I Have Graven You upon My
Palms
I have graven you upon my palms.
—Isaiah 49:16
Long ago your hands clung ’round Mary’s neck,
tiny fingers twining her hair about them
while she hugged you to her breast.
Later Joseph held your boy-hand secure within his firm
grasp
as you walked the road together on your first
pilgrimage to Jerusalem
and taught those hands to handle lathe
and plane rough wood beams to smooth usefulness.
Your hands blessed and healed,
tousled the curly heads of the children who flocked
around you,
and wrote in the dust as the elders looked on,
hoping to ensnare you, too, in the trap laid for the
adulteress.
Raised in thanksgiving,
your hands
multiplied the loaves and fishes
and broke bread
to feed your disciples’ hunger with much more than
crushed wheat.
Then those same hands
that washed soiled feet
(and stained, sin-encrusted souls)
were wrenched and held fast,
forced to the crossbeam as the executioner plied open
your fingers
and drove iron through your palms,
inscribing my name upon them.
Tendons mangled and severed,
nerves vibrating in agony,
muscles contorted in tight spasms—
those hands were made useless
except to hold you pinioned to the cross
as your body sagged,
its weight straining and pressing raw against the
nails.
Your hands, once so wounded and so bloodied,
still bear the hard-won battle scars—
now a sign of victory and glory
and record of the price you paid for me.
These wounds indelibly written upon your flesh
plead on my behalf before the throne of God
where you stand and never cease to intercede as the
Lamb slain for
me.