The Ghost Behind Your Eyes

(Dear Friends: In 1986, I self-published a 16-poem sequence as a chapbook: The Ghost Behind Your Eyes, based on what Jesus said toward the end of the Gospel of John, specifically the transcendent and, for humanity, potentially transformational 23rd verse of the 17th chapter: “I in them and you in me, may they be perfectly one.” The sequence begins on Good Friday and ends on Easter. Several hundred copies were printed and sold in a handful of Virginia bookstores. I sent one copy to the American poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti. In a handwritten reply, he thanked me for sending him my “very good book.” His kind words humble my soul and lift my spirits to this day. Thirty-nine years later, I re-publish this sequence here for anyone who has discovered the ghost behind their eyes, everyone who is still searching and those who haven’t begun. God’s love and grace to you all, Ken Woodley)

By Ken Woodley

1

BOMBERS TAKE OFF FROM GOLGOTHA

The last shade of something 

stalks the rim of night,

barely touching the tops of things,

sniffing the moonlight for food.

The stars are surrounded by burnt tea

and there is drinking.

Darkness walks past the ruins,

spreading like damson

toward the crusty edge.

One by one the constellations are unborn

and the Milky Way seems a beautiful scar.

From the jungle comes the sound of drumming

and the moon is swallowed by clouds

that look like an exploded letter bomb to God.

There are subtle chantings

that seem to be, or not.

People rub their ears

and graze further toward the edge of something.

Some prey is taken

and the night moves one

2

THE RED BALLOON

The red balloon floated away.

It was the one thing wrong with the sky.

That was all.

The red balloon just didn’t seem to fit in

with the white clouds and the blueness

of everything else up there.

“It clashes,” somebody said.

“You don’t see any red clouds, do you?”

Nobody said they had.

The red balloon looked like a drop of blood

in the sky as it floated higher and farther away.

But somebody had held it once.

Somebody had filled it with their own breath,

tied a small knot in it

and secured it with a piece of string.

Then somebody had given it to somebody else.

The red balloon stopped looking like

a drop of blood now.

It looked like somebody’s imagination

and people rubbed their eyes to be sure

they weren’t seeing things.

They weren’t.

When the red balloon was finally swallowed

by the sky

there wasn’t even a ripple.

It was just gone.

“God, I’ve grown up,” somebody said.

That was all.

3

AFTER THE BOMB

The wind exterminates annihilation,

checks its pulse with a dried leaf or two

and climbs a hill behind the barn.

The barbed wire doesn’t stop it.

The cows couldn’t chew it.

The wind plays the sound of crickets eating silence

and there is something else

along the wide black hearth,

tugging back at last syllables,

inventing the new language;

sheep will clothe themselves.

The wind stretches,

yawns and lifts a feather for examination,

blowing it against a sky

which cannot keep it.

The wind blows it north for the summer,

south for the winter,

looking for a season that fits.

The wind blows inside out,

climbs a mountain and falls off.

The hurricane bends everything to its knees.

4

THE CANNIBALS

There are no stars,

no moon,

just hearts beating in the darkness.

Somewhere

twigs snap underfoot.

Wild beasts scream their way

into human silence

and hide among the eaves, waiting.

The armies sit in darkness,

looking for some braille

to tell them this is just

a really black night.

Soldiers smell the enemy coming.

They feel the enemy touching,

the enemy panting,

muscles straining.

The heartbeats quicken

and sound like Morse code,

somebody sending signals

from behind enemy lines.

The arms of the enemy encase them.

The soldiers bite back.

The pain is wet and hot.

Their hearts suddenly sound

like a pantomime.

They taste their own body,

their own blood,

wondering whose skin it is

they’re wearing,

who they used to be.

5

WAR

Summer

is wintered

by teeth

sounding like black heels

crushing ice-covered snow

and a boy looks out the window

for Christmas.

Dinner ends.

A meadow screams “moo”

from the belly of a cow.

6

PEBBLES

The bullets kicking up sand

as they came toward the man

looked like pebbles skipping across a lake.

To skip a pebble across a lake

took the right kind of stone.

