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Divine Humility
“We accept the love we think we deserve.”
How true! And hence, I swerve
Away from pure love, purity-
A gift undeserved from divinity.
Unspoken, undefined,
But felt, for I shied
From love, taking an opposite path
Leading to eternal wrath.
I ignored the knock, the whisper, the word,
That told me I was loved by the Lord.
Told me the price was paid.
Told me that I was saved.
I knew my desserts, and easier to ignore,
To act out, live my way, than accept or
Acknowledge a love so complete
That before it, forced to admit defeat.
Forced to surrender everything in bliss
Unto a love as I’d wished
From birth: Unconditional,
Understanding, Irrational
Except that I was his daughter,
The wayward daughter of a father
Who reached for me with his arms,
Watched with sorrow as myself I harmed
Running through that other trail,
Scraped on thorns, breaking as I fell
Crying, pushing away his hand
Till desperate, I accepted his plan
When nothing was left.
His Divine Humility, bereft
Of justice or pride, both his right—
Gathered me up, held to his side
A broken, sobbing, stubborn girl,
A pitiful trophy: still he called me his pearl.
An infinite God, choosing to be my father
If only I’d accept to be his daughter.
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Drawing from C.S. Lewis' concept of Divine Humility in "The Problem of Pain," this poem also represents some own the struggles in my own personal relationship with God.