This is a poem about how I’ve felt at ministry. Ministry has been hard. It’s been really good, but hard. During the week, we go to Care Points and spend time with kids all day. A lot of the kids are neglected (at least emotionally, if not physically). It’s not usually due to withdrawn parents, so much as their absence altogether. Most of their parents work all day. The kids go to school on their own and tuck themselves in at night. It’s really, really sad the way kids have been hurt at foundational levels. There’s one kid in particular that I’ve had a difficult time with. I don’t know the psychology behind it, but he acts in the way of someone that’s been extremely neglected. He growls and bites. He screeches when he’s picked up, but screeches more so if he’s set down or ignored. And it’s really difficult. I’m seeing these things happen in his formative years and know that the damage is going to be carried with him through life. And at the same time, through the heartbreak it’s really difficult to love him. It’s difficult to hold him, because he’s dirty. Picking him up means hands rubbing dirt down my arms or getting food wedged in my fingers. He has rashes that I’d rather not have pressed against my skin, but that’s inevitably what happens when I lift him up. Though unintentional, it feels intrusive and I know I’m ill-equipped to heal him. But I’m in a place to love him regardless of whether pouring that energy and emotion out will bear any fruit or not. And a lot of times loving the least isn’t pleasant, it doesn’t bear fruit, and it goes against all inclination. But it doesn’t change the truth of Matthew 25: ““The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’”

 

So this is about ministry and how sometimes it’s hard to love the least. 

 

 

Inclination 

 

I can see his fingers

Crawl up my knees

Food crumbs linger

As his hands leave

The contents of his long nails

On my skin

 

I can feel my skin

As soggy crumbs

Slowly begin

To stick and become

Engrained 

In my leg hair

 

My hair is pulled

And it’s prodded

By a boy I’m told

Has fought with 

The thought 

“Am I loved?”

 

Now he’s here

he’s in my lap

He grabs my hands

And begins to clap

Them together

As he sings 

 

And I want to leave

But he’s the least of these

 

It doesn’t come with ease

But I know

For love to be complete

It must be done in absence

Or in the teeth

Of inclination

 

And I’m not inclined. 

His eyes are empty

And he growls and bites

His dirty arms

Are coated in grime

And it rubs off on mine

 

I’m not inclined. 

 

He screams

If I pick him up

But there’s a screech

If I begin to put

Him down

Ignore him and he’ll growl

 

I’m not inclined. 

 

And even the love

That I do show to him

I don’t know if it gets through

Or if it even begins

To heal those wounds

So deeply engraved 

 

I can’t speak

The same language

Nor can I seek

To appease the anguish

That’s been affirmed

Every time he’s been hurt 

 

He’s a clay

And his molder 

Has been the cruelest

Of sculptors 

And I can’t undo

The damage done

 

But do I have to?

 

I’m here for two months

And then I go home

But after these months

His life will go on

Unchanged

With the same pain

 

And it pains me

That it’s his reality

It’s all he’s known

All he’ll ever know

He’ll have children of his own

And the cycle will go on

 

But I’m here for a time

 

A time wasted?

No, not wasted. 

But wasted on you?

No, not wasted. 

But it bears no fruit?

No, not wasted.

 

Fruitless

But not wasted

The truth is

That my place is

Not to heal your wounds

But to love you

 

I’m sorry

That I can’t fix you

And it’s hard

When I can’t give you

What you need

But I’ll give what I have

 

And I have two months.

 

Two months 

to pick you up

But two months 

To have muck

On my skin

Stuck to my shins

 

Two months

To hold you to my chest

But two months

To smell your breath

When you lean in

Closer than I’d like

 

Two months

To hear you laugh

But two months

For your teeth to latch

Onto my hands

As you bite them

 

Two months

To love you

And I know the price

Of loving you

It’s a pretty dime

But I’ll pay what’s due

 

Because I’m inclined. 

 

And in the Lord’s eyes

You’re already reclined

At His table

He’s counted the cost

And He is able

And willing to love this child

 

Yes, He is inclined.