A church is any 2 who meet with me

"For where     2   or 3 are gathered together in my name,  I am there among them".      

  • Matthew 18:20

At any given moment there are more prayers than answers and I am wondering around the city centre looking at yet another obelisk - Waypoint of a seafarer back to

Nile merchant ships but there is no river to return to Only the sun gripping the city air Strange lands Made up of too many people 

A church is any 2 who meet with me along the way

But this hasn’t stopped them from building chapels, monuments and ceilings 

that need an audience of 1 hundred thousand   Higher wayfarer         far out        for purposes unclear   and here in the centre of these lower marshes

The trodden primordial body is suffocating

The souls of 2 or 3 men and only men    can brush their hands across the cages of the altar

as the schoolchildren’s feet are clanking on the ceiling 

Later the priests will become children again

and all children know the way home

all children can build obelisks 

and all children are churches

a river that will not connect to the shore for a great many years  

rocks that have not nestled into the coast and shorelines unbroken

are all made of mothers

At any given moment I am 1 of a half walking alone in a strange city 

where only my mother speaks the language-       holding the bricklayers and the painters

and the men who line the cement ceilings with gold

she is not made of them

she is made of 

only a mother and she is a language onto herself 

Inside of 2 halves there is only her, holding soil eroding against herself 

Made of starry compass celestial body and maps too large to be remembered by the many

    Made of music softly ricocheting down these empty medieval streets 

A church is a mother, 1 mother meeting herself on the riverbank,

holding her child, who is made of herself,

and gently pushing the  basket downstream. 

and as she takes her first steps beyond the ocean, there are more hands than needed, 

pushing her forward, so I look away     and turn to the obelisk for a history,

towards myself as a half, and then when I am forgotten and half empty,

She reminds me  

a church is any 2 who meet within me, 

and I am made of 1000 mothers

Jesus for the shareholders

 "My house will be called a house of prayer, but you are making it a den of robbers."     Matthew 21:13

That you took cattle and sheep 

and herded their trinkets at the foothold of the temple

That there were gods you peddled in the marketplace like merchants

and those gods were the hands of man running under the table

running up her leg

That you would open a holy book

   take out a holy word crush it with your fist

         and sprinkle it into her drink

And that if your hands of man were not guilty of this act

that instead, you kneeled down

perching on her ankle

whispering in her ear

   this is the word of the Lord

That you take hands of love and extract what is left of the word

That your fathers and mothers were farmers and brothers of the world

That you take their livestock down into the temple for slaughter

That your act of conversion is not a sin

That you take one hand and brush it across the altar

and with the other you rip apart her walls

That you spit on the Earth’s primordial body

and you rip apart the bodies of earth

Then when there is nothing left

        and no false gods to worship

  you start to pray

That your bankrupt business is salvaged and bolstered        again and again

       so your golden towers can be erected 

          on top of the chapel doors

            forever 

That you have forgotten that once a man stood at the foot of the church

and overturned the tables of the money changers 

and the seats of those who sold doves

That the house of the Lord requires a contractor

who does not want to sell the bricks to the highest bidder

That business concludes at her feet

before you enter her temple

That you have declared today and forever

Let money be made on the body of the Lord,

       Let her body be used and discarded

              Let slaughter be more than cattle and sheep

Let slaughter be the name of this temple

I too, would have been Leonard Cohen if it were not for the supermarket

“and other forms of boredom advertised as poetry”
-Leonard Cohen, New Skin for the Old Ceremony

once again it all becomes the bonfire

men in caves leading tribes away from the desert

once again there is poverty in this story

and the poet of the picket line and the poet of the magazine

selling digital remedies for the end times

the altar 

replaced by the

supermarket

the last congregation 

passes around a bag of Doritos

the communion becomes the telephone

and you are supersonic

ricocheting down the dairy aisle

sanctifying all the cold cuts you commune 

III.

my father tells me the algorithm has died/that there was a man selling eulogies/brewing syrups/blind/medicine and snake oil for the healing/come forward/he would say/come towards the centre of the digital/commune with me as if were the pastor/kneel

kneel before flopping pixel

IV. 

the angels take the last train out of Manhattan 

you stopped driving sometime after dusk

the car broke down and 

you slammed the door behind you 

anger in the streetlight 

you walked out towards the forest 

I watched you 

from a distance 

holding the soil of some distant holy land

I closed my eyes before you started praying

when I returned you were gone

nothing left

only instructions to travel west

V. 

god becomes the comic book movie

the pulp beaten out of the paper

out my eyes - forgetting how to glaze over

there is always something to look at

god help me there is always something to look at

VI. 

I wrote this letter to you to curb my consumption

To stop my fingers growing fatter

Love in the time of quantities

I begin to eat my pen 

VII. 

when you call my mother after dinner 

tell her I have gone to bed

that my spirit stopped growing older 

in the church of the television 

that stasis usurped enlightenment 

and that I could not bear the weight of it 

tell her 

I was not afraid of the introduction

only I was scared to speak in the contemporary voice 

cannibalised and hardy - I ate more than I needed 

and before I finished dinner 

I was in Amsterdam

spitting out fish bones 

and listening to the sea

VIII. 

music devours its son

something in its eyes  

removes the mundane from the skin 

someone pawns the ceremony off for scraps

the living go on breathing 

buying groceries 

driving further out of town 

and writing everything down 

only now there is no boredom in poetry  

and nothing left to sell 

John Doe
Poet, Independent Writer
IN CONVERSATION WITH
Ramsey Tawfik