stain,

must be effaced. Only in the waiting

then, we see ourselves with a chance


come from elsewhere. Forgotten

in the stacks, maybe stored in the library

basement, retrieved, delivered,

temporarily mine, 42 more days!


Fragile binding eternal, even

conscious fingers and hands

breaking under use, under-used

before evangelical clamor.






II. RUDOLF BULTMANN’S FIRST SERMON FROM MARBURG:

    [from the second book of Marburg sermons : This World and the Beyond]

        Acts 17: 22-32

        June 7, 1936

        “I even found an altar with this inscription: TO AN UNKNOWN GOD. Now what you worship

        as something unknown, I am going to proclaim to you.”

            Acts 17: 23


This is Paul talking to the Men of Athens.


Paul introduces his God, the creator, “who does not live in temples built by hands…”

Acts 17: 24


“In Him we move and have our being.” Paul says more about his God, before returning to the inscription on the altar to the Greek god.

Acts 17: 28


“...as even some of your poets have said, ‘We are his offspring.’

Acts 17: 28


“For we are indeed his offspring…”


Paul is quoting Aratus of Soli, here, Acts 17: 28, and see also Cleanthes’ Hymn to Zeus.. Aratus was a poet and astronomer from Cilicia, Paul’s own province. Aratus’ poem is called “Phenomena.”


Having marked his territory, and his boundaries now, Bultmann sets out, moving deeper into his sermon, quoting the young Nietzsche: “Thou, unknown God, thee will I know…”


This is from the first of twenty-one sermons in Bultmann’s This World and the Beyond, collected in the book, The Marburg Sermons. In this first sermon, Bultmann names the following poets:


Aratus, Cleanthes, Epimenides, Holderlin, Virgil, Karl Immermann, Dwinger, Goethe, Nietzsche, R.A. Schroeder, Wilhelm Busch, Ernst Wiechert, Paul Gerhardt, Mathias Claudius—AKA ASMUS, Schubert, Jesus, Eichendorff, Homer, Wilhelm Raabe, Klopstock, C. F. Meyer, Hebbel, Thomas Carlyle, Adalbert Stifter, Schuler, J. Chr. Gunther, Franz Werfel, Novalis, Rilke, A.V. Arnem, Pindar, Paul Fleming, Tibillus, Hoffmannshal.


My list here contains 34 poets. I may have missed some. My apologies to Rudolf Bultmann. I do not count poets included in the Bible, except for Jesus. I do not count David, the psalmists, the author/s of Lamentations, or others. Naming the poets Bultmann cites is one of my points in this documents.


In addition to introducing the first poet like this: “As some of your own poets have said,…” Bultmann introduces the poets like this:


“This the poets also know…”


“The poet says…”


“For the poet wishes…”


Try doing this work without the poets. Many have tried it. Many haven’t given it a second thought. Ask yourself, those of you with ears to hear, what is missing? Or who? Among your listeners maybe. Among your listeners, What doesn’t get heard?


Poets are present in 20 of the 21 sermons in This World and the Beyond.


This first sermon with Paul in the Aereopagus, is also a sermon full of repetition. In Him we move and have our being… said 5 times? More? In this sermon? I’m not counting here, but the movement, the transport, my God! It’s immense—the territory covered. I’d love to see the notes from those in attendance. Wouldn’t it be something, to see the notes of the students? Of Bultmann’s colleagues in attendance! And this, too, Did even some of these notes reach me, in some even fragmented form—somewhere in my own pilgrimage? Know, too. I didn’t have the qualifications to have sat in that auditorium, chapel, sanctuary, listening.



After listening, walking,

my son calls from his mountain

where he’s walking himself,


it is a day of calls. My grand-daughter

calls from the university, telling

of her mornings with meditation


and writing. She studies psychology,

and asks questions of my reading.

Her questions mirror her own listening,


and I feel like the grandfather

vulnerable, aka the fool, too ready

to believe his stubbornness understands.


Bultmann’s talking about fear

and security. My wife returns

from quilting with her friends


and hands me a poem, The Way

It Is, by Bill Stafford: There’s a thread

you follow. It goes among things that change.


We talk about the poem at dinner.

We talk about the thread

over coffee. We have been doing


this for a long time. Bultmann writes,

How seldom now are we terrified

at ourselves, refers to Dwinger


who wrote about a man in Siberia

constructing a piano of wooden keys

so he could play music in a bad time,


a man holding onto his thread.

Poets want to believe history

is avenged, but the gospel


does not suggest this. Witness

to Christ takes many forms.

Thread that vexes the world.




III. AT THE END OF A TERM


        “Were it not for this intrusive word, then life might be mastered.”

                Rudolf Bultmann Sermon, Marburg, June 27, 1937


Waiting for generosity in the out-breath

one asks, How long has be been like this?

The one who says he’s so grateful. Walk


away from that one, Soldier Boy.

One can say, imagining this situation,

end of school term, professor


talking, exploring with students,

what they got right, what they didn’t get to,

this term—but not only these few—all,


everybody, the entire faculty present,

what it means to come up short. Also this:

What’s coming. Some of it, even here,


said between the lines, dangerous.

Cristo peligroso. When family members

become casualties of war, of war’s lies,


one becomes existentially different.

Existence is different.

After death, too, it’s different.


This June 27, 1937 Marburg letter,

listening from this far,

where fear has found us


returning to your Christ-Hope

center, surrendering pride, discovering

insecurity of what seemed secure.


We have outdone you

in the belief of ourselves!

Those justified by faith, deportees


and all others othered.

Deportation is trauma.

What made us proud now


makes the oppressor bold.

Christ has truly laid His grip

upon us, falling back, only


on His resurrection.

We could not have done this

on our own. How


can it not be?

This intrusive word.

These tentative steps.




IV. THE PEW



I sit in the pew.

This is where I worship from.

On Sunday.


On Sundays.


Other than Karen,

the people who sit with me

in the pew

are not in the pew.


My people are not here.


The pew.

It’s not easy.


Pastors say,

It’s never easy

stepping

into the pulpit.


How could it not be lonely?


Still, we fill it up each Sunday.

It was crowded this morning.

This pew.

Filled up.


All of us scrunched together.


Shoulder to shoulder,

scrunched in the pew.




V. LET US WITH THE POET INVOKE SUNDAY THUS*


        What has Sunday to say to us, this day on which the appeal

        of Christ strikes home to us with peculiar power?

                Rudolf Bultmann, July 28, 1938, This World and Beyond


Decades before Ellington, too.

And decades before I became conscious,

I was a boy from the country, dry-land farming before oil, winter wheat,

town boy on top of that, before we had to leave.

Ellington, black band leader traveling by night

during the time of Jim Crow, the segregated time

you knew from reading, before you crossed

the Atlantic. You might know it, too--


Come Sunday, from the jazz suite,

Black, Brown and Beige, 1943.

Musical history of Black Americans.

In ‘58 Ellington added text

and the song becomes an American Standard.

God almighty, God of love


Sitting at kitchen table with your sermon.*

You’re working with Matthew 11: 28-30--

Vengan a mi todos ustedes que estan cansados,--

take my yoke—Duke, riding passenger at night

crossing state lines, used to say, Wake me

when we get there. He wrote in the car,

more music than any American composer.

Your sermon from This world and beyond,

offers this petition, If only each day began

with quiet self-recollection in the presence of God.

I transcribe sentences into my notebook,

this book on loan from a university library,

to me of all people, Sunday is the day

for the soul. Here we find those hidden things,

slowing down the struggling empire, His yoke,

not mine. You remind us to give thanks

for this new beginning. This time is how

I know, how I connect Ellington to Bultmann,

all that we never learned when you both

were here. Here’s Duke: He’ll give

peace and comfort, to every troubled mind.

