Lizzy Sobiesk
The rapture creeps
in and wind chaps
any word dared spoken.
Jesus meets
believers in the sky,
the closest I come
to seeing his bloodied
hands is amongst
the clouds and sun.
From my blue porch,
I eat sour jelly beans
and watch bodies rise
to heaven. Paul was wrong —
no one is snatched.
True believers fly.
I have been waiting,
living in a temperate
deciduous forest:
maple’s lost leaves,
unclothed oaks,
the life cycle of color.
I leave my home
and the church sits still.
Once unwelcome,
I now kneel fat-calved
on the rough carpet
of the priest’s office floor
and try the crisp,
tasteless Body of Christ
with peanut butter I brought.
Only Mary, stained forever
against a slant of light,
sees me so relieved.