Tuesday 26 July 2016

An Update

Hello all,

I just wanted to write something of an update of what is happening with the anthology and to thank everyone who have got in contact and submitted poems.

I feel truly humbled that people have gotten behind it and understood what I am trying to do with it and it is starting to feel like it will be something really great and unique and different - which has got be a good when we think about fresh ways of meeting with God and expressing how we feel and understand and appreciate who God is. The poems that I have received have been wonderful and varied and amazing and people have been so glad to get involved which is exactly what I hoped for.

I met with a friend last week who is a great artist who is going to help design a cover and it all feels like it is starting to come together.

It feels kind of odd to be putting the anthology together sometimes and strange that it has now becoming a thing rather than just a concept I had in my mind. I have always liked to have a project but this feels like the biggest that I have taken on and the most important as it is not just my writing that I am responsible for and so whilst it is exciting it is now becoming daunting.

I would like to ask for prayer for a few things if I may. I don't want to loose sight of the heart behind this and so I feel that it is important that I put my prayer requests out there. I feel like this anthology brings the writers and readers together as a kind of unique community and so in that spirit I share the following in the hope that you will also pray with me for these things.

1. It is just over 2 months to the deadline and I am still just under half way with the amount of poems that I want to include. I would like to include as many great writers as possible and so pray that the poems will keep coming and that I will be able to include as many great poems as possible.

2. I am leaving my current job and starting a new job next week. I work at the local hospital and have been looking for a new job for a while and a few weeks back I was offered what seems to be a great job. I thank God for it and that the new job involves the minimum amount of disruption as it is still in the building where I work and I have been lucky enough to meet some of my new colleagues. But I pray that I will be able to settle into this new job and give my best to it but also give my best to the anthology and that I will have the time to do both of these.

3. And finally I pray that the focus of the anthology will continue to be  of worship and pointing towards God and that God will bless the work I am doing and those who are contributing.

Thanks all.

Until next time.

Dan


Saturday 16 July 2016

Name


I have been thinking for a while about what to call this anthology. I wanted a name with imagery and intrigue, something that wasn’t a cliché or cheesy or hackneyed, and something that summed up what the anthology was somehow. I have been batting around a few ideas and also discussing artwork with a friend of mine who is going to help with that and so have been putting together inspirational images for that. Thinking about that has also influenced what I have been thinking about the name. Also speaking to the poets who have already contributed has helped and given me a lot of ideas. One of the poets Tami who was one of the first people to submit sent a poem called Song of The Sea which I really liked as a title. I had been thinking about Song of …. Something as I really like the titles Songs of Innocence and Experience (William Blake), Songs of Ascent (from Psalms) and Songs of Faith and Devotion (Depeche Mode album)  but  in the end the idea of song in the title of a collection of poems seemed a little confusing.

But the idea of the sea stuck.

I really like the idea of the sea. The mystery of it. And a few years back I was leading a bible study and asked the question “When you think of God, what image do you think of?”. To which one of my friends answered “the ocean”. I love that image, it was so unexpected but it was perfect, The power, the mystery, the stillness, the might, the unquantifiableness of the ocean. I loved it!

I was talking with one of the other poets recently over email about some of the Orthodox Christian themes I had noticed in his work. Trevor writes poems and hymns that weave together ideas within faith and science which are such huge subjects. He was talking about some of his artwork, paintings of Nebula and about the mystery within the universe and we were talking about the sense of mystery that plays a part in Orthodox Christianity and how our own Anglican/charismatic traditions don’t really deal with mystery.

I really value mystery within faith and I personally find it helpful that I don’t have to all of theology sorted in my head, I now like that it isn’t all tidy and ordered. I prefer not to have God in a box that I can understand, I like that God is the ocean, that there are bits that make sense that you can see and be in awe at and appreciate the beauty of but there are also bits that are completely mysterious and unpredictable and that inspire a different kind of awe.

And so I guess that this idea fits with what this anthology is. This isn’t going to be the comprehensive Anglican, Methodist, Nazarene, Baptist, Adventist, Quaker, etc, anthology. But it is going to be a collection of poems by people who love poetry and love to worship and are offering the best we have in worship and praise.

The final piece to the name puzzle is that I wrote a poem that was kind of about this idea. It isn’t going to be in the anthology because it is too long and so it is going to go onto an album of recorded poetry but the poem talks about mystery and awe before God, as us being grains of sand before the ocean and I think I also like that image as a starting point when it comes to worship.

And so the name is…. drum roll…

Stones before the Ocean

I think the title sums up what this anthology is and I like the idea of that stance when it comes worship. That we stand before a powerful immense, uncontainable entirety  but that as we stand there we are present and we meet and engage with that force, and that the waves that wash over the stones are moved and smoothed, engulfed and washed by the rushing waters. And I also like that it presents a different image, Christian art I fear too often revolves around sunsets, mountain ranges, soft focus pastel colours, doves, which are all fine by the way. But as poets I think it is worth looking for new images, fresh metaphors, and I hope that the poems in this book will resonate with that.

Tuesday 5 July 2016

Better than I can say

I have had quite a few responses for the anthology which is very exciting and I am grateful for those who have contributed. The poems have been quite varied which has been great and exactly what i have been looking for and so I hope that the variety will continue.