The best were like cookies

and you held them with the thumb and forefinger,

throwing with a sidearmed motion,

pretending the pebble was a plane

landing on a runway,

throwing over the lake’s surface,

angling it down slightly.

The man had skipped pebbles once.

Eleven skips was the most he’d ever seen.

7

IN THE CATACOMBS

My hands find the ghosts of wind and water

which haunt the world with their smoothness.

Such soft fossils in the stone,

my fingers feel like they are touching themselves.

I reach for an indentation and find a broken reflection.

I pick up one of my eyes along with some of the ceiling.

They become my nose and a piece of lip.

My hair and a look of pain

stick in my fingers and I hurt and bleed.

I am just as much a grave in this room as I am me.

But I remember opening my eyes for the first time.

Buildings were not broken by the colors.

Neither were the people.

Children ran through fields with their parents

who were also children,

picking flowers which did not burn them.

We spoke sky.

We spoke clouds.

Our accent came from everywhere

and we sang songs which made the elephants dance.

The world grew round and we rolled it to each other.

Nothing growled.

Everything kept growing.

I remember the sound of the first cannons.

It’s mice in the attic, we said, eating cheese.

We’ll get traps when we go to town in the morning.

I remember footprints in the snow.

I remember following.

It seemed like a prayer.

8

WAITING ON THE FALL-OUT

On the edge of everything

I catch a taxi to the harbor

where the boats lay still

and the gulls don’t speak.

Even the pier

holds tightly to its splinters,

giving nothing away

but my own drumbeat steps

as the mist tries me on for size.

I sit along the end of this half bridge

and wait for anything else,

hoping the stars

rule out the total winter.

A ricochet of light

and one has become like us.

There is no splashing,

only ripples

and the echo of my own slow dripping.

I stop remembering now,

only listen to the resonance.

Touch me.

Lose this definition.

9

THE STORM

I listen to my storm.

There are no words anymore,

no voice like winter thunder,

no lightning in my dreams.

It has rained for days

and the only sound is the river

pulling at roots of trees,

erasing the tracks of animals

that came to the bank for food

and the footprints of hunters who followed.

Black birds skate across a stratus pond

and I wonder about things.

The river, tumbling over itself,

sounds like sand being brushed off the sky

and I pray for something to stop this unwinding.

There is a noise.

I look up.

A bird has fallen through the ice

and it begins to rain.

Tomorrow the river may flood.

10

BREATHLESS

I am like a moon.

I am a white lung breathing through the night,

from crescent to full circle,

and then

nothing.

I am a body breathing,

but never enough at once

to never breathe again.

11

SECRET AGENT

I shadow myself

in the long puddles from yesterday’s rain.

Bedouin clouds cross their blue desert;

the city loses its grip and the sand takes over,

seagulls singing as if they are deaf.

I will leave no tracks on this beach.

The wind and tide are my safe house.

I have come all this way to watch waves

defect from the sea.

They look like someone coming over

from the other side,

breaking cover at the last possible moment,

spreading their secrets on this countertop coast.

I cup a foam cipher in my hands

but it soon disappears

and I am left decoding my palms,

my own wrinkles and veins.

12

THE DISTANCE

The distance

is someone else’s

frontyard

where children

play with a dog and a ball

and their parents

sit on the front porch

gazing off into the distance

which is someone else’s

frontyard

where children

play with a dog and a ball

and their parents

sit on the front porch

gazing off into the distance.

13

WINTERS

I walk across a field to where frost

has painted shattered glass on the ground.

Summer must have looked in the mirror,

seen autumn, and the reflection broke.

Even the clown trees cry,

dropping their circus leaves.

Soon the whole world will lie dead,

quiet as cotton, and cold.

There is an attic smell in the air.

I wonder if this is how our own winter

has been born.

Have we forgotten spring?

I kneel now, touching an ice-covered blade.

The frost melts and turns to dew.

My shadow feels the silent barking of the sun.

14

GOD CAME TO BREAKFAST

A star

fell into my cereal

this morning.

It left a hole

in the roof,

splattered milk

in my face,

and just lay

among the cornflakes,

waiting 

for my spoon.

