Jack went
on in his email to ask me about a poem that has been haunting him almost as
long, if not longer, Francis Thompson’s The
Hound of Heaven. I said that I remember it well because it was the favorite
poem of my high school English teacher. I also said that as famous as that poem
is, I did not like it back then and I still don’t, mainly because I am not a
fan of poetry.
After I
sent my email, I found the poem online and read it again. I still don’t like
it. It takes too much work to decipher, but I suppose that is what all good
poems are to do: make us ponder the words, wrestle with their meaning, make
them part of our being. I don’t want to work that hard: give it to me plain and
simple…and make it rhyme.
Nevertheless,
I worked my way through the poem and have to admit that while it was difficult
to get through, it was and is worth it. The truth is, the imagery Thompson
paints has remained with me since high school. In fact, it is so vivid that it
is indeed very memorable and unforgettable no matter how difficult the poem.
The picture Thompson paints, at least for me, is about me, about my sometimes relationship with God. The truth and the reason why the poem is so famous is that the poem speaks to every one of us and our often relationship to God. We all, if I may be so bold to include every believer, spend an inordinate amount of time running away from God, running away from our responsibilities to live as God wants us to live, as we know we should be living, as we truly want to live.
The
saving grace is that God, The Hound of Heaven, keeps chasing us down, never
lets us get too far away. Eventually we stop running away and start back
towards the Hound. Would that we remain that way. But we do not. All too often
we turn tail and run away once again; and once again the Hound sets out after
us, catches up to us and brings us back home.
The good
news is that the chases are fewer and further between as we grow older and
wiser, but they never end. That’s what sin is all about: our going after what
we know and the Hound knows we want but do not need, after what is harmful to
us and others but what seems so delicious and desirous.
And why
would the Hound of Heaven give up on us, stop chasing after us? After all, the
Hound loves us so much that he sent his son to give his life for us because of
his love for us. What’s a little chase now and then?