Writing a Psalm of Lament: An Exercise
"Mending" (Phaedra Taylor) |
I’ve had
two experiences recently where folks have crafted their own lament psalm. At
Fuller Seminary I teach a course on worship annually. I cover topics like
prayer, confession, the Lord’s Supper, Sabbath-keeping, the liturgical
calendar, and so on. It’s one of the funnest courses I get to teach—and I teach
a lot of fun courses.
This year I
did something new. In our session on the Psalter, I not only taught them about
the psalms of lament, I also gave them a chance to write their own psalm of
lament. After giving them a crash course in Hebrew poetry and introducing them
to the “singular powers” of poetry in general, I provided them with a frame for typical
psalms of lament and invited them to write their own. The results were deeply
encouraging.
A few days
later I found myself at the Laity Lodge retreat center. Sharing the speaking responsibilities with Kathleen Norris, the author of The Quotidian Mysteries and
The Cloister Walk, among others, we both spoke on the psalms. Needless to
say, it too was super fun. In our fourth session I gave folks an opportunity
to craft a psalm that gave expression to their own experiences of grief,
suffering, loss, loneliness, doubt, tragedy, death, and so on.
After 45 minutes working alone, I gathered everyone back to together and invited people
to share the final results, if they wished. Listening to the ten to twelve
people share their poems of lament, I was astonished. People not only
exhibited an extraordinary vulnerability, they had also managed to craft remarkable poems in a really short amount of time.
I had
reminded them earlier of what both John Calvin and Ellen Davis had said about
the psalms. In the psalms, Calvin wrote, “we have permission given us to lay open before [God] our infirmities,
which we would be ashamed to confess before men.” Davis remarks similarly, that the
psalms “enable us to bring into our conversation with God feelings and thoughts
most of us think we need to get rid of before God will be interested in hearing
from us.”
As we approach Holy Week and
the conclusion of the season of Lent, I thought I'd share here the handout that
I had originally produced. There’s nothing so powerful as being able to name
the reality of one’s lament at all that’s gone wrong in one’s life and in the
world. There’s nothing so cleansing and healing as being able to share one’s
lament with others. This is the gift of Lent. This is the gift of the psalms.
Two final notes. I’m
including here a sample psalm of lament written by Amber Noel while at the
Laity Lodge retreat, and I thank her for the permission to do so. Also, the material here represents matter that I will treat
at length in my forthcoming book with Thomas Nelson, Honest to God: The Psalms and the Life of Faith (due out 2019).
My hope is that individuals,
small groups, church staff and entire communities might take advantage of this resource (and others like it) as an opportunity to
craft a psalm of lament and to share it with one another as together we partake of the sufferings of Christ and in the power of his resurrection.
THE SINGULAR POWERS OF POETRY
1. Poetry is a language that says more and says it more
intensely, more densely, than does ordinary language.
2. Poetry accents the musical textures of human
language.
3. Poetry brings us into metaphor-rich, imagery-rich territory.
4. Poetry draws our attention to the particularity of
things.
5. Poetry invites us to slow down as a way to pay
careful attention.
6. Poetry brings to our awareness the “more than just”
quality of things.
THE SINGULAR POWERS OF HEBREW POETRY
1.
Shorter
sentences than in prose: one line = 6 Hebrew words divided in two halves/cola,
or 9 words in a tri-cola. EX: Ps. 2:1 + 2:2.
2.
Default
rhythmic arrangement is 3 Hebrew words or 3 stresses per half line. EX: Ps.
2:2, 7 and 8. The second most common is the 3-2: Pss. 14 and 27.
3.
Its language
is terse. Things are said in the most economic way possible; it is not a
flowery style of poetry.
4.
It relies on
the following devices:
-
Strophe
and Stanza: Ps. 13 and 19.
-
Rhyme:
5:1-2; 18:46; 26:11; 35:23; 44:5
-
Paranomasia
(play on words): 6:10; 28:5; 37:2.
-
Alliteration
and Assonance: Ps. 127:1 and Ps.
102:6.
-
Alphabetical
psalms: Pss. 9-10; 25; 35; 37; 111; 112; 145; 119.
-
Chiasms
(abba): Ps. 29.
-
Refrains:
42:43; 67; 80.
-
Parallelism
(“stereophonic complementariness”). Three of the most common types of
parallelism include:
a) Synonymous (Ps. 77:11)
b) Antithetic (Ps. 30:5)
c) Synthetic (a heightening or specifying of first line: Ps.
33:8; 6:5).
5.
Its language
is suggestive rather than discursive.
6.
Its powers
reside in its use of metaphor and imagery.
THE BASIC SHAPE OF LAMENT PSALMS
With individual and communal
psalms of lament, there is a recognizable pattern. Psalm 13 is typical of this pattern.
A
Complaint (vv. 1-2)
How long, O Lord? Will you forget me
forever?
How long will you hide your face from me?