And here’s you. We are truly weary…

Work is not our master. Mi carga es liviana.


The time we live in graces me. So many

carry me in song and sermon. You invoke the poet,

thus: ...all week-day wanderers, burdened.

Come Sunday. Gustav Schuler ends

your sermon, Mahalia ends Duke’s song.

Go in secret. So many listeners.

These are the mountains from another land.



*24 July 2938, Rudolf Bultmann, The Marburg Sermons

St. Matthew 11: 28-30.



WAITING FOR THE ARRIVAL OF THE PASTOR


        I said to my soul, be still and wait without hope…

                T.S. Eliot, East Coker, Four Quartets


        ...for we cannot touch bottom in these deep waters; the world

        that is revealed to us entirely exceeds us. We can understand

        only what God reveals to us.

                Michael Edwards, The Bible and Poetry


Snow and ice on the driveway

when you knock, But come in.

Excited by your presence

I go looking for a book


and get lost in my own bookshelves.

Ice everywhere bringing danger

beyond falling. This winter storm

has nothing to do with snow on roadways.


I return to sit empty-handed,

learning of your installation, order

this book, and it comes on time.

Maybe I ordered the wrong one?


The psalmist walking rails slips

back and forth between anger and praise.

It doesn’t matter, Pastor Kathleen.

The pastor who knows the walk


is dangerous knows to use a shovel.

Being so close to death, she can stand on her feet.

Installation marries the word to the walk.

That pastor can point to another way.


--for the Installation of Pastor Kathleen Anderson

First Lutheran Church, Pasco, Washington

31 January 2025



DRIVING TO ELLENSBURG ON I-90

TO STUDY BONHOEFFER WITH STEVE

BEFORE THE 2024 ELECTION



                --for Steve Hill



Driving home he says these things

come up on his phone every day--



I get the last one: What good shall I do?

This thing called grace, the cheap one,



what we talk about. Steve’s catalogue

built from yard sales, a garden with no



white space, surrounded

(immersed?) by the homeless



(and every homeless plant

re-planted) is a catalogue of things



to do daily advocating for those

living in tents, sleeping under tarps.



Shopping carts, dogs, doorway

urinals, letters to city hall, nothing



eliminated from Steve’s agenda.

You don’t go off the handle,



ever? Nope.

What would that do? The book



in his bag, today, Trash.

But I thought you were reading Bonhoeffer?



Steve is costly grace. Steve has

his twenty people, it’s such a small



circle, he says, walking me through

his compost system, from kitchen



waste to aged top

soil, showing me how his sprinklers



keep things moist. Here pick

some figs, he says. This is Cedar



Monroe’s poor white journey, Trash.,

still deep suffering to attend to,



still much work to be done,

Steve handing Monroe’s book



to me in the car, paraphrasing

his own neighborhood full of color,



and poor whites: 66 million poor

whites in America: If you are housed,



or at least a verbal agreement to live somewhere…

Pastor Monroe. His cross on his desk:



We are not trash. The systems that kill us

are trash, his epilogue his anthem. Steve’s



got his hat on, his suspenders,

in cutoffs, looking at a boarded up



Victorian house as we drive

neighborhoods: Wouldn’t it be fun



to get that house and a bunch of kids

and fix it up! Bonhoeffer knows



deeply, he knows, how the Gospel

gets turned into its opposite through



such easy moves. How does Jesus

read scripture! So interesting.



Where do you begin?

The way Steve opens his phone--



Names what he’s grateful for,

three things, asks, What good shall



I do today, saying,

Good things will happen.



One can’t be Christian and nationalist.

Answer your own questions.



VI. “THE WRITTEN WORD BECAME A VOICE AGAIN”--Michael Edwards,

        The Bible and Poetry


       The New Testament contains no word which has a direct bearing on a situation

       such as is ours to-day….The New Testament pays no attention to these time

       periods which are so significant to us.

            Bultmann, 27 July 1938, Marburg Sermons


It won’t be there, that word we’re looking for,

but there is a word contained in the word,

we have that, and that’s the assuring


thread, as woke as I am blind. Farewell

words of Jesus for seminarians. Am I not

the school boy beginning to get the idea?


Isn’t this a good sign, if it’s anything.

We’re not going to get there on our own.

In-breaking time, Father Hopkins:


I am soft-sift in an hour glass.*

Riding the breath of now,

breathless, how could I ever think


I was the strong man any-way?

Look. Hope is the chink saving

me from satisfaction. Even


with the gift of a listening notebook.

Make peace. It’s been given.

Why these dare-deaths, this crew


in Unchrist all rolled in ruin.**

Time is in the other, beyond,

and can be heard without fear.



29 January 2025



*The Wreck of the Deutschland, Gerard Manly Hopkins

**The Loss of the Eurydice, Gerard Manly Hopkins



VII. RAW NOTES FROM THE AMERICAN SONG BOOK


        LET ME ASK A QUESTION: Is the American

        Songbook the same thing as your Leuchtturm1917?

        RESPONSE: It is, it is. Very good. This is called

        witnessing for the defense.



As of now Sunnyside police is not working with ICE.

We live between the ridges, and this is an organization.

This is how we talk with each other up and down the valley.

Every day is a lobby day.


It’s already happening.

What it means to take direct action is what’s being explored.

NPR is here. Accompaniment.

Most of our work has been in churches

because they’ve got big buildings and they’re empty.


I remember the first time I heard B. B. King sing,

Don’t open the door for nobody. It wasn’t on no record.

Live, baby, live. Live blues.

Playing Lucille, his guitar.

The guitar that can’t be replaced

He didn’t see this coming. No, no, no. He didn’t.


That’s what I hear. It’s a point of emphasis.


Unless they’ve got a search warrant, don’t open that door.

Don’t open that door for Nobodaddy.

The strong man keeps coming on.

They taught you the religion they disgraced.

Don’t open that door. It was the poet Carl Sandburg

who said, Strong men coming on.


This is a history in rivers. Call it Upstream.

Call it from mothers coming from a dark sea.

Two names merging, diverging, calling Yes,

Carl Sandburg, calling Yes, Sterling Brown.

Celebrate Chicago. Celebrate African origins.

Celebrate any bodaddy who knows American poetry.


A quiz: Answer Sandburg. Answer Brown.

A clue: Both of them are saints.

Who wrote: They go down shot, hanged, sick, broken.

Who wrote: They put hammers in their hands.


B. B. King sang: ‘Cause I don’t want a soul, baby

Hangin’ around my house when I’m not at home.


If you see something, you call.

You call.

Every time information gets passed around, it gets distorted.


The strong man talks everyday.


These raw notes.

They’re part of the preparation.

These woven voices.


Some of this stuff, some of this stuff

we have to be prepared for.

It takes people to circle the familiar.

Strong men keep me.

Strong men help me sleep.

There are others, keeping me

from sleep, but these are the ones

who come to me in song.





VIII. THE POETS ALWAYS SHOW UP IN PROFESSOR BULTMANN’S SERMONS


“The poet says: ‘World history implies world judgment.’ But this is not the meaning here. For the poet wishes to affirm that in the course of world history all wrong is avenged, all right finally triumphs, and that the development of world history is an upward progress towards the light. But the gospel does not suggest this.”

        Rudolf Bultmann, May 15, 1938. This World and the Beyond


Still here, with just this much,

and this much is a lot

being just this much.


And the kitchen, plentiful.

Discovery while baking.

Here one can be fooled by success


One can also be flat-out fooled.

Different things.