I have wanted to write something more about what poetry is and was researching when I cam across this list so instead of writing a blog I am leaving the list. These are quotes from other poets and are way more likely to get you thinking than my ramblings.

So read, be inspired and find your way to the website link at the top of the page and get involved!


1. Poetry is truth in its Sunday clothes. ― Joseph Roux
2. Poetry can be dangerous, especially beautiful poetry, because it gives the illusion of having had the experience without actually going through it. ― Rumi
3. Poetry is just the evidence of life. If your life is burning well, poetry is just the ash. ― Leonard Cohen
4. Poetry is what in a poem makes you laugh, cry, prickle, be silent, makes your toe nails twinkle, makes you want to do this or that or nothing, makes you know that you are alone in the unknown world, that your bliss and suffering is forever shared and forever all your own. ― Dylan Thomas
5. If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry. ― Emily Dickinson
6. I’ve had it with these cheap sons of bitches who claim they love poetry but never buy a book. ― Kenneth Rexroth
7. Poetry is plucking at the heartstrings, and making music with them. ― Dennis Gabor
8. Poetry is the journal of a sea animal living on land, wanting to fly in the air. ― Carl Sandburg
9. Poetry is language at its most distilled and most powerful. – Rita Dove
10. Poetry is an act of peace. – Pablo Neruda
11. Poetry is ordinary language raised to the Nth power. Poetry is boned with ideas, nerved and blooded with emotions, all held together by the delicate, tough skin of words. – Paul Engle
12. Poetry is eternal graffiti written in the heart of everyone. – Lawrence Ferlinghetti
13. Poets are soldiers that liberate words from the steadfast possession of definition – Eli Khamarov
14. There is something about poetry beyond prose logic, there is mystery in it, not to be explained but admired. — Edward Young
15. If you can’t be a poet, be the poem. – David Carradine
16. Poetry is not an expression of the party line. It’s that time of night, lying in bed, thinking what you really think, making the private world public, that’s what the poet does. — Allen Ginsberg
17. The poet is the priest of the invisible. — Wallace Stevens
18. Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world. – Percy Byshe Shelley
19. Poetry is a language in which man explores his own amazement. – Christopher Fry
20. The poet doesn’t invent. He listens. – Jean Cocteau
21. There is poetry as soon as we realize we possess nothing. – John Cage
22. Poetry is an echo, asking a shadow to dance. – Carl Sandburg
23. Like a piece of ice on a hot stove the poem must ride on its own melting. – Robert Frost
24. Poetry is everywhere; it just needs editing. – James Tate
25. Poetry is frosted fire. – J. Patrick Lewis
26. Genuine poetry can communicate before it is understood. – T.S. Eliot
27. A poet’s work is to name the unnameable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world, and stop it going to sleep. – Salman Rushdie
28. To be a poet is a condition, not a profession. – Robert Frost
29. Poetry is nearer to vital truth than history. – Leonardo da Vinci
30. Poetry lies its way to the truth. – John Ciardi
31. For what is a poem but a hazardous attempt at self-understanding: it is the deepest part of autobiography. – Robert Penn Warren
32. We make out of the quarrel with others, rhetoric, but of the quarrel with ourselves, poetry. – William Butler Yeats
33. Poetry is like a bird, it ignores all frontiers. – Yevgeny Yevtushenko
34. I think that were beginning to remember that the first poets didn’t come out of a classroom, that poetry began when somebody walked off of a savanna or out of a cave and looked up at the sky with wonder and said, “Ahhh.” That was the first poem. – Lucille Clifton
35. Publishing a volume of verse is like dropping a rose-petal down the Grand Canyon and waiting for the echo. – Don Marquis
36. Poetry is the journal of a sea animal living on land, wanting to fly in the air. – Carl Sandburg
37. Writers don’t write from experience, although many are hesitant to admit that they don’t. If you wrote from experience, you’d get maybe one book, maybe three poems. Writers write from empathy. — Nikki Giovanni
38. But all art is sensual and poetry particularly so. It is directly, that is, of the senses, and since the senses do not exist without an object for their employment all art is necessarily objective. It doesn’t declaim or explain, it presents. – William Carlos Williams
39. All poets, all writers are political. They either maintain the status quo, or they say, ’Something’s wrong, let’s change it for the better.’ – Sonia Sanchez
40. My role in society, or any artist or poet’s role, is to try and express what we all feel. Not to tell people how to feel. Not as a preacher, not as a leader, but as a reflection of us all. – John Lennon
41. If you want to annoy a poet, explain his poetry. ― Nassim Nicholas Taleb
42. Anon, who wrote so many poems without signing them, was often a woman. ― Virginia Woolf
43. Writing poetry is a state of free float. ― Margaret Atwood
44. There is not a particle of life which does not bear poetry within it. ― Gustave Flaubert
45. Don’t use the phone. People are never ready to answer it. Use poetry. ― Jack Kerouac
46. A poet is, before anything else, a person who is passionately in love with language. ― W.H. Auden
47. Writing a book of poetry is like dropping a rose petal down the Grand Canyon and waiting for the echo. – Don Marquis
48. Poetry is the robe, the royal apparel, in which truth asserts its divine origin. — Beecher
49. The courage of the poet is to keep ajar the door that leads into madness. ― Christopher Morley
50. The true poem rests between the words. ― Vanna Bonta