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The Psalm of the Great Amen
When I finish praying apart from others,
as the final word of prayer
drifts away beyond reach of ears,
I listen for the Great Amen.
Like silent thunder
it comes rolling back.
Or it leaps across the roof tops,
racing madly through the leaves of trees,
whipping wildly over electrical wires
linking pole to pole,
and with the surge of a cosmic sea wave
it crashes upon my shore:
“Amen.”
From all creation comes the chorus,
from snow-swept glaciers
and ever-extending deserts,
from dark-brown jungle rivers
and majestic mountain ranges,
from vast redwood forests
and endless rolling prairies,
from flocks of flying birds
and herds of wild animals,
from swarms of monarch butterflies
and schools of fish in the ocean deep:
to each of my prayers
comes the great “Amen.”
From God’s great family, one and all,
rainbow-colored in skin and faith,
from those of every compass point,
from country, town, and urban slum,
it comes, it always comes.
From heaven’s host in splendor wrapped,
angels and archangels
saints and mystics all,
it slowly swells and rises;
then rushes cascading into the cave of my heart:
“AMEN, AMEN, AMEN.”
From Prayers for a Planetary Pilgrim by Ed Hays
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Prayer action suggestion:
Immerse yourself in the din of humanity and listen for the Great Amen. Now, immerse yourself in the silence of nature and listen. And then, deep in your heart hear the Great Amen.
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a beautiful and poignant
a beautiful and poignant meditation of the final three psalms, once chanted at Lauds throughout the known world, now resounding forever an ineffable Amen upon this rocky shore of our stony unhearing hearts
At Easter of 2004, my husband
At Easter of 2004, my husband and I were at the rim of the Grand Canyon about 5:30 in the morning, along with about 2500 other people, awaiting the sunrise over the north rim of the Grand Canyon. We were standing at Mather's Point and just beyond the stone "floor" where many of us were standing, there were the three crosses of Calvary, draped with purple cloths. The choir from North AZ U were awaiting their cue to sing Easter songs of praise. Then we saw the sun inch over the sun inch over the rim of the North rim, the brilliant orange glow began to fill this huge sky, and people began to sing their Halleluiah's that Christ had risen. The songs of praise, led by the choir grew stronger as the sun rose higher. It was one of those moments that is unforgettable--the rising of the sun, the return of Jesus. Bobbie
I guess when we are doing
I guess when we are doing what we know to be right and true we hear that Great Amen and when we know we aren't well, we can fool ourselves but that Amen won't be heard and we will know it.
So beautiful! Gerard Manley
So beautiful! Gerard Manley Hopkins couldn't have said it better. I'm going out into the din ... and I'll listen!
Ed Hays makes my ordinary day
Ed Hays makes my ordinary day a song of creation.
Thank you for this prayer
Thank you for this prayer which I will print and keep at my place of meditation until I can know it by heart. It sothes me and brings Christ's peace into my heart.
I have read many of Father
I have read many of Father Hays books and enjoy them greatly.
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