15

SURROUNDED

The sentry noticed something peculiar.

He was surrounded.

Something must have crept up on him during the night.

He dropped to his belly

and wriggled around a large boulder

to see what it was.

He waited fifteen minutes and didn’t see anything.

When the members of his platoon woke up

and were not shot as they stood

urinating on the ground,

the sentry decided he must have been

imagining things.

Still, something seemed strange.

He felt more surrounded than before.

It was unearthly.

It was the trees, he told himself later.

Yes, it’s the trees, and the grass,

and the sky.

They’re not fighting.

They’re not at war.

16

EASTER

If I could

I would see the sun making sherbet in the sky

and children running along the edge of their lives,

wishing for bowls and spoons,

sand kicking up behind their heels like bullets

just missing.

Each second would be a museum

as I look into their eyes

and see Ulysses in the wooden horse,

feel Africa touching Brazil.

Camels sip scotch through straws now,

trying to forget their humps,

but a whippoorwill calls its own name into the twilight

and the wind in the trees sounds like many hands

clapping behind a heavy door.

A dream kicks the wall of its womb.

The sky bends.

I feel pregnant with myself.

A herd of Zebra lopes past me,

looking for the mountains of Peru.

“I in them and you in me,

may they be perfectly one.”

                                 —John 17:23

Copyright 1986 by Ken Woodley

(Dear Friends: In 1986, I self-published a 16-poem sequence as a chapbook: The Ghost Behind Your Eyes, based on what Jesus said toward the end of the Gospel of John, specifically the transcendent and, for humanity, potentially transformational 23rd verse of the 17th chapter: “I in them and you in me, may they be perfectly one.” The sequence begins on Good Friday and ends on Easter. Several hundred copies were printed and sold in a handful of Virginia bookstores. I sent one copy to the American poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti. In a handwritten reply, he thanked me for sending him my “very good book.” His kind words humble my soul and lift my spirits to this day. Thirty-nine years later, I re-publish this sequence here for anyone who has discovered the ghost behind their eyes, everyone who is still searching and those who haven’t begun. God’s love and grace to you all, Ken Woodley)



By Ken Woodley

1

BOMBERS TAKE OFF FROM GOLGOTHA

The last shade of something
stalks the rim of night,
barely touching the tops of things,
sniffing the moonlight for food.
The stars are surrounded by burnt tea
and there is drinking.
Darkness walks past the ruins,
spreading like damson
toward the crusty edge.
One by one the constellations are unborn
and the Milky Way seems a beautiful scar.
From the jungle comes the sound of drumming
and the moon is swallowed by clouds
that look like an exploded letter bomb to God.
There are subtle chantings
that seem to be, or not.
People rub their ears
and graze further toward the edge of something.
Some prey is taken
and the night moves one




2

THE RED BALLOON

The red balloon floated away.
It was the one thing wrong with the sky.
That was all.
The red balloon just didn’t seem to fit in
with the white clouds and the blueness
of everything else up there.
“It clashes,” somebody said.
“You don’t see any red clouds, do you?”
Nobody said they had.
The red balloon looked like a drop of blood
in the sky as it floated higher and farther away.
But somebody had held it once.
Somebody had filled it with their own breath,
tied a small knot in it
and secured it with a piece of string.
Then somebody had given it to somebody else.

The red balloon stopped looking like
a drop of blood now.
It looked like somebody’s imagination
and people rubbed their eyes to be sure
they weren’t seeing things.
They weren’t.

When the red balloon was finally swallowed
by the sky
there wasn’t even a ripple.
It was just gone.
“God, I’ve grown up,” somebody said.
That was all.


3

AFTER THE BOMB

The wind exterminates annihilation,
checks its pulse with a dried leaf or two
and climbs a hill behind the barn.
The barbed wire doesn’t stop it.
The cows couldn’t chew it.
The wind plays the sound of crickets eating silence
and there is something else
along the wide black hearth,
tugging back at last syllables,
inventing the new language;
sheep will clothe themselves.
The wind stretches,
yawns and lifts a feather for examination,
blowing it against a sky
which cannot keep it.
The wind blows it north for the summer,
south for the winter,
looking for a season that fits.
The wind blows inside out,
climbs a mountain and falls off.
The hurricane bends everything to its knees.


