For The Interim Time

“On The Way” is a newsletter publication of The Central Pacific Conference of the United Church of Christ. I love the title. It shows commitment to movement and process. I’m working (and friending) with some really good people in that conference to support a cultural evolution and leadership centered in participation. I get to cohost their annual meeting again this fall.
This month’s “On The Way” included the poem by John O’Donohue, the Irish poet and priest who died in 2008. I love this encouragement to “dwell in the between spaces, refining the heart for the dawn of the new.” There’s a kind of spiritual maturity in that that continues to beckon for patience in the deep.
Enjoy.
For the Interim Time
John O’Donohue

 
When near the end of day, life has drained
Out of light, and it is too soon
For the mind of night to have darkened things,
 
No place looks like itself, loss of outline
Makes everything look strangely in-between,
Unsure of what has been, or what might come.
 
In this wan light, even trees seem groundless.
In a while it will be night, but nothing
Here seems TO believe the relief of dark.
 
You are in this time of the interim
Where everything seems withheld.
 
The path you took to get here has washed out;
The way forward is still concealed from you.
 
“The old is not old enough to have died away;
The new is too young to be born.”
 
You cannot lay claim to anything;
In this place of dusk,
Your eyes are blurred;
And there is no mirror.
 
Everyone else has lost sight of your heart
And you can see nowhere to put your trust;
You know you have to make your own way through.
 
As far as you can, hold your confidence.
Do not allow your confusion to squander
This call which is loosening
Your roots in false ground,
That you might come free
From all you have outgrown.
 
What is being transfigured here is your mind,
And it is difficult and slow to become new.
The more faithfully you can endure here
The more refined your heart will become
For your arrival in the new dawn.