Baptism
As a sucker for symbolism,
I was baptized in elementary school.
I’d witnessed plenty of baptisms in
baptismal pools
Ponds
Metal wash tubs in store-front churches.
None of them were like mine.
My father – not a pastor – prayed for me and dipped me in our family bathtub.
Usually, robed men lift their hands to God
Debate whether to say Jesus or Father Son Holy Ghost
Debate whether to sprinkle, dip, dunk, or drown
Some say everything.
Some do everything.
But nobody being baptized really cares what they say at all.
The men mumble on
while you, draped in white,
contemplate how your life will change after this moment.
How after your body makes contact with this water
you will do life right
this time.
This time is new.
And doesn’t everyone deserve a moment such as this –
A moment when water floods the ears
A moment of shocking cold that palpitates the heart
A moment of weightless abandon to
Hope
That you can finally be new
And clean
And right
And holy.
Hope is a holy thing that must be watered.
I connected with your poem because baptism is something I’ve had discussions about recently – you somehow managed to capture the thoughts in my mind, and gave words to some I couldn’t articulate yet. Thank you and well done.