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Reopening the Garden

30/11/2025

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A walled-off acre
filled with corridors of flowers
and herbs and healing plants
seemed that it had come from
paper packages of seeds
a Shaker Eldress made.
Vines and curling tendrils
rose up straight so like
a straight-back chair
ascends, a final ladder
angels climb to heaven
amidst the foliage of a city
hiding holy beings.
Disheveled weeds in
pandemonium have spread
across embankments and
beyond my sight with
speckled butterflies and birds.
A simulacrum of our place
of first beginnings, now with
insistent fists of fuchsia of
vivid shades of violet.
The garden is a vestibule
to a house of plenty,
where on an antique table
a still-life lingers for a day.
And spiders in their own
mythic anonymity have spun
a gauze that covers everything
from a long abandoned wedding,
a raiment only worn by ghosts.
And in recesses of my broken head
deeper darkness hints at dawn,
as it catches light and then ignites the
vision of a widened world that weds
both gift and grace that will return
me to the garden I will then get lost in.

--
​Royal Rhodes is a retired educator who taught courses on Early, Medieval, Reformation and Modern Christianity. He lives in a small village in the heartland of Ohio, surrounded by
a nature conservancy and Amish farms.
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Offering of Earthly Delights

23/11/2025

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Have you stood silently
surrounded by the crescent
sweep of planted daffodils
and abundant lilies-of-the-valley
with an angel at the gate
guardian of the garden
keeping out despair?

Or seen hydrangea globes
let direct sunlight change
their palette of pastels?

Walk beside the chosen rocks
that are a threshold
from grass to flower beds
and the stones scooped out
with water pockets
that draw the thirsty birds.
This is a sight to slake
my own deep thirst.

Beside a day-lighted
stream and granite steps
moisture-loving plants abound
and there, look quickly,
is a peacock in the shade
displaying a hundred eyes
watching over our steps

--
​Royal Rhodes is a retired educator who taught courses on Early, Medieval, Reformation and Modern Christianity. He lives in a small village in the heartland of Ohio, surrounded by
a nature conservancy and Amish farms.
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Gracie's String-bean Casserole

16/11/2025

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Gracie sits beside me at the pot-luck luncheon. 
She wears lacy half-sleeves to cover her tattoos 
now that she is born again. Those arms flash out 
in frustration toward my piled-high plate 
when I compliment her string-bean casserole,
and I mean it—it is good. 

“No,” she insists. 
“If it hadn’t sat in the church kitchen 
through the long morning service,
with moisture gathering under the foil,
the onions on top would have stayed crispy. 
Instead they’re mushy. 
I just wish you could’ve tasted it before.”

I understand.
Once, my offering was at its finest,
fresh, poised, and able like crisp onions.
Now I am unseemly, white, and frayed,
my song like soggy bellows.
I aged out of freshness in my turn, as happens
after decades of long services spent under foil.

Yet, as I live, something tasty may persist,
and while I wish you could’ve tasted it before,
this is what I have to share anymore.

--
Michelle Shelfer and her husband, Jerry, operate a non-profit called Prepare a Room Ministries, which seeks to help those hurt by abortion and disciple the next generation to embrace life and the Giver of life. Her poetry has been published in Ekstasis, Penwood Review and Solid Food Press. Her poetic themes often centre around motherhood. She can be found at michelleshelfer.substack.com/ and on social media at @preparearoom.
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Inner Healing

9/11/2025

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Splintered bones set hard, out of place.
I limp among those I cherish, gripping
onto furniture, before I sit, defeated.
From the crucifix, your steadfast eyes

say, What’s mine is yours. To offer
this pitted stone—my heart—is pain;
but you do not take a hammer.
Quiet light penetrates, halos me, burns

the muscle-memory that mires my feet.
How cheap the word miracle—one step,
and now immersed in grace, I stride, serene,
across the river’s bridge. The agony

was always yours. The pasture greens.
Your breath is holy. I fill my lungs.

--
Emma-Jane Peterson writes for magazines in the US and the UK, where she lives. Her poems are published in BoomerLitMag, The Clayjar Review, The Ekphrastic Review, Metphrastics, Penstricken, Black Nore Review, Prosectrics and Pure in Heart, among others. She is the co-author of a book of children’s Bible stories (Parragon). 

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From Water

2/11/2025

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Clumped among the frothing mounds,
flung onto shore, a tiny wholeness
in baby bib overalls, awaits the finding:
this is what you have for me.

Brush away the flies—shoo now, gull!
unweave fingers of
emerald, garnet, opal seaweed,
and midwife a new sort of glean
from out the lashing waters
onto my-side, land-side, sand-wide world.

Make his cradle in the turn of my hand
and lift him to where my neck
is a cleft to share dry skin and warm,
encircled by wind moans in lullaby.
We both are foundlings found in the finding.

All that the tides have snatched from us
is now repaid in this, a crowning catch--
perfect transfer of seed to the barren,
speech to the silent, orphan to his rest.

--

Michelle Shelfer and her husband, Jerry, operate a non-profit called Prepare a Room Ministries, which seeks to help those hurt by abortion and disciple the next generation to embrace life and the Giver of life. Her poetry has been published in Ekstasis, Penwood Review and Solid Food Press. Her poetic themes often centre around motherhood. She can be found at michelleshelfer.substack.com/ and on social media at @preparearoom.
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