Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
#*Seated in a window was a young man named Eutychus, who was sinking into a deep sleep as Paul talked on and on. When he was sound asleep, he fell to the ground from the third story and was picked up dead.*     [Acts 20:9] Ye Olympian poets, hearken well while the fall of a tragic youth I tell. My Lydian lay, unsung by Homer in pastoral ages far and former shall warn and chasten your Patrician ears recalling bygone Hellenistic years. Pardon the insufficient gravitas – the intention here is not blasphemous… Saul, since Damascus and the desert days had progressed to his apostolic phase; a minor Asian town, Trojan Troas lent him their ears. What we came to know as Western Judeo-Christianity was birthed in near-comic humanity. But Saint Paul was completely serious feverishly focused, quite delirious. And so the first story he narrated- second, then a third story related, foreshadowing from Moses’ law the Christ and Gentile nations grafted in, or spliced as shoots from a wild rebel olive tree; the Eternal One who is Trinity… and many other holy mysteries he taught and unlocked with scriptural keys. By his third story, some eyelids fluttered the lamps burned low while his truths were uttered. The allure of Aegean night was deep – but he offered something greater than sleep. Among them one languished, barely alert, a young (very tired) Grecian convert. Eutychus nodded, his frame lightly propped, in the night-freshened window. He had stopped heeding Saint Paul who was preaching Jesus… and thus he surrendered to Morpheus. Unfortunate, weary, his tired head nods; still exegeting from beyond, Paul plods. Finally, the liminal threshold reached E. falls – to encounter the power Paul preached. His toga billowing as he plummets from peaks of Christological summits, he descends to gather cryptic renown and a dubious New Testament crown. Was E. bored to death by St. Paul’s discourse? Descending from grace – did he stay the course? Was his revival a first holy fruit – or an arrival by alternate route? One wonders, in retrospect- was he saved? or is this a picture of mankind, depraved fallen in slumber, oblivious, dead until Truth’s unkindness touches our head… Like Lazarus, this one had to die twice We ask: how many more deaths would suffice? Did he talk to the Lord while departed? Could he fathom what Jesus had started? Like Luke’s blind man, the sin was not his own, but that God’s power be openly shown. For his pains: a two-fold resurrection rebirth through Paul and divine election. (Unless the whole thing was allegory – mere Jewish fable or pagan story…) Don’t censure my Lydian levity nor discount apostolic gravity lamenting the youth bored to death by Paul; we discern, in Eutychus, our own fall. Revived, he learned, before the rest of us, the difference between Christ and Morpheus. If there be details still to verify or vague scenarios to modify, we shall, in heaven, request to hear it from the lips of Eutychus’ own spirit. (And then we can corroborate with Paul The how and the who and the wherewithal.)
0
Sep 17, 2015
Sep 17, 2015 at 10:35 PM UTC
Eutychus Awakes
#*Seated in a window was a young man named Eutychus, who was sinking into a deep sleep as Paul talked on and on. When he was sound asleep, he fell to the ground from the third story and was picked up dead.*     [Acts 20:9] Ye Olympian poets, hearken well while the fall of a tragic youth I tell. My Lydian lay, unsung by Homer in pastoral ages far and former shall warn and chasten your Patrician ears recalling bygone Hellenistic years. Pardon the insufficient gravitas – the intention here is not blasphemous… Saul, since Damascus and the desert days had progressed to his apostolic phase; a minor Asian town, Trojan Troas lent him their ears. What we came to know as Western Judeo-Christianity was birthed in near-comic humanity. But Saint Paul was completely serious feverishly focused, quite delirious. And so the first story he narrated- second, then a third story related, foreshadowing from Moses’ law the Christ and Gentile nations grafted in, or spliced as shoots from a wild rebel olive tree; the Eternal One who is Trinity… and many other holy mysteries he taught and unlocked with scriptural keys. By his third story, some eyelids fluttered the lamps burned low while his truths were uttered. The allure of Aegean night was deep – but he offered something greater than sleep. Among them one languished, barely alert, a young (very tired) Grecian convert. Eutychus nodded, his frame lightly propped, in the night-freshened window. He had stopped heeding Saint Paul who was preaching Jesus… and thus he surrendered to Morpheus. Unfortunate, weary, his tired head nods; still exegeting from beyond, Paul plods. Finally, the liminal threshold reached E. falls – to encounter the power Paul preached. His toga billowing as he plummets from peaks of Christological summits, he descends to gather cryptic renown and a dubious New Testament crown. Was E. bored to death by St. Paul’s discourse? Descending from grace – did he stay the course? Was his revival a first holy fruit – or an arrival by alternate route? One wonders, in retrospect- was he saved? or is this a picture of mankind, depraved fallen in slumber, oblivious, dead until Truth’s unkindness touches our head… Like Lazarus, this one had to die twice We ask: how many more deaths would suffice? Did he talk to the Lord while departed? Could he fathom what Jesus had started? Like Luke’s blind man, the sin was not his own, but that God’s power be openly shown. For his pains: a two-fold resurrection rebirth through Paul and divine election. (Unless the whole thing was allegory – mere Jewish fable or pagan story…) Don’t censure my Lydian levity nor discount apostolic gravity lamenting the youth bored to death by Paul; we discern, in Eutychus, our own fall. Revived, he learned, before the rest of us, the difference between Christ and Morpheus. If there be details still to verify or vague scenarios to modify, we shall, in heaven, request to hear it from the lips of Eutychus’ own spirit. (And then we can corroborate with Paul The how and the who and the wherewithal.)
Read all about it in Acts, chapter 20
connecthook
Written by
Sep 17, 2015
Sep 17, 2015 at 10:35 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem