Lament for the Universe
Once upon a time God said:
“I will create.”
And from a multitude of brilliant stars
a great fire – ball exploded
into the universe.
Over billions of years
it birthed galaxies, planets,
the moon and the sun
and the beginnings of life.
And God watched in delight.
Land and seas emerged
Spanned by the great canopy
of the sky.
From the energy of soil and sea
living things appeared -
swimming, creeping, wriggling,
crawling and flying in vast
Plants, bushes and thick forests
pushed forth from the rich soil,
mountains arose
And valleys unfolded
fed by rivers and streams.
And God said “It is good.”
Then God called forth
The ultimate wonder of all creation:
Humanity evolved -
walking, exploring, discovering,
playing and thinking
on its journey into consciousness
And fullness of creation.
And God was very, very proud.
But, as humans developed –
growing strong and powerful
and self-aware,
they came to believe
that all God had created –
all that had gone before
for billions of years
in intelligent design -
was theirs -
to possess, use, cultivate,
consume or destroy.
And God hoped.
Then humans forgot their place
as a single piece
in the great cosmic jigsaw.
They set-about rearranging
the earth’s intelligent design –
Re-organizing, displacing, consuming
and destroying
for profit and greed –
until the winds blew hot and violent,
the oceans turned to acid,
the rains dried up the soil turned to dust
and the forests disappeared.
The natural and balanced seasons
fell into disarray
and billions of living, flying,
crawling and swimming creatures
But humanity
did not see nor understand,
for they had forgotten their place
and who they were
in the unfolding and inter-connectedness
of all creation.
And God wept and watched
as humanity began to sicken
with the destruction
of the home God had created for them…
And God whispered –
“Don’t die
Don’t die…
Don’t let my creation die…”
And God pleaded with humanity –
“Please, Please –
Don’t let my creation die.”
~ Edwina Gateley
from Edwina's newest book of poetry: Soul Whispers (pg 49)
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