All beautiful. Today,

building a Boston Cream Pie,

baking for a woman elder

who has never been given a party--

there is joy in the kitchen

even while I’m weeping non-stop

while friends face deportation,

Help me understand this.


Knowing just this much, only

this far. Trauma

has entered the kitchen,

I say to Karen,


who rings bells in the morning.

Bells are not neutral--

There must be more

than the four theologians

of crisis come from Germany*

during the World War--

Bells are not neutral.

The bells themselves.

Made to ring,

they are adversarial

like hope. They are sounds

of the universe ringing,

Dis-arm, dis-arm!

and built for penetration.

Bells call for listening,

not manipulation.

Bells pursue a path

overcoming sorrow,

thrown even in anger.

The poets who hear the bells

listen for what the listening gives them.

They want to listen like Crazy Horse.

The poets are complete in their complaint.


Some of the poets quit listening.


Listening itself fails to understand.


And the other ones, too, who are so many,

the he ones who chose silence, who adopted it,

silence become their way and practice.

becoming what cannot be coming--


become a program of separation and deportation.

What about them? The ones that are so many.


There is a cake in the oven.


Deportation is trauma.


The carefully tempered eggs

in cream do not call for attention.

The oven respected, is not feared.

Poets mostly have accepted their vows,

as other poets in other times

suffered, were suffered, ignored and laughed at.


Become other in memory and word

what Martin gave with the arc of justice bending wild.

And just like that turned into a bumper sticker.


I sit stupefied in front of the television.


Bultmann and King together

weep for us

in our blind marching joy,

not seeing

what is,

what isn’t,

gospel.



What am I doing?

Friends asking.

Carrying the raw notes

from last week’s meeting

Between the Ridges,

smoke signals from up and down the valley,

and YIRN—Yakima Immigation Response Network,--

pages—each line a cry from a different person.

Raw Notes. Carrying. Walking. Not neutral.

Adversarial. Warrior emotions in an old man.

And listening. And listening--

my wife is ringing bells in the morning.

She rings in a bell choir. For worship.

Practicing before worship. I will be present,

listening to the bells. This listening

is what I do. Third ear listening. I will sit very close

to the bell ringers as the sound of the universe

comes from the bells when the ringers

connect to the striker on polished brass

as the music is released. The priests in my head

tell me solidarity begins with discomfort.

It is not very much, no, it is not, this kind of listening,

this kitchen work, cooking,

this thrilling work calling out, tears in the cake mix.



*Karl Barth, Rudolf Bultmann, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Paul Tillich





IX.


“WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON?”

LETTER TO RUDOLF BULTMANN FROM AMERICA,

FEBRUARY 6, 2025


PART ONE




        Forgetting and losing ourselves, we too pass through the Red Sea, through the desert,

        across the Jordan…

        “February 6”: A Year With Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Daily Meditations from His Letters,

                Writings, and Sermons, Carla Barnhill, Ed.



        How many of our compatriots still allow themselves to be summoned by the bells

        to enter the house of God?

                Rudolf Bultmann, 22 June 1941, St. Luke 14: 16-24, This World and the Beyond


Somewhere Bonhoeffer says,

I used to think Bultmann

went too far, now I wonder

if he went far enough--some-


thing like that. In his new existence

in America, more trouble for the beloved

martyr. After worship one Sunday

I mention to a man,


I’m reading Bonhoeffer, to which he says,

Which side are you on, be careful.

A man in a Lutheran Church.

Turns out there are sides, and he and I


are on different ones. Just like that

I find myself thrown to the curb.

There’s a new movie, too, Christian Century

asking, Has Bonhoeffer been hijacked?


You know the magazine, Professor Bultmann,

It’s good. However, No one asks me questions

about you, and you’re the one

who opened my eyes to Jesus. Others


carried me to Bonhoeffer. 40 years ago,

when I told my Icelandic pastor about

the man who brought me to Bultmann,

I say, the Iraqi Jesuit Stanley Marrow.


My pastor drives across the mountains to see.

He wants to know how this happened:

Who was this priest who brought

a man back to Lutheran roots? My pastor,


Harald Sigmar, knew his Bonhoeffer,

I was a sergeant in a MedEvac Hospital

in Vietnam when King was killed on May 8th,

listening to Black Gis on bunks, barracked,


asking, We’re fighting for the guys

who killed Dr. King? When I come home,

late 1968, after Tet, Bobby Kennedy also gone,

I’m listening to gospel, Odetta’s deep voice,


thinking King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail

should be bound with Paul’s letters, but I can’t

read the New Testament. That’s how I found

the Catholics and Vatican II. Through Merton.


Mid-70s now. Sigmar, my pastor, knows

what happened to Bonhoeffer in the Bronx.

He knows Tillich and Rollo May.

He doesn’t know poetry, and he’s trying


to write himself away from apology,

and fundamentalism. He loved Stanley Marrow.

He didn’t know what would happen

when I came home loaded with Rudolf Bultmann.


That rejection happened. It’s your great gift. It’s why I’m here.

Sitting alone. Maturity that slow. Nationalists

seeding themselves in power and glory. And

a man in my church asks, which side are you on?



X.


NEITHER HOT NOR COLD


    the reason why I do it

    though I fail and fail

    in the giving of true names

    is I am adam and his mother

    and these failures are my job

        Lucille Clifton, the making of poems, two-headed woman




    Behold, I stand at the door and knock.

        Revelation 3: 14-20

            December 8, 1940—from the sermon of Rudolf Bultmann, This World and Beyond


            “Amen”. Amen signifies validity: what is unshakably true. R.B.


I.


Black history month. Where I learn to say, Amen.

Heat came from my mother and she gave it to me.

But the poets: Countee Cullen:

To make a poet black

and make him sing.

If only I could do something like that.


II.


    And from that hidden beyond, there can and there will one day break forth into this world

    a power for judgment...R. B.


A boy walking railroad tracks. His father at the grain elevator.

Rural North Dakota.

He sets out walking rails.

A rope-pulled elevator takes them up,

father and son.

Holding his father’s leg rising into dust and sky.

Unbalanced on rails. Through dark silos of grain.

This was Indian country with a church.

across the street from his house.

He searched the sky for Smoke signals.


Later he heard about the Blessingway Singer.

Hozho. Frank Mitchell and his wife.

Everyone told him he couldn’t go.

They told him he didn’t belong.

But when he asked the family

Each member said it would be a blessing.



III.


    Or perhaps the inner void of our lives has become painfully apparent

    to us at some moment when we have been called upon

    to help and comfort another…R. B.


My parents would cry in their sleep from the cold. The pastor didn’t like what he heard.

The church right across the street from our house. Jesus Christ. Real loud.

I knew they were prayers. Jesus knew that too. Jesus heard. Nobody here cursing.

This is a house of prayer.



IV.


        A poet, Wilhelm Busch, with his vein of playful fantasy,

        describes with somewhat grim humour

        a dream which transported him…R. B.


Men and women made of numbers,

hollowed out.

Still running into them.


As soon as they open their mouths.

Makes me want to get out of town.

Up to seven, numbers speak of God.

Talk bottoms out in a hurry.

Moves to a kind of middle...

Like painted lines on the highway.

So much traffic to get there.

From the inside of a painted line

you won’t recognize

suffocation or salvation.

From this side of the line, no survivors.

Alcohol everywhere.

You can’t see the line

but on its other side, small talk.



V.


    ...the word of God which resounds from the invisible world of eternity: R.B.


We are connected in time, Dr. Bultmann.

I am born 9 August 1945.

I am young, back from war.

An old pastor gives me the kairos

for my questions.

Word arriving in the instant.

Like a goodnight kiss.

Poem come from nothing.


