Worship Sails – a poem by Becky Parker

Worship Sails


Learning to play worship songs
on my tongue drum
is feeding my cheesecloth soul,
knotted tension and angst.
 
Is this what joy tastes like?

Wildflower honey dapples the numbers
tensed along the grooves of the turquoise drum,
now transformed as ancient ships
firmly sailing turbulent waters.

I don my sailor’s cap
and play on.
 

Becky Parker is an award-winning writer from Tennessee who loves glamping with her husband. She is the founder of Briar Haus Writes.

Embodied Prayer – a poem by Sheila Wellehan

Embodied Prayer


Muscle memory propels my morning rituals
and routines. I don’t have to think
as I sleepily hustle and bustle—

letting my dog out, brewing coffee,
dispensing pills. The animals’ bodies
move automatically too.

My dog gently thumps her tail
in anticipation when she sees the flash
of her stainless steel bowl in the sun.

The cats tussle and tumble with gusto
when I fuss with their meals—
they know the wonder of breakfast is near.

We’ve repeated our morning rituals so often
they’ve become embodied prayers.
We’re filled with joy. We’ll trust this day.

We give thanks for the gifts
of good food and good health.
Such abundance. Such luck. Such love.

Sheila Wellehan’s poetry is featured in On the Seawall, ONE ART, Maine Public Radio’s Poems From Here, Rust & Moth, Thimble Literary Magazine, and many other publications. She served as an assistant poetry editor for The Night Heron Barks and as an associate editor for Ran Off With the Star Bassoon. Sheila lives in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. You can read her work at www.sheilawellehan.com.

Jerusalem – a poem by Nell Starr

Jerusalem

It feels strange going south;
dust and divots
punctuate the road
like a pocky moon.

Where are we?
I drive on.

If we abandon our dreams like meccas
and all you call manna – illusion…

Then which way is Jerusalem?
Maybe nowhere but somewhere east of here;
I am not sure.

I follow the road to Pipiriki,
hoping it will flatten,
admiring the dark green hollow
that hides a river:
the Whanganui lies exposed.

Once it carried men, wills set on wandering;
men of few words.

Jerusalem -- follow the river.
Here lived a man of several words
poet, rascal, friend of priests.

I remember being shown pages bible-thin
words spent in a night of readings and laughter.
gone now, remote and hidden
like a landing in the overgrown bush.

Tamed, the poet’s words rise as prayer:
Heaven is with us when you are with us…
I will go no further today
but pause to retrieve a stone, gray
to prop by the cottage door.

My son wants to go to the Four Square,
not Jerusalem after all.
So we turn before the water rises
and slip upstream,
gathering supplies for a voyage to come.

Nell Starr is a poet and priest in New Zealand, trained at Iowa (MA) and Duke (MDiv). She writes poems and prayers, and while in Iowa City, helped Windhover Press print poetry by hand, a letter and word at a time.

Let – a poem by Patricia A. Joslin

Let 
after “Let Evening Come” by Jane Kenyon

Let the morning sky be a prayer,
clouds dappled peach and purple.

Let memories of a loving marriage
be a prayer for our children.

Let strong faith and hope for the future
be praise, a forever prayer.

To the poem that sings, the world that turns,
let there be prayer.

Let the blooms of dogwood and redbud
be a prayer of promise.

Patricia A. Joslin is a poet living in Charlotte, North Carolina. She writes about music, memory, and the magic of life in later years. Her first collection, I’ll Buy Flowers Again Tomorrow was published in 2023 as “literary therapy” following the death of her husband. A second collection, No Packing Necessary, Poems for the Solo Journey is forthcoming from Main Street Rag. Poems have appeared in a variety of publications. Patricia travels widely, often alone, seeking immersive experiences that inspire her poetry. She believes that every stage of life holds its own magic. Online: patriciajoslin.com

Basilico S. Domenico – a poem by Beth McDonough

Basilico S.Domenico

Landlocked by a Sienese fresco, you pray,
insipidly fleshed, matched by wings

in dusty pinks.

Bent-kneed, you mirror your twin,

high arched in an organised cosmos,
backgrounded tight as a Liberty print.

Each of you sports a dinner-plate halo,

fixed to a circlet of something
slightly perjink.

Attendant on celestial duty,
guard for the Madonna and child,

crowned, fairy-lit.

But do your knees really suggest genuflection?
I’m uncertain, as your feet disappear
in a shoal. So, is it


that even angels need breaks?
Transported by medieval jet-skis – 

get you – painted, ready to dive.

Beth McDonough is a Dundee-based poet and artist. Initially she trained in Jewellery and Silversmithing at Glasgow School of Art, later completing an M.Litt at Dundee University. She has been Writer in Residence at Dundee Contemporary Arts and Makar of the Federation of Writers (Scotland). Her pamphlet Lamping for Pickled Fish is published by 4Word. Her shared poetry collection with Nikki Robson, and a hybrid project on outdoor swimming will be published in 2026. She co-hosts Platform Sessions in Fife.

Conductor – a poem by Megan Denese Mealor

Conductor


Sometimes I sit beside my golden son
as he bathes, god of the sudsy sea,
admiral of the milk jug boats.
He seems to feel the most operative here–
maybe even the most effusive–
but he will never allow me to play
with his moldering bath toys or
splash him with supportive water,
no matter how many fevered giggles
he ejects my way, how many of his
raving smiles I snare. Still, we perch together
for a fishline of epitomized magnitude,
operating untogether but never far apart.

