All Saints Day

 All Saints Day

Guest Writer: Karen Dubert

All Saints’ Day: a Crowd of Saints  2020

“After this, I looked, and there was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation.”—Rev 7:9

Fra Angelico

My solitude of social distance is suddenly congested

by reminders of the great cloud:

that crowd of witnesses huddled over there in eternity,

peering into time

from vast margins of timelessness,

voids of space.

How is it that we eternal beings—

embedded in time,

prehistoric insects in amber—

How is it we so obsess over the amber

that we imagine ourselves the focus?

We sing of saints “who from their labours rest”

possibly imagining

eternity as an endless “rest" of watching us—

Dreary infinitude.

This amber chamber in which we live and move and be

confounds, imprisons us

defining our vision

regulating our expression;

so we envision the ancestors of millennia

eagerly peering over each other’s shoulders

to catch glimpses of us—

“the living ones”

The irony catches in my throat,

a log hung up on the flotsam of a cosmic flood.

That our amber-vision defines us

rather than enabling us

to gaze beyond and marvel that

out of here, somewhere

amberlessness means

movement.

 (revised 2 Nov 2021)

Karen Dubert

dancing saints icon Saint Gregory Nyssa Episcopal Church David Sanger

Grace Chapter Daughters of the King at Saint Mark’s Episcopal Church will lead a prayer vigil on All Saints Day, November 1, 2023, for peace in Israel/ Palestine. The chapel at Saint Mark’s will be open for prayers from 8:30 after Morning Prayer to 5 p.m. before the 12-step Eucharist. People are invited to attend the All Saints Eucharist at noon outdoors at the stone altar in the Columbarium, weather permitting, or the 5:30 p.m. Eucharist, and to pray in the chapel during the day, invoking all the saints to help us pray for peace in Israel/Palestine. Prayers for peace will be available in the chapel.

Joanna joannaseibert.com