A pair of sonnets for St. John the Baptist.

So keep his fires burning through the night
Beacons and gateways for the child of light.

Now, with the summer solstice, we have come to midsummer and the traditional Church festival for this beautiful, long-lit solstice season is the Feast of St. John the Baptist, which falls on June 24th, which was midsummer day in the old Roman Calender. Luke tells us  that John the Baptist was born about 6 months before Jesus, so this feast falls half way through the year, 6 months before Christmas!

The tradition of keeping St. John’s Eve with the lighting of Bonfires and Beacons is very ancient, almost certainly pre-Christian, but in my view it is very fitting that it has become part of a Christian festivity. Christ keeps and fulfills all that was best in the old pagan forshadowings of his coming and this Midsummer festival of light is no exception. John was sent as a witness to the light that was coming into the world, and John wanted to point to that light, not stand in its way, hence his beautiful saying ‘He must increase and I must diminish’, a good watchword for all of those who are, as the prayer book calls us, the ‘ministers and stewards of his mysteries’.

I have written two sonnets,  one for St. John’s Eve reflecting on the lighting of the fires and another for St. John’s day in which , in honour of the Baptist, I reflect on the mystery and grace of baptism itself.

I am very grateful to the artist Rebecca Merry  for her beautiful interpretation of this feast and these poems.

Both these sonnets were published in Sounding the Seasons, my cycle of seventy sonnets for the Church Year.The book is now back in stock on bothAmazon UK and USA  It is now also out on Kindle. Please feel free to make use of this, and my other sonnets in church services and to copy and share them. If you can mention the book from which they are taken that would be great.

As usual you can hear the poems by pressing the ‘play’ button if it appears, or else by clicking on the title.

St. John the Baptist: 1 St. John’s Eve

Midsummer night, and bonfires on the hill

Burn for the man who makes way for the Light:

‘He must increase and I diminish still,

Until his sun illuminates my night.’

So John the Baptist pioneers our path,

Unfolds the essence of the life of prayer,

Unlatches the last doorway into faith,

And makes one inner space an everywhere.

Least of the new and greatest of the old,

Orpheus on the threshold with his lyre,

He sets himself aside, and cries “Behold

The One who stands amongst you comes with fire!”

So keep his fires burning through this night,

Beacons and gateways for the child of light.


St. John the Baptist: 2 Baptism

Love’s hidden thread has drawn us to the font,

A wide womb floating on the breath of God,

Feathered with seraph wings, lit with the swift

Lightening of praise, with thunder over-spread,

And under-girded with an unheard song,

Calling through water, fire, darkness, pain,

Calling us to the life for which we long,

Yearning to bring us to our birth again.

Again the breath of God is on the waters

In whose reflecting face our candles shine,

Again he draws from death the sons and daughters

For whom he bid the elements combine.

As living stones around a font today,

Rejoice with those who roll the stone away.

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5 Comments

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5 responses to “A pair of sonnets for St. John the Baptist.

  1. zimsuzieq

    Dear Father Malcolm. We struggle, as Christians these days, to know where to find the path, with all the ‘noise’. And then you quietly point out where we have been told to go, so long ago. And how to find it today. Thank You.

    Suzanne Mooney, Ottawa, Ontario. Canada.

  2. Bruce Bridgewood

    Thank you fopr the lovely poems. Why is it Holy Mother Church keeps his Feast on his Birthday rather than his Death day? I have forgotten …

  3. leoaylen177bb9c421

    sonnet for a Sudamese St John the Baptist’s Day

    A locust swarm can eat a community’s entire harvest.  Locusts are immune to pesticides. Communities that catch and eat the locusts are likely to succumb to pesticides.

    Hungrily haggard we gloat over our crop,

    Feeding our kids with our imagination’s

    Mealie-piled bowls. But brown clouds order “Stop!

    Commandeered for a Locust  feeding station!”

    Our leaders laugh. They shout their orders: Nets!

    Quick there! Bring out the village feeding pots. 

    Breakfast today? Locust. You’ll never forget

    Fried locust Help yourself. Go on. Take lots.

    John the Baptiser watches Sudanese

    Converts, once starving, now extremely fit,

    Suddenly slump with a deadly disease:         

    Vomiting. Fever. Spasms. Bloody spit.

    .

    Sudanese priests exhaust themselves with praying,

    While multinational companies go on spraying.

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