Gerald W. Schlabach

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Category: Poetry

Ars Profetica

Posted on July 15, 2020November 11, 2020 by admin

a poem by Ivan J. Kauffman from his collection,The Ironshop & Chartres (1982) Declaimed.That is a word seldom used these days.Once popular it has fallen into disuse in our timeswhen anger and psychology have been all the rage. And now I must ask (timidly)is it so unfashionable as to be unspeakable that one might take…

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Though this page too will crumble
(Valentine card no. 35)

Posted on February 14, 2016November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Someday we will have made love for the last time. Will we know this at the time as one inept and final fling?Or will cooling embers simply have turned to wisp-whipped ash?Must I name a heart suddenly failing?Or illness imposing impolitelyloss upon loss? Perhaps not. Perhaps nothing of the kind.For love once truly made –…

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Sed contra (a poem)

Posted on November 1, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

I suppose I will always be suspect to you,heir as I am to martyred dissent,beholden to untidy reality no catechism can tame,gripped by loyalty to bishops and creedthrough a second simplicity not simple at all,a good enough Catholic at best,in a time when the “best” of so many is enemy of the good. Still, can…

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“As”

Posted on January 30, 2015November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

A pebble in our shoes, that little word: “Forgive us our sins as …” “as we forgive those who forgive us.” As we forget? No, of course not. And yet I do remember. And remembering I hurt anew, wincing. And wincing I stumble, just a bit, just enough, to bump you, but it feels like…

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“The Little Nation”
by Jessica Powers

Posted on October 6, 2014November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

Having recently discovered the poetry of Jessica Powers, thanks to Give Us This Day, I find this one especially delightful and apropos in these days that tempt us even more than usual to trust in violence. I guess it also provides a salutary antidote to my own somewhat gloomier poetry!  The Little Nation Having no…

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My Bucket List

Posted on September 21, 2014November 11, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

A Maturing Zen Christian Localist Manifesto Eat a nutritious breakfast. Figure out how to use a prayer book and start saying the liturgy of hours. Find a local parish with a priest who loves and listens to the people; attend weekly. Find a local public radio station and lock it in. Marry someone who prays…

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Thoughts in a season of dreary news

Posted on September 1, 2014November 10, 2020 by Gerald Schlabach

So is this how it ends — civilization we call it? First, a few trillion insults uncountable mounting thoughtless words, and a billion well-meaning projects each with fruits unintended unforeseen misdirected sinned and singed by one human condition now globalized across a heating planet.

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For Joetta

Posted on July 23, 2007September 1, 2014 by Gerald Schlabach

Prose Haiku July 2007 We walk the labyrinth, my love and I. Curving around each other, almost crossing, turning away, back, parallel, apart, one mysterious destination. Labyrinthian ways run through the bed where we touch tenderly and weep bitterly. They take us to the table at the center of the maze – extend? defend? bend…

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Recent posts

  • Washing All Our Relatives’ Feet:
    A Homily for Creation Care
  • Of Elves and Theologians
  • Where Have You Gone, Malcolm Gladwell?
    An Open Letter
  • A Pilgrim People:
    Becoming a Catholic Peace Church
  • Ars Profetica
  • We Are All Monks Now
  • The Mystery in Ordinary Churches

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Affiliations

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  • Catholic Nonviolence Initiative
  • Department of Theology, University of St. Thomas
  • St. Peter Claver Catholic Church

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  • Academia.Com
  • Catholic Peacebuilding Network
  • Catholic Theological Society of America
  • Society of Christian Ethics
  • The Tolkien Society

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