How long must I bear pain in my soul,
and have sorrow in my heart all day long?
How long shall my enemy be exalted over me?
How long will you hide your face from me?
How long must I bear pain in my soul,
and have sorrow in my heart all day long?
How long shall my enemy be exalted over me?
A
Petition (vv. 3-4)
Consider and answer me, O Lord my God!
Give light to my eyes, or I will sleep the sleep of death,
and my enemy will say, “I have prevailed”;
my foes will rejoice because I am shaken.
Give light to my eyes, or I will sleep the sleep of death,
and my enemy will say, “I have prevailed”;
my foes will rejoice because I am shaken.
A
Resolution (vv. 5-6)
But I trusted in your steadfast love;
my heart shall rejoice in your salvation.
I will sing to the Lord,
because he has dealt bountifully with me.
my heart shall rejoice in your salvation.
I will sing to the Lord,
because he has dealt bountifully with me.
While there are plenty of
variations on this pattern, the complaints are directed chiefly to God. (Psalm
3:1, “Oh Lord, how many are my foes!” Psalm 10:2,“Arise,
O Lord; O God, lift up Your hand. Do
not forget the afflicted.”) What are the complaints about? They may be about
God, or about one’s life, or about a presumed enemy. (Psalm 22:1, “My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” Psalm 38:3, “There is no health in my bones because of
my sin.” Psalm 72:4,
“Save the children of the needy, and crush the oppressor.”) The kinds of
petitions that the psalmists make of God range widely. They include requests
for healing, deliverance, vindication, provision and protection, and, in the
cases of confession of sin, forgiveness. The final resolution of a psalm of
lament may involve a confession of trust; it may involve a resolve to praise or
a promise to obey; or it may involve a confident affirmation of God’s own
faithfulness, even if there is no empirical data to prove it.
WRITING YOUR OWN PSALM OF LAMENT:
1. Taking the basic shape of a lament psalm as your
pattern, write your own lament psalm.
2. Choose whether you wish to write an individual lament
or a communal lament.
3. Keep your phrases/lines succinct; no long sentences,
no wordy phrasings.
4. Be specific and concrete in your statements, rather
than abstract and idiosyncratic.
5. Choose evocative imagery or metaphors that will help
you see what you’re praying.
6. Take advantage of the unique devices of Hebrew
poetry.
7. Title your psalm.
8. Share it with a friend (if you feel comfortable).
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God heals the
broken-hearted,
and binds up
all their wounds,
God fixes the
number of the stars;
and calls
each one by its name.
“Psalm 147,” by Amber Noel
God of Israel,
listen! Let me wag a bitter tongue.
How my desires
cling to the dust! Would you
call it lame? Do
you blame me for eating too much,
or for watching
Netflix instead of your numbered stars?
Why do good, why
licitly, innocently amuse
myself, without
shared memory, progeny --
when people who
don’t even bother
to seek you seem
to do just fine? Oy!
Damn it. You
don’t even treat animals
this way, ask
for patience, proper ceremony,
unbroken
covenant from birds in pair,
from monkey
troops grooming each other
in zoos, from
does, each year their new fawn.
Or two!
Your are not far
off, O LORD. That is not
my problem. I
make my complaint of the farness
of flesh, the
inability to look your sweet eye
in the eye, in
the eye of another, a human gaze.
You command not
the deprivation of the senses,
O LORD, and we
desire it not. I’ve said save me
from the lying tongue,
the violent hand,
the turned-aside
foot, the hopeless belly.
But for the
hungers you have ordained,
which your very
presence does not dampen
but stoke, not
fair! What shall I ask? You give
the wine, the
bread, the priestly hand
on palm and
hair, the oil, the ash, the tears
Of saints
falling, from me, (I think) from statues;
the friendship
of children, too, animal comfort,
friendly
embrace, my body bounding still free
through air or
water on a summer’s day. Hooray!
Are these
enough? If I am honest with you
(petulance not
having yet undone your love
some-thousand
years and counting, I risk),
then no. No,
your gifts are not enough...
My God,
have mercy.
Let those whom
the generations yet unborn
praise, saying,
“This will be my mother, and this
shall be my
father,” stand in the gates and praise me also,
saying, “This is
she who loved and loved, who prayed
For me on my
sickbed, and I arose, who took
the LORD for her
abode.” O LORD, comfort
the single, the
childless woman! The one-bedroom
apartment, O
God, I know you do not despise.
I look at the
stars and see you have fixed
the number of
the clusters, yet set between
each the expanse
of your presence, like open
hands. It is in
their aloneness you name them.
It is in their
gatherings we do. Return, O God,
To count your
modern does among the blessed,
maybe even the
blessed few who wait with no proof
that your will
will please. You do not reject the lonely,
nor cast out
those who rule a small house.
Hallelujah!
Bearing your name, I say,
let the Name of
the LORD be praised.
Amber Noel, 2018
Comments
Congrats, David, on the upcoming book too!
Tim