Some centuries ago
Powerful clerics
In order to attain
A perfect orthodoxy
Banished the very Lord of Charity
And sent their soldiers out
To bind and burn
Some stubborn scholar
Or visionary farmer
Or some outspoken country girl
As honest as the angels
Later there were the virtuous
Church-going slave-ship owners
Who thought that since they prospered
The Lord Himself was blessing
Their cruel enterprise
In our own time
There were the prison guards
Who starved and killed
Innocent prisoners
Yet still received
The Body of the Lord
At Mass on Sunday
Are we so different from them?
Year after year
We chant the Psalms
And sing the carols
Of the Nativity
The hymns of Easter
And in that music is a cry
For justice and for mercy
We barely hear it
And we accept
The falling of our bombs
On foreign villages
And on the women men
And children in them
As we accept
The falling of the rain.
—Anne Porter