To Every Human Being Whom Ever Lived Or Will Live Even If For Only A Few Seconds Poem by Gary Edward Geraci

To Every Human Being Whom Ever Lived Or Will Live Even If For Only A Few Seconds



black faces
white faces
brown faces
faces of ev-
‘ry color
look magnif-

‘icent in
flowing white
robes of Heav'n
where my Love
for him or
her (or her

or her) is
no longer
a scandal
or a sin

-Gary Edward Geraci

To Every Human Being Whom Ever Lived Or Will Live Even If For Only A Few Seconds
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
In my poem I appeal to the ultimate end; eternal life in heaven, deigned for human souls, if we so choose it. While Jesus certainly didn't have to suffer, he incarnated and lived among us, suffering along the way. But he spoke of a future where there would be no suffering, where there would be a communion, a pure love - love with a capital " L" : Love. Here, now, many confuse lust with love and shortchange themselves. We see the negative effects all around us. Use of symbolism in our human language such as ‘white robes', a symbol of purity, can inspire us to think more about eschatology - " the part of theology concerned with death, judgment, and the final destiny of the soul and of human kind" and ‘her (or her or her) ', the symbol of a masculine, universal longing for Love, as pointing us to the eternal fulfillment of our eschatological destiny. The diverse ‘faces' remind us " all peoples, irrespective of ethnic, gender, and social distinctions, are equal candidates for salvation and sonship in Christ." (Galatians 3: 28, Colossians 3: 11; Catechism of the Catholic Church 791 - the Catholic Study Bible version 6.0, Ignatius Press) . Poetry attempts to convey all of this within a certain economy of words, here, pre-dominantly, with just 3 syllables per line (trimeter) .
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