Ed Stevenson
Some of us used to kneel
 to pray, to share communion
 to exchange vows, to grieve at a grave.
 Even now,
 when some of us have the chance or challenge
 we kneel to weed a garden,
 to examine a small flower along a path,
 to play with a child,  to scrub a floor.
 Kneeling has meant humbling ourselves
 as a sign of a willingness
 to use our hands and hearts to serve,
 kneeling has meant humbling ourselves
 in a posture of physical vulnerability
 to indicate our willingness
 to be emotionally and spiritually vulnerable
 before the pains and angers of the world,
 kneeling has meant humbling ourselves
 to respect something greater than ourselves,
 kneeling has meant humbling ourselves
 to praise that which is worth praising,
 May we not then kneel to mourn,
 to honor those dishonored
 by the rage,
 the prejudice,
 the accidents,
 the negligence
 of our imperfect world?
 
