Late thou comest, little
one, Snow is on the stones.
Earth is bitter, little
one, Grey with mists and moans.
Thou art cold as we art
cold, Huddled with the lost.
Star of winter, star of
want, Crowned with the frost.
Bare thou comest, blessed
one, Clean of rod or crown.
Stark and poor, beloved
one, As God sends us down.
Thou art bare as we art
bare. Bare as death and birth.
Naked as the stars and
snows, We come upon the earth.
New thou comest, nascent
one, Little hands astray
Where life formless lies,
and void, As creation’s day
And though our hopes for
man be wild, Starry, frantic, free
All things now are possible,
Unto God and Thee.
GK
Chesterton, Hymn of the Poor
Reflection – I have always loved this poem of GKC’s.
The idea of the poor of the world at the stable, singing to the Christ Child,
is a deep one. There is a bit more to the poem, and in fact I have seen variant
texts of it with different stanzas here and there. But this is enough to give
the sense of it.
There is
something very beautiful about the whole spiritual reality of poverty as it is
met by Christ here. There is nothing particularly praise-worthy about poverty
in itself, we must realize. The simple fact of being hungry, cold, naked is not
virtuous, nor (alas!) does it automatically render the poor one virtuous. If
only it were that simple, eh?
Of course,
neither is being rich virtuous nor does the possession of wealth render the
possessor virtuous. I make these, which may seem rather obvious points, because
there is an awful lot of nonsense floating around to the contrary on both
sides.
Poverty is not
a virtue, but poverty is something else that pertains deeply to the spiritual
life, which is another way of saying poverty is deeply connected to the reality
of true and lasting human happiness and flourishing. Namely, poverty is truth.
Poverty, real
physical poverty and the want it delivers to us, plants us (whether we like it
or not, whether everything in us seethes and rebels at it or not) in the deep
truth of our humanity, which is our state of radical dependence. Every poor
man, no matter what else is going on in his life, knows in his very flesh that
he is not self-sufficient, that the cold can kill, that hunger is real, that we
are not placed on this earth containing within ourselves everything that a
human being needs for life.
This is where
the poor have an advantage over the rich. The rich can fool themselves, can
perhaps acknowledge in some vague abstract way the dependent nature of human
life, but may never really experience it in any real sharp way.
So, back to
Chesterton. The whole sense of this poem is that the poor of the world are
marveling that God, coming as man, chooses to come as one of them, one of the
cold, naked, needy ones. And in that coming of God as a Poor Man, poverty is
revealed as something that is shared, not only among the poor, but with the
stars and the snows, the elemental human realities of birth and death (we all
are born poor, and die poor), and indeed creation itself springing eternally
from the hand of God as total gift and gratuity, and as total contingent
dependence.
And in this
revelation of the poverty of God, something shifts on such a deep level that it
is genuinely difficult to grasp the extent of the shift. The whole poor-rich
dynamic dominates our human world to such a huge and tragic extent. Greed and
envy, injustice and crime, exploitation and violence—all of this is the bitter
fruit of so much of the have/have-not juxtaposition of humanity.
But God has
come as a poor baby, naked, shivering, hungry. And everything shifts in this.
Everything is a little different, because of that fact. And this is the whole
mysterious shift in that final stanza, which may seem a bit random and rushed. ‘Though
our hopes for man be wild, starry, frantic, free, all things now are possible,
unto God and thee.’
It is not
simply, although it is certainly part of it, that God has taken the side of the
poor. That is undoubtedly true, and Scripture bears united witness to it. But
rather, in becoming poor in his Incarnation, God shows that poverty is the doorway
to the ‘all things’ that God in Christ is doing and will do for humanity.
To know our
weakness, our vulnerability, our utter dependence, to not just know it
notionally and vaguely while all the while we grab as big a piece of the pie as
we can and wrap ourselves in layers of comfort and wealth, but to really know
it, to taste it, to feel it, to shiver from it, to be all weak and wobbly the
way we are when we are really hungry—this is the gateway to the kingdom of God.
And this
kingdom is where are hopes run wild, where the starry, frantic, free action of
grace can move in its perfect freedom, and where all things truly are possible.
It is not just a frantic grubby grab for the big money and the big life, but
something much better, much more joyous, much more lasting. And this is
something the poor are at least better situated to know about than the rich,
and that is why the Lord Himself calls them ‘blessed.’
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