What came to me

as a boy

come to me

as a man


Accessing that place

from a town not on the map.

Belonging to everything.

God-world.

Eternity’s sand.

The chimney sweep’s pillow.

William Blake in the living room.

My living room.

Matter of fact world,

this one.



VI.


    ...the depths of divine love are opened out only to him

    who allows himself to be emancipated in his life. R. B.


I know this about him.

He had to know.

At every point in his life.

Every time it came up—where ever.


He went down that road.



XI.


TRIPTYCH TO RUDOLF BULTMANN, TRYING TO SAY

SOMETHING OF WHAT HE GIVES ME


        “The Poet who feels that poetry is born from this strange punishment—from the punishment that             creates the strange--”

                Michael Edwards, “Poetry and Isaiah’s Burning Coal”


This morning, four men at coffee.

Poet, photographer, jeweler.

I no longer know what to call myself.

Between it all. The photographer’s


birthday, 78, the youngest. The jeweler’s

85. Two poems. I take notes on the poems.

Four of us making an odd bunch. Friends

over decades, historical eyes and ears,


listening in a snow storm. Before coffee,

this from my friend Terry, poet friend given

cancer as a retirement gift ten years ago:

Look to the Margins, from Richard Rohr,


priest who runs a center for meditation.

Path of prophets, an essay from Cassidy Hall,

Queering Prophecy. First a word about margins.

Everywhere not geographical—we’re


everywhere. The illuminated margins

of El Salvador: Los Marjinados.

Those who live between railroad tracks

and the street, building casas de carton.


Mi amiga que vive en los marjinados

me envieron café desde esta frontera.

If the prophetic is queer, Cassidy writes,

..roots from 16th Century Scots, when


the word meant things like odd, strange,

transverse, or oblique. Ezekiel ate a scroll.

The poet at coffee reads his poem

celebrataing the birthday of his friend


and the history of photography,

light and dark. There’s a hidden

eye in the jewelry torched by fire--

and our nation queered by an election.



    Maybe poetry always begins with such a double

     awareness, of sorrow but also of something else: not necessarily of God…”

        Michael Edwards “Poetry and Isaiah’s Burning Coal”


El Salvador is always somewhere close to me,

Professor Bultmann. Five decades ago, Stanley Marrow,

Iraqi Jesuit priest, confronts me with my own questions

and brings me the end of the world. At first


I think I can tell others, This is how.

This is how to change your life.

Like Rilke said we must.

This world and the beyond. Right here.


A tiny cross on my dresser before me

where I put my glasses the night before.

I place it around my neck, sitting in the pew.

The Subversive Cross from the small


Lutheran Church in San Salvador.

The cross that went to prison, prisoners

painting the sins of the state on the cross.

Injusticia social, violencia a los derechos


humanos, sea pobre y marjinado.

Descriminación contra la mujer. Hambre.

After decades of failure to show others

Christology in daily walking, God


fed me pupusas, liberating nuns

and a Jesus who walked with the poor.

Obispo Medardo Gómez, Fr.s Jon Sobrino,

Ellacuria and Dean Brackley. I sat


in the pew where Rutilio Grande

gave the Santa Biblia to campesinos.

After the murders of Romero and Ellacuria,

I read the letters Sobrino wrote to Ellacu--


and Obispo Medardo—bishop to the poor,

walked me through barrio-soaked tsunamis,

taking me into his home, telling me how

he told the president to return his cross,


the Subversive Cross, the replica I place

around my neck this morning. All of this,

part of my walk, Medardo promising

I would be given this poem to write--


his great unsaying, the bewildering

unsaid, gift of a simple amen.

All of this written down in a notebook.

A Chinese koan.



    “If a threshold is meant, we perceive even more clearly the ability

    of poetry to open the world for us, to cross

    a trembling limit, to penetrate into the otherness of things.”

            Michael Edwards, “Poetry and Isaiah’s Burning Coal”


Your sermons open in many ways.

Today I’m looking at your homily from 22 June 1941,

not the news that Germany’s now at war with Russia,

not the text your preaching from, but this calling


for more understanding for spiritual, intellectual life

of our time...the burning questions and struggles—I want

to speak here of American voices who listen deeply

for prophetic presence. Dropping names--


American crisis calling. Calling Bultmann?

You’re part of this, How shall I live with myself?*

Barry Lopez, Gary Snyder.

Terry Tempest Williams, Rebecca Solnit.


So many names caring for our dying planet,

names who speak in the world as you spoke, ones who

mentor and confront. Snyder you could have

known, born in 1930. Trailmaker crossing


into Japan, coming home Buddhist. Lopez

stared into melting glaciers. In our town,

where I sit at coffee with friends, where

I worship, still—unsettled, with my wife,


I ask the pastor to sit with me beside

another cross, on three chairs, one for

her dog, Goldie, trying to talk between

the poem and the pew, the pew and the pulpit,


that between place. She listens.

She lets me. She isn’t afraid of Bultmann

or the poets. Of pastors or pews.

You wouldn’t know Michael Edwards,


of course. He comes later, now.

Poet and Christian. English writing in French,

translated back to English. I read him now, reading

your sermons, This world and beyond.


P.S. This short thanks—for taking us there, and always, for courage,

for believing in us, the ones in the pews. For words in dangerous times.



*In a letter to Karl Barth, Bultmann states, asking, What shall I say to my children?but consists of the question: How shall I say it to myself? Or rather: How shall I hear it myself? #94 Marburg, 11-15 November 1952. Karl Barth—Rudolf Bultmann Letters, 1922/1966.


THE POEM INSIDE THE FOOTNOTE


Railroad grafitti

wooden fence sentries

protecting grand kids






XII. THAT OTHER WORLD IS THIS ONE—RUDOLF BULTMANN






    RUNNING BACK AGAIN, MORE THAN WORDPLAY,

    MAGIC ON FABRIC, EFFIE, LUKE 9:36, JOHN 3: 16


            for Rex DeLoney, again


On the wall in the living room

beneath the butterscotch chair

where I sit, Rosie Lee Tompkins,

African-American quilter,


from a painting, looks down

at me, every morning, like this,

her luminous eyes, woke open

and framed by her kerchief,


tied in a knot at back, looking

at me, as I’ve said, and speaking too,

saying, God gave me these colors

to see. Saying, The pool


is giving birth to itself all the time.

It is February, African-American

history month. This painting,

by a friend, Rex DeLoney,


colorist, commissioned by me

for my wife, who is also a quilter.

Rex, a friend, also gave me his painting

of Coltrane’s A Love Supreme


when I left the classroom. Mss. Tompkins,

born in 1936, began with pillow cases.

She is famous now. Her imaginative

portrayals of God and freedom,


quote scripture. Her mother’s here,

also quilting, and the cross to the left

of her face (Magic Johnson’s on it),

which she had to cross through


enabling her to do her magnificence.

Extremely shy, known as Effie,

she called herself in fabric

Rosie Lee Tompkins. If you listen


while looking at these quilted squares

embedded in paint, you will hear

the horn of Ornette Coleman.

You will know the word, Palindrome.





ON RUDOLF BULTMANN’S SERMON, 17 JUNE 1945


        2 Corinthians 4: 6-11


        For it is the God who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness’, who has shown in our hearts

        to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Christ.

        ‘But we have this treasure in earthen vessels.”

                Rudolf Bultmann


The spiritual strength of Paul springs from the fact that he lives in two worlds; not only in the visible world of change and decay, of tears and death, that world in which we are, ‘afflicted in every way’ and ‘perplexed’, but also in the invisible world in which there is no fear and no despair.”

