Pray Naked
I used to get up
And once, all dressed
I’d head out for Ist and Main
The better to pray.
The better to testify,
I was someone who agreed with God,
And not someone
Who reeked of sin.
I had a good upbringing-
Mom was tough as nails,
And Dad never minced words,
So I learned to do as I was told.
Never late for church,
Never missed my tithe,
Never lost a job,
Like the rabble unemployed.
There I’d stand,
And there I’d chant,
My ritual morning prayer,
My pride and thanks to God.
At first I thought it strange
That people would stand and watch
Us canters and us chanters
Who knew all the holy words.
Fallling off our lips,
Calling out to God,
Loud enough that the deaf could listen,
And long enough to shame the scoffers.
I really liked my prayer shawl,
I wore it for the warmth,
It gave my satisfied mind
Cloaking vague insufficiencies.
You might say I was distracted,
By the pressure of the public,
To knock so loud on heaven’s door
That I never heard God’s answer.
I watched one day,
Out from the furtive cluster,
A sinner made his way
Inside the nearby church.
What ever will God think?
I thought, bemused.
No prayer shawl, and no chutzpa.
What good’s a prayer spoken from the shadows?
I peeked, to watch him pray so naked,
Exposing all his sins, to the unseen Ear
“Be merciful, I’m just a sinner,
And I don’t know how to pray.”
Though standing in deep shadow,
He was glowing from some light
That clothed his naked sinful form
With a radience: purest white.
I wonder if God ever does that
Glowing thing with me?
Or does he only save the sinner
From purient curiosity?
As he walked outside,
A jeering friend stopped short,
As he noted a new aura,
Shaming him into silence.
That’s how forgiveness seems to work,
When God looks on the naked,
He gives to each new clothes to wear,
In answer to their private prayer.
I’m no longer the man with the prayer shawl,
Chants rising from off of a curb,
I’m trying to learn to pray naked,
Secretly confessing my need for mercy, too.
For prayer is all about the audience
It really doesn’t much matter how many,
If any, hear you pray, unless you know,
God’s the first one to have heard.
And it deosn’t matter how long
Or short,
The prayer may ramble on,
Unless you have first exposed yourself to God.
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