“Joy Unspeakable”

Joy Unspeakable

is not silent,

it moans, hums, and bends

to the rhythm of a dancing universe.

It is a fractal of transcendent hope,

a hologram of God’s heart,

a black hole of unknowing.

 

For our free African ancestors,

joy unspeakable is drum talk

that invites the spirits

to dance with us,

and tell tall tales by the fire.

 

For the desert Mothers and Fathers,

joy unspeakable is respite

from the maddening crowds,

And freedom from

“church” as usual.

 

For enslaved Africans during the

Middle Passage,

joy unspeakable is the surprise

of living one more day,

and the freeing embrace of death

chosen and imposed.

 

For Africans in bondage

in the Americas,

joy unspeakable is that moment of

mystical encounter

when God tiptoes into the hush arbor,

testifies about Divine suffering,

and whispers in our ears,

“Don’t forget,

I taught you how to fly

on a wing and a prayer,

when you’re ready

let’s go!”

 

Joy Unspeakable is humming

“how I got over”

after swimming safely

to the other shore of a swollen Ohio river

when you know that you can’t swim.

It is the blessed assurance

that Canada is far,

but not that far.

 

For Africana members of the

“invisible institution,” the

emerging black church,

joy unspeakable is

practicing freedom

while chains still chafe,

singing deliverance

while Jim Crow stalks,

trusting God’s healing

and home remedies,

prayers, kerosene,

and cow patty tea.

 

For the tap dancing, boogie-woogie,

rap/rock/blues griots

who also hear God,

joy unspeakable is

that space/time/joy continuum thing

that dares us to play and pray

in the interstices of life,

it is the belief that the phrase

“the art of living”

means exactly what it says.

 

Joy Unspeakable

is

both FIRE AND CLOUD,

the unlikely merger of

trance and high tech lives

ecstatic songs and a jazz repertoire

Joy unspeakable is

a symphony of incongruities

of faces aglow and hearts

on fire

and the wonder of surviving together.

 

-Barbara A. Holmes


 

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