Rudolf Bultmann


What she said next sounded barbed...’I don’t know how you can sleep at night.’ Obama replied, ‘You know what? I don’t really sleep at night. It’s not just that I worry about these kids from El Salvador. I also worry about kids in Sudan, in Yemen, and in other parts of the world. And here’s my problem. We live in a world with nation states. I have borders.’”

        Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here, Jonathan Blitzer


Last night on the news, They can move you

if they have a bed—and they’re building centers

with 40,000 beds. Call this country as you call me.

Can I turn myself inside out? Transcending

anxiety on my own? It’s June, 1945--

my mother is seven months pregnant with me.

Born 9 August 1945—that day. Nagasaki.

Invisible realities. 80 years later, having lived

this life, consuming as no one in the history of mankind

has ever consumed. No one. Not like this.

Physicians desperate, I recommend

putting medicine in the water for all.

What you say at Marburg: Right cannot

be maintained without power.

The world demanding practicality.

This world. Where our church--

ours—hijacks Bonhoeffer.

How does anyone sleep at night, not,

What have we become, but who we are

in our expediency.

How you address June, 1945.


And still you call on the poets.

I say, Thank you, again. Galway wrote

that short poem seeming to channel you:

“Whatever happens. Whatever

what is is is what

I want. Only that. But that.”

This world and the beyond,

coming back to you, understanding.

Understanding ourselves, 2025.

Sterling Brown in the 1930s, again,

you were delivering sermons at Marburg

against the strong men, writing to his people,

like you, the two of you, worlds apart,

They taught you religion they disgraced.


To have been in that pew, Professor Bultmann.

To hear you now is to have heard you then.

Empathy won’t take me that far.

Cancel myself, Rilke? Rilke, tan poco,

won’t get me there. You call

for the first question, How,

while in the midst of it all--

Church, Black Church, children

crossed and border-separated.


Crucified children. On the cross with the criminals.

First congregation revisited.

Here among the sacrificed. Say their name.


And still, you call on the poets

from the pew where the poets have fled.

And here, in America, mass deportations.



You wrote

that sermon,

finishing

with the psalm,


Psalm 115:

Not to us, Lord, not to us--

La gloria, Señor, no es para nosotros,

No es para nosotros--


giving us then Paul Fleming’s poem,

Be content and know your part.



...our hopes to the world of unseen realities. It is just in so doing that we shall win true inner freedom for the urgent tasks of the present, courage to accomplish the work which in the distress of our days is laid upon us. For then no disillusionment can paralyse our strength; then we have become unassailable. Patience…”

    23 June 1946, Rudolf Bultmann, This World and Beyond, Lamentations 3: 22-41


And that sermon sandwiched between two others. One on Guadalupe’s Day, December 12, 1943, on the Beatitudes, asking, “Do we belong to the circle of those to whom these promises apply?” And you single out, the one in particular addressed to your people: Blessed are they who mourn for they shall be comforted. We feel what we cannot see in your words. Strange. Offensive, Bewildered. Frightened, astonished, piercing all humanity to its depths, renunciation. With an attitude of waiting. Suppressed, distorted. Thrust forward by achievement or pose. And then this: “...or whether our waiting for the future is so radical that we renounce all dreams and yet are cheerful in our waiting...true joy is promised to those who wait upon God.”


Jump to the third sermon, following the 17 June 1945 sermon using Paul’s text from II Corinthians, Let light shine out of darkness. Here, the twenty-first of twenty-two sermons in This World and the Beyond, the sermon this study will close with, you turn to Lamentations 3: 22-41. The date is 23 June 1946. “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, his mercies never come to an end.”


You ask in a series of questions: Do we feel the pain and suffering of our people? You say, “...perhaps in our case, the situation is one of irremediable ruin.” And you let the poet in Lamentations have full rein. My eyes flow without ceasing...El Señor es todo lo que tengo...The Lord is my portion.


Again and again we listen from the African-American songbook. Stony the road we trod. How we hear you, Professor Bultmann, citing poems, citing scripture, here, this:


As God shall guide, so will I walk,

resigning all self-will.


And again, Moses only permitted to see God’s back:

As God shall guide, so will I walk,

Though hard and stony be the way


Black church. People of color. La Raza. Difficult truths. Cheap grace again. How far from solidarity, America. Your sermons, Rudolf Bultmann. Your reading of Lamentations. Your reading the poems. Ending this sermon with the toughest love in the toughest time:


What has a living man the right to complain of?

It is his sin that each man should lament.


This one, a long, tough sermon. “Yes and no. The way to God leads not to hell but through hell, or, in Christian terms, through the cross. It leads us not to hopelessness but to a hope which transcends all human hope; and we must silence all human hope, if that divine hope is to dawn for use...For man as he is...This hell we must traverse.”






THE ODD VOCATION

OF A FOLLOWER


Blind Bartimaeus

Almost eleven pm

When vision arrives


Void of all content

Yesterday is left behind

For a way of life







ADDENDUM, INSERTION, AND VOICES OF GOD





Some years before things went bad, I arrived in an Aboriginal settlement called Willowra, in Australia’s Northern Territory….This simple technique of awareness had long been my way to open a conversation with any unfamiliar landscape. Who are you? I would ask. How do I say your name? May I sit down?

    Barry Lopez, Barry Lopez “Love in a Time of Terror: On Natural Landscapes, Metaphorical Living,     and Warlpiri Identity



Once tried a haircut at the Barber College too –

sat half an hour before they told me
white men use the other side.
Goodwill, St. Vincent de Paul,
Salvation Army up the coast
For mackinaws and boots and heavy socks
Seattle has the best for logger gear
Once found a pair of good tricouni boots at the under-the-public market store,
Mark Tobey’s scene,
torn down I hear –
& Filson jacket with a birdblood stain.
    

    Gary Snyder Bubbs Creek Haircut



If the world is torn to pieces, I want to see what story I can find in fragmentation. I have taken to making collages. I want to see whether a different narrative might arise from poring over American magazines, tearing them up, and putting them back together in a shape that makes sense to me.

    “The Turquoise Triangle Erosion: Essays of Undoing, Terry Tempest Williams


    The word emergency comes from emerge, to rise out of, the opposite of merge, which comes from mergere, to be within or under a liquid, immersed, submerged An emergency is a separation from the familiar, a sudden emergence into a new atmosphere, one that often demands we ourselves rise to the occasion.

    Rebecca Solnit: A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster




If you see something, you call.

You call.

Every time information gets passed around, it gets distorted.


The strong man talks everyday.


These raw notes.

They’re part of the preparation.

These woven voices.


Some of this stuff, some of this stuff

we have to be prepared for.

It takes people to circle the familiar.


Sterling Brown’s Strong men



So, in a way, we know what’s coming.

And so it begins!!


ACCOMPANIMENT, 2019


Asked to drive to Ephrata to pick up a couple and take them to their ICE appointment, I didn't understand the mission, or know the couple. I didn't know Ephrata, but I knew Quincy, and have a friend in Quincy. I thought the two towns were close together, that's what I knew. Because I thought it was the following day, I declined. My son was visiting between his mountain and the farm, two places he lives, making his world. He was gone on Tuesday when our town's airport becomes the connecting point for ICE flights connecting immigrants from the detention center in Tacoma, and others in the country. Flights regularly come in from Phoenix. Buses are emptied and people, bound in chains, board the planes. The plane arrives from Phoenix, and the airline is always Swift Air.


When I talked with the woman where we meet to protest the flights behind the chain link fence where the plane and buses converge, who asked me if I might make the drive, she explained that that the couple's appointment was the following day, I agreed to do it. The woman is a friend. She didn't make the request lightly. We share four decades of accompaniment work. "This might be something you'd be interested in," she had said. She is a go-between, a correveidile. Her invitation had been received.




from THE ICE COUNSELER INTERVIEWS, 2019


Young women bringing in young women,

mostly. Some couples. An occasional man.

