Yes in a World of No
Sunday, 20 August 2023
| Glenn Loughrey
A Prose Poem in Six Stanzas based on Luke 2:1-7
(with interludes from Thomas Merton)
Introduction
In those days a decree went out from Emperor Augustus that all the world should be registered. This was the first registration and was taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria. All went to their own towns to be registered. Joseph also went from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to the city of David called Bethlehem, because he was descended from the house and family of David. He went to be registered with Mary, to whom he was engaged and who was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for her to deliver her child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn.
i
Mary,
the mother of Jesus,
A woman,
A person
Who said yes
In a world of no.
Who said yes
to giving life
and breath
to the Son of God,
The Prince of Peace
Who said yes to God
In a world of no
In a world of no
Peace
Freedom
Hope
In a world of no,
Power
Sovereignty
Voice
In a world of no,
Recognition
Visibility
Safety
In a world of no
Mary said yes,
To birthing the
Divine Yes,
Bridging the abyss
Between
The countries of
His father and
His mother
In a world of no,
No place for
Women
Children
The unclean
In a world of no,
Mary said yes.
(Pause)
(Clapsticks)
Interlude:
‘Christ our Lord did not come to bring peace to the world as a kind of spiritual tranquilizer. He brought to His Disciples a vocation and a task, to struggle in the world of violence to establish His peace not only in their own hearts but in society itself.’[1]
(Clapsticks)
(Pause)
ii
No is the world’s
Default position of fear,
Fear of the transcendent
Of mystery
Of the unlike me
Of losing privilege to the privilege-less
No is obsessed with
Maintaining
Power
Control
Othering
No is obsessed with.
Using violence in
Design
Words
Actions
No is obsessed with
Holding to itself
All that is
Privilege
Power
Resources
People
No is obsessed with
Not seeing,
Reducing others
To Persona nullius,
Not real persons.
(Pause)
(Clapsticks)
Interlude:
‘The person can never be properly understood outside the framework of social relationships and obligations……
(Clapsticks)
(Pause)
iii
No remains
Today
Now
In this present breath
No remains
In the lived experience
Of those subjugated by
Violence
Invasion
Extermination
Genocide
No remains
In our people’s lived experience
Of being
Reduced
Redacted
Redrawn
As the less than
The deficit
The excuse
No spoke loudly in
1770
1778
1824
1901
2007
2017
And in the unnumbered statements and
Asks from our people
ACP - After Cook and Philip.[2]
Of being used
As collateral in
The power game of politics,
The oppositional binary
Of yes no
Winner loser.
Of being
Incidental damage in an ask
Without political ideology
Of Seeking
Only Justice
For what should be ours,
Recognition and a voice
To be seen and included
Not as less than
But same as
Not as someone
To be fixed
But as a people who are
65,000 years
At home on country.
A people contemporary to all ages.
(Pause)
(Clapsticks)
Interlude:
The person finds (their) reason for existence in the realm of truth, justice, love and liberty….
(Clapsticks)
(Pause)
iv
Mary said yes
In a world of no,
She turned fear
Into hope
Through faith and trust
Her not knowing,
Became the bridge
Into a new dawn
Instead of the relentless
Monotony of another sunset
Clouded with,
Disappointment
Failed promises
Infantilisation
Her not knowing
Soared above what she
Knew
Lived
Recalled
In
Story
Song
Dance
In the colonial memory of
Dispossession
displacement
Deprivation
Offering no
Pathway of return
To the circle of wholeness
The circle of
Country
Kin
Custodial belonging
Of
Respect
Responsibility
Reciprocity
(Pause)
(Clapsticks)
Interlude:
‘If the person is to function rationally as a member of society, (they) must meet others on the common ground of reason.’
(Clapsticks)
(Pause)
v
Mary’s yes
Can be your yes
The yes of accepting
The outstretched hand,
The dream of a renewed nation
Birthed in conciliation,
And truth,
Repairing the fractured nation,
As the Yes Mary bore
Repaired the relationship.
between God and creation,
The relationship between
The always was and always will be,
and those who
Came,
Dispersed,
Settled,
Without seeing.
(Pause)
(Clapsticks)
Interlude:
‘Common decisions and efforts must be oriented towards the common good’.[3]
(Clapsticks)
(Pause)
vi
Mary heard
The Voice of the first morning
‘Let there be….’
The Voice heard
Mary’s Voice
And saw that she was good
Into the world came
Our Voice
For the common good.
Can we hear echoes
Of these Voices in our time,
To say Yes, here I am ?
The alternative?
The Judas kiss
Thirty pieces of silver
For the souls of the first people.
Make Mary’s Yes
Your Yes.
(Clapsticks)
Glenn Loughrey is Wiradjuri man. He is a Canon of St Paul's Cathedral and the Cathedral’s Artist in Residence. Glenn is the Anglican Diocese of Melbourne's Educator and Advocate on the Referendum for Recognition and Voice, and Chair of the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Anglican Council. He is Associate Professor at the Australian National University’s College of Asia and the Pacific. You can read more about Glenn and find his artwork at https://www.glennloughrey.com/.
Image credits: ‘Treaty’ and ‘Turning to the Heavens and Earth’ Glenn Loughrey.
[1] Thomas Merton, The Nonviolent Alternative, 13.
[2] 1770 – the discovery
1778 – the invasion
1824 – the war of extermination
1901 – the Constitution
2007 – Northern Territory Emergency Response
2017 – Turnbull’s rebuttal of the Statement from the Heart
[3] Thomas Merton, The Nonviolent Alternative, 52.