The prompt for today’s, November Poem a Day Challenge is “a pet poem.”
I’ve been working through the book of Job, and this passage caught my attention. In the Lord’s final words to Job, the Lord addresses the monsters of the world which Job has faced. These monsters are imagined and embodied in the figures of Behemoth and Leviathan. The Lord shows to Job something of his own purposes for the two. After Eric Ortland’s commentary, Piercing Leviathan, only such a revelation, I think, would warrant Job’s response when he speaks of those things “too wonderful for me, which I did not understand” (Job 42:3).
Job 41:1-5 reads,
“Can you draw out Leviathan with a fishhook or press down his tongue with a cord? Can you put a rope in his nose or pierce his jaw with a hook? Will he make many pleas to you? Will he speak to you soft words? Will he make a covenant with you to take him for your servant forever? Will you play with him as with a bird, or will you put him on a leash for your girls?"
It is a striking picture. The Lord promises to subdue Leviathan and to make him no more harmless than a house pet. And so, Leviathan is the subject of my pet. You may listen to me read the poem via the player below.
Tied like bait and fastened to a tree He descended, cast himself to the depths Of this world’s chaos and calamity, Sank ‘neath its waves and breathed his last breath. Swallowed by the gaping mouth of death, In the dark of its belly he lay Until the barbed hook of justice set On the morning of the third day. Holding his rope in the beast's jaw fixed fast, The one who was drowned, went down, arose! Bursting death’s belly, the scorned and outcast Led Leviathan out by the nose. In our loving, Redeemer’s victory, The fears we fear, the terrors and threats Are of no more concern for you and me Than a bird a young boy might get. And Leviathan, that dragon of death, Is led for your girls on a leash like a pet. © Randall Edwards 2021.
The artwork is available via Wikimedia Commons which notes that the image is, God fishing Leviathan, using Jesus Christ’s human nature as bait. Jesus is depicted crucified, at the bottom of a w:Jesse Tree. Miniature from Hortus deliciarum. between 1167 and 1185. w:Herrad of Landsberg. I think it’s pretty cool that the metaphor and imagery which I imagined was captured 800 years earlier at least by a 12th Century Abbess. Hope I get to meet her someday.