We're young women, too,

friendly, warm, bilingual.

No tengas miedo aquí,

coming into the system

at the ICE office


Toca el timbre sola una vez

Only ring the bell once

La proxima vez toca mi ventana

Three photos on the wall

Top down men, top down woman,

she's gone now, and I don't know

the man in the middle, la rubia,

ella se fue,

the link to us here

can't be seen, it's hardly noticed

it's good work and sad too

hay mucha tristeza, we try

and take away the fear, el miedo,

I think we're a good fit

what we do is almost a perfect fit

para ellas en la sombra, in shadows,

las braceletas, the bracelets

around the ankles fit tight

on the leg, and those plastic bags

they carry those replacement batteries,

it's abrasive, yes it is, it rubs the soul

and it's hard on us counselers


Those batteries must never

run out of power

as long as that battery is charged

and that bracelet is secure

on the ankle, you won't

have trouble and you're safe


And that's our job in a nutshell.



Jim Bodeen

17 October--26 October 2019






ICE FLIGHT #93, 29 DECEMBER, 2020

        for Danielle, Mick, Mike, Pat


Flight’s back on, Email says,

a chance to say once more,

Thanks for counting, reporting for

asylum seekers, for waving

until I found you. Last one

this year. Last one, ever?

They piled some snow up here

in front of us. The legal pad

records 15 deportees

from two buses arriving

from Tacoma. Personal

belongings in plastic bags.

Shackles laid out on tarmac

with handcuffs. Behind the fence

with us, a photographer

from the paper, stabilizes

his camera with a mono-pod.


Jim

31 December 2020



Listening Session Table Conversations

Suggested Questions for conversation.

What are you hearing in your communities?

What are you / others you know feeling, concerned about?

How have you already been affected?

In your families, at work, at school etc?

What incidents have already happened to you or others?

What resources do you need?

Where do you get reliable information?

How do you feel supported?

Where do you feel safe?


This is immigration workshop day


Whatever standing in solidarity is about,


and accompaniment


This point of emphasis:

Most of our work has been done in churches

because they’re big, and mostly empty.




WE’RE NOT STARTING FROM SCRATCH--

SOME DAYS--

WE’RE STARTING FROM SCRATCH--

BEGIN AGAIN

SOME DAYS, CHRISTMAS EVE, 2019--

SOME DAYS


Today for instance,

I drive

around my town

stopping at lights


hoping

some

one

will see (and read)

the sticker

on my rear

window

saying,


CLOSE THE CAMPS


and when I drive away


as the light

turns

GREEN


the camps,


will

be

CLOSED




Christmas Eve, 2019




Here are some responses


Students are reluctant to stand out and participate in high school leadership groups, attend

conferences as heard from Migrant education at ESD 105, representing 26 School Districts

throughout the valley

Students are reluctant to speak in public the language used in their homes.

Fear of elimination of Dept of Education.

Employees fear repercussions at work, economic and social. Fear of billionaires.

Fear of family instability.

Fear of people’s perceptions, especially in the face of rise of criminal, abusive racist threats and

behavior directed toward people of color. Disgusting behavior modeled by incoming

administration of disgusting behavior, seems to give people permission to be abusive.

Feel safe on the reservation, any reservation in the US.

Discussed reservations as Sanctuaries and Sanctuary Cities.

Already the talk of defunding the cities--



JUST OUTSIDE CHAIN-LINK FENCE

AT YAKIMA'S MUNICIPAL AIRPORT, ALL SOULS DAY, 2019,

WATCHING AND LISTENING AS MICHAEL,

PHOTOGRAPHER OF DETAINEES AT ICE FLIGHTS,

PHOTOGRAPHER WHO PHOTOGRAPHS

EACH ONE, BETWEEN SWIFT AIR JET N531AU

AND TACOMA DETENTION CENTER BUSES,

AS HE INFORMS NEW WITNESS WHAT'S HAPPENING


for Michael Collins


They've been arrested for the crime

of seeking asylum

in the United States of America


All Souls Day, 2019

Yakima, Washington








Hearing a lot of anxiety, fear about what is going to happen

It’s happening.

Students and children fear parents disappearing

Students are not showing up to class.

People feel safe in Churches, Not in schools

Need Reliable information, Dependable new sources e.g Reuters

Thankful for YIRN, and Know Your Rights resources

Would like centralized information

Apps on Smart Phone

Safe Places: Churches, Schools, Shelters, Reputable Non-profits, Home, Zoom, Help Hotlines

Instead of creating more space, use already used sources to do outreach: Facebook, Radio, Free

Cable, Local Facebook Groups.

Uncertainty about what is going to happen, people divided and we are attacking our own, no

security and assurances, polarized community, need to understand power of voting and the ballot.


Fear of the Unpredictable Day to Day

Fear of Racial Profiling

Feel Safe at: Home, Shelter as meeting spaces, virtual meetings, library, hospitals, schools

Information: Reputable news sources, chats, Spanish speaking Radio

Fear of Immediate family deportation



Listening Session Table Conversations

Suggested Questions for conversation.

What are you hearing in your communities?

What are you / others you know feeling, concerned about?

How have you already been affected?

In your families, at work, at school etc?

What incidents have already happened to you or others?

What resources do you need?

Where do you get reliable information?

How do you feel supported?

Where do you feel safe?



This is immigration workshop day


Whatever standing in solidarity is about,


and accompaniment


This point of emphasis:

Most of our work has been done in churches--

they’re big, and mostly empty.




Students are reluctant to speak in public the language used in their homes.

Fear of elimination of Dept of Education.

Employees fear repercussions at work, economic and social. Fear of billionaires.

Fear of family instability.

Fear of people’s perceptions, especially in the face of rise of criminal, abusive racist threats and

behavior directed toward people of color. Disgusting behavior modeled by incoming

administration of disgusting behavior, seems to give people permission to be abusive.

Feel safe on the reservation, any reservation in the US.

Discussed reservations as Sanctuaries and Sanctuary Cities.

Already the talk of defunding the cities--


Fear of the Unpredictable Day to Day

Fear of Racial Profiling

Feel Safe at: Home, Shelter as meeting spaces, virtual meetings, library, hospitals, schools

Information: Reputable news sources, chats, Spanish speaking Radio

Fear of Immediate family deportation



24 January 2025










THOSE SUNDAY MORNINGS



Pulpits silent

as the church mice

Narthex after worship

all about cookies


Nobody recites the poems of William Blake

or the songs of Kris Kristofferson


To see a world in a grain of sand

and a heaven in a wild flower

hold infinity in the palm of your hand

and eternity in an hour


Coming of age in Panama

working with the medics

at the government hospital

in the Canal Zone—Gorgas

its name. GI. I learned how

to conjugate verbs

in high school Spanish

and some Panamanians

thought I was Castilian

right out of Madrid.

There weren’t many

and mostly they were

with Gis in bars

singing Guantanamera


Growing up in rural North Dakota

near the Canadian border,

Jesus on a flannel board

mounted on a tripod

in a boat on water

taking the fishermen

deeper than they were

comfortable going,

Jesus with David,

John the Baptist,

Abraham, Jacob, Joseph

the coat of many colors

I was down for that

all of them so good together


Just months before, fall of 65,

lost from Karen in New Orleans,

failing even with literature

when Hurricane Betsy hit

closing the university of Ponchartrain,

Dylan singing, Something is happening

and you don’t know what it is,

from Highway 61, walking away

from those classes,...do you, Mr. Jones?