4

THE CANNIBALS

There are no stars,
no moon,
just hearts beating in the darkness.
Somewhere
twigs snap underfoot.
Wild beasts scream their way
into human silence
and hide among the eaves, waiting.
The armies sit in darkness,
looking for some braille
to tell them this is just
a really black night.
Soldiers smell the enemy coming.
They feel the enemy touching,
the enemy panting,
muscles straining.
The heartbeats quicken
and sound like Morse code,
somebody sending signals
from behind enemy lines.
The arms of the enemy encase them.
The soldiers bite back.
The pain is wet and hot.
Their hearts suddenly sound
like a pantomime.
They taste their own body,
their own blood,
wondering whose skin it is
they’re wearing,
who they used to be.


5

WAR

Summer
is wintered
by teeth
sounding like black heels
crushing ice-covered snow
and a boy looks out the window
for Christmas.

Dinner ends.

A meadow screams “moo”
from the belly of a cow.


6

PEBBLES

The bullets kicking up sand
as they came toward the man
looked like pebbles skipping across a lake.
To skip a pebble across a lake
took the right kind of stone.
The best were like cookies
and you held them with the thumb and forefinger,
throwing with a sidearmed motion,
pretending the pebble was a plane
landing on a runway,
throwing over the lake’s surface,
angling it down slightly.
The man had skipped pebbles once.
Eleven skips was the most he’d ever seen.


7

IN THE CATACOMBS

My hands find the ghosts of wind and water
which haunt the world with their smoothness.
Such soft fossils in the stone,
my fingers feel like they are touching themselves.
I reach for an indentation and find a broken reflection.
I pick up one of my eyes along with some of the ceiling.
They become my nose and a piece of lip.
My hair and a look of pain
stick in my fingers and I hurt and bleed.
I am just as much a grave in this room as I am me.

But I remember opening my eyes for the first time.
Buildings were not broken by the colors.
Neither were the people.
Children ran through fields with their parents
who were also children,
picking flowers which did not burn them.
We spoke sky.
We spoke clouds.
Our accent came from everywhere
and we sang songs which made the elephants dance.
The world grew round and we rolled it to each other.
Nothing growled.
Everything kept growing.

I remember the sound of the first cannons.
It’s mice in the attic, we said, eating cheese.
We’ll get traps when we go to town in the morning.

I remember footprints in the snow.
I remember following.
It seemed like a prayer.


8

WAITING ON THE FALL-OUT

On the edge of everything
I catch a taxi to the harbor
where the boats lay still
and the gulls don’t speak.
Even the pier
holds tightly to its splinters,
giving nothing away
but my own drumbeat steps
as the mist tries me on for size.
I sit along the end of this half bridge
and wait for anything else,
hoping the stars
rule out the total winter.

A ricochet of light
and one has become like us.
There is no splashing,
only ripples
and the echo of my own slow dripping.
I stop remembering now,
only listen to the resonance.
Touch me.
Lose this definition.


9

THE STORM

I listen to my storm.
There are no words anymore,
no voice like winter thunder,
no lightning in my dreams.
It has rained for days
and the only sound is the river
pulling at roots of trees,
erasing the tracks of animals
that came to the bank for food
and the footprints of hunters who followed.
Black birds skate across a stratus pond
and I wonder about things.
The river, tumbling over itself,
sounds like sand being brushed off the sky
and I pray for something to stop this unwinding.
There is a noise.
I look up.
A bird has fallen through the ice
and it begins to rain.
Tomorrow the river may flood.


10

BREATHLESS

I am like a moon.

I am a white lung breathing through the night,
from crescent to full circle,
and then

nothing.

I am a body breathing,
but never enough at once

to never breathe again.


