Jesus Piece
America’s sport
and for some of us
locker rooms have always taught more than classrooms ever could
There are moments when chainlink, astroturf, and “suck it up”
form the type of crucible necessary to teach us
what it means to balance the intoxication of dominance with the humility of accord
to teach us about power, glory, and even faith
Like the other day, when I walked in to overhear one of my teammates say
“Aye yo, you got your new Jesus Piece?”
to which you responded: “Yeah man, solid 14K gold.”
As you indicated to the laser cut chunk of fate in the shape of a cross
glimmering against your cotton covered chest
You said “this will give me so much swag”
As if, a sign of faith is just one more step
enlisting into the athletic chain gang we call a team...
I’ve watched boys like you
Murmur prayers more for superstition than for faith,
cross yourself instinctively as you step into that dull diamond,
thank God as you round the bases
You care more about that cross when you need a big save
Instead of wearing as a sign of being saved
Its all part of the game
What’s more them than glory
What’s more you than competition
What’s more American than wielding power as a lifeline between God and ourselves
Since 1845, Baseball has been America’s pastime,
and since the dawn of our country we have known that symbols speak louder than deeds
We’ve convinced ourselves that its ok to kill in the name of christ
when the only death he wanted was his own..for us
Glory….Power….Faith
Why should we expect any different?
We make money off of the Godly showdown between channels every Sunday morning
We like our gospels intertwined with commercials selling a mail order slice of salvation
Our stairway to heaven is a spiral one where we are
Led, moving in circles without moving higher
Too many look for the covenant of grace in the local jewelry shop
Go to church an open up the rule book to hypocrisy
pray to God in blue robes
feel a sense of rejuvenation as they walk the blood stained carpet
Like their veins are filled with power
Like they have so much swag
But America’s past time wasn't created on a manicured green quilt
It was forged in the knotted pews of the house of god
By belief that the way to the right hand of god is on the left hand of our brazen consciousness
We all forget sometimes…
That we were all modeled out of God's personal mortar
That he sees us as worthy artifacts
And we are incomparable to others
Even if we sometimes can’t see that for glaze over our marbled eyes
That these gold crosses around our necks are only a reminder
that since he was nailed to that lumber of calvary,
Jesus will accept anyone back again,
one glimmering crucifixion at a time