How to become a soldier in New Orleans.

What must be done to get back to Karen.

The chaplain in Basic Training

who put me with the medics

telling me, We believe in this war.


Studying poetry

at the Canal Zone college

dressed in Class As,

wearing the cunt cap

walking into that room

full of 18-year old red lip-sticked

dependents of officers

who move away

when I sit down. We read

Prufrock,….would I be good?

And memorize gulping chunks

of immortality.


That’s some catch, that Catch-22,

Yosarian said. It’s the best there is,

agreed Doc Daneeka


After Prufrock, Sunday Morning

by Wallace Stevens and I memorized

great dizzying images, Complacencies

of the peignoir, and late coffee and oranges

in a sunny chair...learning how

to pronounce peignoir, to see

through sheer, the negligee itself

floating feathers, and the teacher,

whose name I do not know

to this day, showing how Sunday

worship’s become common place

next to Sunday morning--and more lines

from other poems, Call the roller

of big cigars, the muscular one,

and bid him pitch…


–the soldier could have stayed in Panama

and finished his tour—but—

being young—


I had to go to Viet Nam

to get back to Karen—again--

A career soldier, Tom Pendergrass,

West Texas Irish Baptist,

who loved Hemingway, became my guide.

We drove the Panama-American Highway

in his VW to San Antonio not knowing

about the war in Central America.

I saw Oaxaca for the first time

from the south.


A month with Karen

in Seattle, a buck sergeant now,

on my way to Viet Nam, supposedly

I knew all there was to know

about evacuation. This was

August, 1967.


The question I would ask

people for the rest of my life:

Where were you in 1968?


85th Evacuation Hospital, Qui Nhon.

When the Non Com said,

We’re going North, I told him

my orders were to stay in Cam Ranh Bay,

he says to me, Get your ass

on that fucking truck, soldier.



You might not believe this,

but I took my R&R and went skiing in Japan.

Took the luxury train out of Tokyo north

to the mountains close to where Bashō

walked, making his journey to the narrow north.

Hot springs, cotton robes, powder snow.


Flying back into Saigon,

Ho Chi Minh City today, the plane

couldn’t land. Tan San Nhut under

attack. Tet. 1968. Days later

when we got back to the 85th

it was non-stop triage for three months.

We evacuated 700 Gis a month

until Johnson stopped the bombing.


King is shot in April--on the 4th--

in my letter to Karen on the 9th

I’ve got the date wrong--while listening

to the black medics

saying, And this time

they’ll send us

back to the United States.

    What did we know?


I came home in August, 1968.

Turned 23 in the Nam.

I’m renting violins in a music store

and two weeks later, enrolled

in an evening drama course

at the community college.

That first class

the drama teacher says,

Jim, let’s go outside for a minute.


I’m going to show you

how to walk into a room.


Karen and I get married in November.

The 23d. Kennedy, the president,

was killed on the 23d, right? 1963.

Right after Karen and I finish high school.


I’m back in school. Witth the GI Bill.


And the beer I had for breakfast

wasn’t bad, so I had one more for dessert.

Kris Kristofferson singing.

I’m older. The 18-year olds

ask me two questions,

Did I kill any babies?

Did I have any dope?


Back in the poetry room

Reading Wallace Stevens again.

Kristofferson had just written that song,

Sunday Morning Coming Down.

That’s what I’m listening to.

I’m in a master’s program now.

Blake and Wordsworth.

Robin Redbreast in a cage

Puts all Heaven in a rage.

I write my paper on those two

Sunday mornings--

Stevens’ and Kristofferson’s,


get all the way to Jesus

but the door doesn’t open,

that door to another existence.

It opens to the Black Church.

It goes through El Salvador.

It rides ICE flights.

Some of that

why I read these sermons.


When the elevator opens,

a man, emerging. And Sunday morning.

Sunday mornings will never be the same.








ALL THE CHILDREN



“This brings us to the main point. To be ready for God’s call means just this—to be prepared to live in the conviction that our life of earthly work with its cares and projects, its sorrows and joys, is not the ultimate reality. What then is the essence of God’s invitation? It is surely the call to a higher life, to a future life, to a life that lies beyond this world. It is the call to free ourselves from this world and to become centred in God’s world.”


Rudolf Bultmann This World and Beyond


June 22, 1941





“Then the house-holder in anger said to his servant, ‘Go out quickly to the streets and lanes of the city, and bring in the poor and maimed and blind and lame.’ And the servant said, ‘Sir, what you commanded has been done, and still there is room.’And the master said to the servant, ‘Go out to the highways and hedges, and compel people to come in, that my house may be filled.’”


St. Luke 14: 16-24







MY GRAND DAUGHTER CALLS FROM THE UNIVERSITY


        For Katie, 19


You call from your dorm all fixed up

to thank me for the second-hand,

but leather-bound, New Testament

I sent you for your backpack,


scripture I pass along to you,

good to carry into any coffee shop.

You never know with words,

that’s part of how I hear you


on the phone—your meditation

and morning practice, getting ready

for the day. Your thank you turns

into the kind of conversation


always rare, always possible,

with ones like you, who pay attention.

You have the third ear for listening.

You have the third eye for seeing.


You speak more than one language.

When you walk into any classroom

people can see you’re down

from the Mountain. They might


not be able to say, Third Burroughs,

Fire Lookout. They’ve not seen you stretch.

They know someone new just walked into the room.

Give them some time to catch up.


Love, Grandpa




WHEN THE TUESDAY ICE DEPORTATION PLANE

LANDS IN YAKIMA TOMORROW


We can wave goodbye

for his wife and three children

from Fed Ex parking





A VALENTINE’S DAY POEM

AND A BOOK BEFORE VALENTINE’S DAY


Each two pages in this book,

Forgive Everybody Everything,*

has a different surprise,

but I don’t know

your inner lives well enough

to know which two pages

might be your two,

carrying a personal surprise

particular to you, for instance,

Joy, Gratefulness, Resilience,

maybe.

Maybe you combine different ones

together--

Love and Companionship. Jesus and Knucklehead.

Maybe Faith and Take Off.


You are, each of you, a Masterpiece,

and Masterpiece is in here

on page 24. And you’re all,

Beauty Full, too, and Beauty Full

is on page 40.



*Forgive Everybody Everything, by Father Gregg Boyle




SO MUCH MORE TO FIND OUT


    Josh at 19


You’re coming by tomorrow

to tie Grandpa’s necktie


with that double Windsor

knot I could never learn.


Thanks, man. Like you said

last night, When do you need it?


You’re driving back

from the Klickitat--


How’s the fishing? I ask.
No good, brown as dirt--


fish everywhere, they can’t see

my lures or smell my eggs.


That’s poetry! I say.

I said it the way I did--


on purpose, you say.

That’s more interesting to me


than your fishing, is what

I say. So much you’re learning


about yourself everyday.

You’ve got my ear, Josh--


Gpa’s listening!



Gpa Jim/Gma Karen

P.S. Love is still the most important.



SUMMER SOLSTICE SEVENTEEN


She comes by, Samantha does,

beautiful with that cocky smile,

carrying ice cream sundaes

in a bag for Grandma & Grandpa,

with spoons, indicating

we are to eat them before dinner.

Finished first, I ask her to load up

my spoon one time from Grandma’s dish.

She smiles, then she and Grandma drive

to the nursery to buy a plant.

She returns with a desert cactus palm

for her room. Small and expensive.

Size has no value in what we treasure.

Much of what we know, we know together.


Sammie looks at the red flag on the porch

with the poem in white letters

beginning, So much depends.

Grandma says to her

Grandpa made you memorize

the wheel barrow poem when you were a little girl.

