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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE JEW TO THE GENTILE, by SARA MESSING STERN First Line: The priest bent angry gaze upon the jew Last Line: "can bring more souls to god than all man's creed." Subject(s): Anti-semitism; Christianity; Jews; Religious Discrimination; Judaism; Religious Conflict | |||
THE priest bent angry gaze upon the Jew, "What base ingratitude. Shame, shame that you Who love the Father, should deny His Son. Christ, Jesus, is Divine, with God is one. His coming was foretold. His glorious birth, A miracle, His gentle life on earth. An inspiration and His body bled For us, that through His death our souls be led To God. He died for us. Oh, stiff-necked race, Forever shall the glory of God's face Be turned from you. Christ is the Lord. Take heed. Confess Him and from all your sins be freed." And swift the Jew replied: "'Christ is the Lord!' You forced upon the world with rack and sword. Your sins are legion. Oh, the awful moan Of babes and mothers, maids and men and youth Who died because they dared refuse the truth You claimed. For these things how can you atone, How ease your burdened conscience, how forget The needless misery you caused? "And yet Although you maimed us with the scourge and flame And tortured and reviled us 'in His name'; We reach our arms in friendliness to you And plead for peace. We are God's children, too, Have known the love and mercy in the Face He turned to us, His priests and chosen race, 'Acknowledge Christ,' you say, 'and save your soul. Confess our creed. This is the only toll Required to enter heaven and from sin Be freed.' 'Serve thou no other God but Me And love your fellowmen.' This is our key To life. We love the Father, He is One. We need no mediator. 'Christ, the Son,' Was but God's child like all of us. His kin, The atheist, agnostic, Jew and Turk And Christian. And his equal, all who shirk No sacrifice for fellowmen. Some may Not hold like creed with you. For one will say He worships Reason. One doubts Christ is King. One calls God, allah. Does that matter? Fling Afar your doctrine. Cast aside your fears, Seek out the weeping ones and dry their tears. The sick, the halt, the sinner and the blind, Oh, pity them and love them and be kind. For, after all, the helpful human deed By Christian, Turk or Jew to one in need Can bring more souls to God than all man's creed." | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: YEE BOW by EDGAR LEE MASTERS CASSANDRA SOUTHWICK; 1658 by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER JOHN UNDERHILL by JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER LATIMER AND RIDLEY, BURNED AT THE STAKE IN OXFORD, 1555 by WILLIAM EDMONSTOUNE AYTOUN THE NEW ANTHEM by NORMAN BOLKER ROGER WILLIAMS by HEZEKIAH BUTTERWORTH AN EXPOSTULATION WITH A SECTARIST, WHO INVEIGHED AGAINST THE CLERGY by JOHN BYROM ON THE GROUND OF TRUE AND FALSE RELIGION by JOHN BYROM A DIALOGUE BETWEEN TWO ZEALOTS UPON THE &C. IN THE OATH by JOHN CLEVELAND THE NEW APOCRYPHA: THE FIG TREE by EDGAR LEE MASTERS AN EPITAPH, INTENDED FOR HIMSELF by JAMES BEATTIE SONG, FR. ERNEST MALTRAVERS by EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER-LYTTON |
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