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" Creed by Abigail Carroll, p.196-197

I believe in the life of the word,
the diplomacy of food. I believe in salt-thick
ancient seas and the absoluteness of blue.
A poem is an ark, a suitcase in which to pack
the universe—I believe in the universality
of art, of human thirst

for a place. I believe in Adam's work
of naming breath and weather—all manner
of wind and stillness, humidity
and heat. I believe in the audacity
of light, the patience of cedars,
the innocence of weeds. I believe

in apologies, soliloquies, speaking
in tongues; the underwater
operas of whales, the secret
prayer rituals of bees. As for miracles—
the perfection of cells, the integrity
of wings—I believe. Bones

know the dust from which they come;
all music spins through space on just
a breath. I believe in that grand economy
of love that counts the tiny death
of every fern and white-tailed fox.
I believe in the healing ministry

of phlox, the holy brokenness of saints,
the fortuity of faults—of making
and then redeeming mistakes. Who dares
brush off the auguries of a storm, disdain
the lilting eulogies of the moon? To dance
is nothing less than an act of faith

in what the prophets sang. I believe
in the genius of children and the goodness
of sleep, the eternal impulse to create. For love
of God and the human race, I believe
in the elegance of insects, the imminence
of winter, the free enterprise of grace. "

Sarah Arthur , Between Midnight and Dawn: A Literary Guide to Prayer for Lent, Holy Week, and Eastertide


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Sarah Arthur quote : Creed by Abigail Carroll, p.196-197<br /><br />I believe in the life of the word,<br />the diplomacy of food. I believe in salt-thick<br />ancient seas and the absoluteness of blue.<br />A poem is an ark, a suitcase in which to pack<br />the universe—I believe in the universality<br />of art, of human thirst<br /><br />for a place. I believe in Adam's work<br />of naming breath and weather—all manner<br />of wind and stillness, humidity<br />and heat. I believe in the audacity<br />of light, the patience of cedars,<br />the innocence of weeds. I believe<br /><br />in apologies, soliloquies, speaking<br />in tongues; the underwater<br />operas of whales, the secret<br />prayer rituals of bees. As for miracles—<br />the perfection of cells, the integrity<br />of wings—I believe. Bones<br /><br />know the dust from which they come;<br />all music spins through space on just<br />a breath. I believe in that grand economy<br />of love that counts the tiny death<br />of every fern and white-tailed fox.<br />I believe in the healing ministry<br /><br />of phlox, the holy brokenness of saints,<br />the fortuity of faults—of making<br />and then redeeming mistakes. Who dares<br />brush off the auguries of a storm, disdain<br />the lilting eulogies of the moon? To dance<br />is nothing less than an act of faith<br /><br />in what the prophets sang. I believe<br />in the genius of children and the goodness<br />of sleep, the eternal impulse to create. For love<br />of God and the human race, I believe<br />in the elegance of insects, the imminence<br />of winter, the free enterprise of grace.