Sammie looks at Grandma

and asks, When was that?


Grandpa







THE AMERICAN GOLDFINCH


        --for D. P. at 17


is the songbird you fill the feeder

full of thistles for, Dee. This morning

you’re 17, and finches sing

Tsii, tsi, tsi, tsit, for you. Maybe


you’re making pizzas today,

working your shift at Mod Pizza,--

maybe right now, you’re getting ready

for work, maybe checking messages


on your phone from friends singing

for you. When they call, sing back.

Tell them you like thistles, dandelions,

small twigs. Tell them you like flowers,


lots of flowers, purple ones.

Purple ones with yellow centers.

You’re 17. Give this day to yourself.

Hey, this day to find out again, what it’s like!


Love you. Gpa




STEPPING OUT, A COMMENCING


        --for K. P.


    --Search into the inner-pattern of things:

    Isn’t it joy?

        Tu Fu*


You text me with news of fresh limes

in ice water wondering what you might


call it. You can’t know what joy

this gives a grandfather watching you


walk into this unexplored world,

discovering image by image, your eyes


opening to yourself, refreshed

and astonished. I’ve been given


these gifts, too! Katie, you are

all dance and dharma, water


colors and paintbrush. You,

the camera and the shutter speed.


Aperture and depth of field.

You with the voice of many talents--


Yes, you have, this is you,

brave one before yourself,


--Oh, my gosh!



Love Grandpa


*translation by David Hinton




EIGHT DECADES AFTER HIS MARBURG SERMONS, 1933-1950

FROM YAKIMA, WASHINGTON STATE, DURING FEBRUARY, 2025


    Our church has withheld a good deal

    of criticism and scholarship from the laity

    and must rapidly make up for what has been missed,

    if it does not want to atone for this in a painful way.”

        R.B. quoted in Rudolf Bultmann: A Biography, Hammann Konrad, p. 101


When I found this kernel of nourishment,

I photographed it, but in my haste,

did not record the source.

The sentence alone fed me.

It became the image on my post card.

poems were written and mailed. Quickly

I ran out of friends I could safely

send them to, and then there were those

who I found it difficult to speak to,

except--

when I had this to say to them.


This is more important today than before.

I relish this post card in the mail,

with short poems on the back,

using a special commemorative stamp

with each one. The final step

involves getting a hand cancellation

from the postal clerk before mailing.

I’m attaching a rare James Baldwin stamp

on your card, mailing it to the White House

in Washington, D.C.

Others,

well, for them, what Rilke said,

Professor Bultmann, Take a step out.


Love, Jim



PRIOR TO RETURNING YOUR SERMONS

TO INTER-LIBRARY LOAN

LAST POST CARD TO RUDOLF BULTMANN


This morning I carried your Marburg

sermons, This World and Beyond,

to coffee for my friend to see. He’s a poet,

outlaw Buddhist, He’s been following me

as I read. I show him descriptive passages

you worked with, and dates of the sermon.

He asks what I’ve done with them

in word and prayer. How does Bultmann

speak to you? Then, almost without pause,

How did he survive? Kind of off-balance

by his question, wondering, Have I told

this wrong? Silence in buying time.

Bultmann follows the word where

it tells him to go. His Christ-posture

modern, unyielding, that of a teacher,

asking like a teacher, faculty

and students alike, How

did we come up short, this time?


Look here. August, 1940,

how you say, We spoil our relationship

to God failing to confess! We have nothing

that you did not give us. Our lives

are without content apart from you.

Have I not shared this with my friend?

Do I not, then, carry you into my day?

It’s time to turn these sermons back

to the library. My friend thinks

I should have this book on my shelves.

It’s been in my care for six weeks.

I’ve carefully erased my pencil marks

made in the margins,

and the book’s as good as new.


Blessings, as you Lutheran pastors say, and thanks.


        Jim









NOTES AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS:


I.




Shortly after the world was opening back up after the Covid epidemic, I asked Pastor Kathleen Anderson to sit with me in the small chapel under the cross in our church. I set up three chairs, one for her dog, Goldie. She listened to me for more than an hour as I talked about poetry and Christianity. My frustration with the poetry business is as great as it is with the Christian church is what I said.


My half-century journey with Rudolf Bultmann begins in 1975 at Seattle University in their Vatican II program for priests and nuns (SUMORE: Seattle University Masters of Religious Education) where I encountered Professor Stanley Marrow, S.J. who was the lead Christology Professor, Weston Jesuit School of Theology.


There are others. First, there is Harald Sigmar, pastor at our neighborhood Lutheran church. When I confronted him with the Black Church’s gospel that spoke to me in word and song, Pastor Sigmar gave me Abraham Herschel with Martin Luther King, Jr., and Dietrich Bonhoeffer in Harlem. When I told Sigmar about Stanley Marrow he got in his car and drove to Seattle, attending the course with me. The Pastor talked his way into the program, too. Then he became an adjunct professor in the program in order to guide me through Paul Tillich’s Systematic Theology. This all taking place during the three academic summers in the program.


Pastor Ron Moen guided me into Dietrich Bonhoeffer's Cost of Discipleship, Life Together, and Letters from Prison.


Yakima Valley Regional Library was helpful through out my reading during my life with books I never could have obtained on my own through Inter library loan. They made it possible for me to read Bultmann’s work on John’s gospel and then, before it was fully available, an early version of Konrad Hammann’s biography.


I also found David W. Congdon’s work during the time of George W. Bush’s presidency, when knowledge of the German theologians became more crucial for me to understand. Again, however, I would not understand his full importance to me at that time.


Lowell Murphree, a Methodist pastor and poet from Ellensburg, Washington, where I finished school after returning from Viet Nam, offered a summer reading course on Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Cost of Discipleship. During the summer of 2024, Pastor Lowell Murphree sent word on social media, that he was going to offer a 4-week course on Bonhoeffer’s Cost of Discipleship. My friend Steve Hill, a master gardener and activist in justice work, and community mental health rode with me, attended the class, and provided deep listening as well. Finally, Tripp Fuller offered an online class on Bonhoeffer during this time and I became aware of Christians competing for Bonhoeffer.


During the Covid years the Yakima Airport became a site for weekly deportation of immigrants. Buses from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrived weekly. Danielle Surkatty, leader of Yakima Immigration Response Network (YIRN), organized our witness of these flights, counting bodies, tracking and caring for the people as only a true witness can. February is African-History month.


II.



MY FRIEND STEVE HILL SENDS ME AN EMAIL


Grafitti on a fence in SE Yakima

by railroad tracks. Where does this come

from? I ask. Go down 6th Street


past my house, go north, cross

the railroad tracks and turn

towards First Avenue.


ALL THE CHILDREN MATTER

painted on boards, hand prints

of missing indigenous women,


and t-shirts, too, the size of fists,

I matter printed as though

they’re commercial products


for sale in store fronts.

Red Paint. Bold.

My camera gets up close--


100 images in minutes.

Visionary landscape large.

Find the name of this artist,


I say to Steve,

Grand children proud,

proud grandpa.


I want to know him--

one who knows the risk

when all children matter.


Jim Bodeen

25 February 2025




All images in this mss by jim bodeen





Rudolf Bultmann


Rudolf Bultmann, 20 August 1884-30 July 1976, was a German Lutheran theologian and professor of the New Testament at the University of Marburg. A critic of liberal theology, Bultmann instead argued for an existentialist interpretation of the New Testament. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.




Jim Bodeen


Jim Bodeen , 9 August 1945-, is a library patron, and card holder at the West Valley Branch of the Yakima Valley Regional Library, Yakima, Washington. He attends Central Lutheran Church in Yakima.

No comments:

Post a Comment