The backyard pool comes alive in May,
where I stand my son up on my feet
and take him for a Cajun waltz
along the strongbox shallows.
He will spend many buoyant hours
crawling up and down the vinyl steps,
chasing a life raft around the redwood deck.
With a euphoric “Jump! Jump!”,
I leap into intrinsic action, bouncing him
up and down in the whisking water
as he shrieks up a storm of spirea.

Our peak adventures are on the coquina beach,
where the emerald ocean exhales flustered surf.
The scalding driftwood sand burns our hungry heels,
so I take his curt hand and we run for the brink of shore.
He races down the unfolding joyful sand,
mosaic sealight flickering with sunup against
my wide-brimmed black oak tortoise shades,
shielding stabs of scurvy grief from God’s audit.

Megan Denese Mealor echoes and erases in her native land of Jacksonville, Florida. Nominated three times for the Pushcart Prize, and a 2023 Best of the Net candidate, her writing has been featured in hundreds of literary journals worldwide. Megan has authored five poetry collections: Bipolar Lexicon (Unsolicited Press); Blatherskite (Clare Songbirds); A Mourning Dove’s Wishbone (Cyberwit.net, 2022); A Cat May Look Like a King (Dancing Girl Press, Summer 2026); and Coals to Newcastle (Cyberwit.net, 2027).

The Dove and the Crow – a poem by Cynthia Pitman

The Dove and the Crow

Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the song without the words
And never stops at all.

                 Emily Dickinson​


Yes, Emily, you are right.
Hope is the thing with feathers
that perches in the soul,
life’s sweet Dove.
But right beside it,
too near, perches Despair,
life’s ravenous Crow.
the thing with blue-black feathers
the color of a day-old bruise.
The Crow caws at the Dove,
stares it down with blood-red eyes.
The Dove cowers,
hiding its face under a pure white wing.

But curled into this ball
the color of virgin snow,
the Dove’s heart
begins to swell with song.
Its wings break free,
spread wide,
and loosen upon the world
the holy melody of Faith.
The Crow backs away,
taking its minor place.
The Dove takes flight,
soaring high and high and high.

Cynthia Pitman, author of poetry collections The White Room, Blood Orange, Breathe, and Broken, has been published in Amethyst Review, The Ekphrastic Review, Literary Yard, Third Wednesday (One Sentence Poem finalist), Saw Palm: Florida Literature and Art (Pushcart Prize nominee), and other journals, and in anthologies Pain and Renewal, Brought to Sight & Swept Away, Nothing Divine Dies, and What is All This Sweet Work?

Gracia – a poem by Bett Butler


Gracia

I’ve been thinking lately
about the word grace

how it sounds in Spanish
gracia how it starts

with the catch of a brief breath
against the roof of your mouth

then a half-rolled r flutters
on the butterfly of your tongue

I love the way its first syllable
grows in your opening mouth

only to find itself
ebbing in a sibilant whisper

and the way its ending
not quite two syllables

dances away in the air
leaving your mouth unfastened

unfettered open
in wonder

gracia

all the sounds of the world
are in that word spoken

time and again in thanks,
in beauty in prayer

Often addressing the malignant legacies of racism, misogyny, and religious trauma, Bett Butler’s poetry and short fiction have appeared in small-press publications in the U.S., U.K., E.U., and Canada. An award-winning songwriter and jazz musician (International Songwriting Competition, Artist Foundation, Independent Music Awards), she co-owns Mandala Music Production, where she and her spouse produce music and spoken word licensed for HBO, Discovery Channel, and more. Her upcoming album, “The Gospel Truth,” is a musical response to the rise of Christian nationalism. More of her work can be found at www.mandalamusic.com.

Island in the River – a poem by Deborah Leipziger

Island in the River  

I, like you, am a landscape
of return of languages--
a river’s home.

This place of repair
of lighthouses of stone,
old growth forest just

small enough to enclose me.
I like, you, am totemic
geodesic ecosystem.

Place of convergence,
birch and sunflower.
You send me searching

for lost languages.

Deborah Leipziger is an author, poet, and advisor on sustainability. Born in Brazil, Ms. Leipziger is the author of Tell Me, published by Lily Poetry Review Books. Her poems have been published in ten countries in such magazines and journals as The Bombay Literary Review, Pangyrus, Salamander, Lily Poetry Review, and Revista Cardenal. Her work appears in numerous anthologies, including The Nature of our Times and Tree Lines: 21st Century American Poems. She is the Founder of the Lexicon of Change, a web-based platform devoted to the words we need for ecological and social transformation.

Ashes of a Promise – a poem by Trisha Whipple

Ashes of a Promise

Fire consumes the trees, taking the familiar—
 canopy, shelter,
 the sound of birds,
 the scurry of small lives
 in the brush.

What once held life falls silent.
 It leaves a black scar,
 nothing but ash
 where memory once stood.

But beneath the ash,
 the ground is not finished.
 Heat cracks open what was sealed.
 Light reaches soil that has never known it.
 Seeds long buried begin to wake.

The forest does not return as it was.
 It grows back changed—
 new trees,
 new life,
 claiming the space as home.

What the fire consumed
 was not the promise,
 only the familiar.

And even now,
 the earth remembers what was placed there—
 before fire,
 before loss.

Trisha Whipple is a 7th-grade Science Teacher who uses poetry to understand the world. Her poems explore ideas of faith and reflect on how those truths appear in everyday life.