11

SECRET AGENT

I shadow myself
in the long puddles from yesterday’s rain.
Bedouin clouds cross their blue desert;
the city loses its grip and the sand takes over,
seagulls singing as if they are deaf.
I will leave no tracks on this beach.
The wind and tide are my safe house.
I have come all this way to watch waves
defect from the sea.
They look like someone coming over
from the other side,
breaking cover at the last possible moment,
spreading their secrets on this countertop coast.
I cup a foam cipher in my hands
but it soon disappears
and I am left decoding my palms,
my own wrinkles and veins.


12

THE DISTANCE

The distance
is someone else’s
frontyard
where children
play with a dog and a ball
and their parents
sit on the front porch
gazing off into the distance
which is someone else’s
frontyard
where children
play with a dog and a ball
and their parents
sit on the front porch
gazing off into the distance.


13

WINTERS

I walk across a field to where frost
has painted shattered glass on the ground.
Summer must have looked in the mirror,
seen autumn, and the reflection broke.
Even the clown trees cry,
dropping their circus leaves.
Soon the whole world will lie dead,
quiet as cotton, and cold.
There is an attic smell in the air.
I wonder if this is how our own winter
has been born.
Have we forgotten spring?
I kneel now, touching an ice-covered blade.
The frost melts and turns to dew.
My shadow feels the silent barking of the sun.


14

GOD CAME TO BREAKFAST

A star
fell into my cereal
this morning.
It left a hole
in the roof,
splattered milk
in my face,
and just lay
among the cornflakes,
waiting
for my spoon.


15

SURROUNDED

The sentry noticed something peculiar.
He was surrounded.
Something must have crept up on him during the night.
He dropped to his belly
and wriggled around a large boulder
to see what it was.
He waited fifteen minutes and didn’t see anything.
When the members of his platoon woke up
and were not shot as they stood
urinating on the ground,
the sentry decided he must have been
imagining things.
Still, something seemed strange.
He felt more surrounded than before.
It was unearthly.

It was the trees, he told himself later.
Yes, it’s the trees, and the grass,
and the sky.
They’re not fighting.
They’re not at war.


16

EASTER

If I could

I would see the sun making sherbet in the sky
and children running along the edge of their lives,
wishing for bowls and spoons,
sand kicking up behind their heels like bullets
just missing.
Each second would be a museum
as I look into their eyes
and see Ulysses in the wooden horse,
feel Africa touching Brazil.

Camels sip scotch through straws now,
trying to forget their humps,
but a whippoorwill calls its own name into the twilight
and the wind in the trees sounds like many hands
clapping behind a heavy door.
A dream kicks the wall of its womb.
The sky bends.
I feel pregnant with myself.

A herd of Zebra lopes past me,
looking for the mountains of Peru.


“I in them and you in me,
may they be perfectly one.”

—John 17:23


Copyright 1986 by Ken Woodley


The Smallest Star At The Bottom Of The Sky (A parable about Jesus)

 By Ken Woodley

“I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”

                                                                                      —Matthew 18:3

Once upon a time on a blue planet deep in space, two children stood looking through a window at the night-time sky. Darkness was everywhere and they heard the darkness thunder.

The date was December 25. A day of no meaning whatsoever for the children, nor anyone else in their world. Just another Tuesday. 

One-by-one, all of the stars disappeared.

The children reached for each other when all of the light was gone.

The darkness always scared them when it thundered with storms that swallowed all of the stars with its booming clouds. They held each other’s hands, looked up into the sky and decided to pray.

“How far can you see?” Liam asked when they had finished praying.

“I think I can see to the bottom of the sky, but it’s too dark to be sure,” Fiona told him.

“Can you see God anywhere?” he asked.

“No,” she replied. “Just like all of the other scary nights, I don’t see God at all.”

Their eyes filled with tears.

But, far, far away, a Little Star that had just been born heard the children calling. Their voices sounded so distant, as if they were on the other side of the universe. 

“Please,” it heard them pray, “there is a terrible storm thundering toward us in the darkness. If you are really there, please come to us. Let us see you. Be with us and protect us from the thundering darkness.”

The Little Star looked around. None of the other stars seemed to hear the children calling. It was surprised. “Me? They are calling me?” it wondered. “I am such a very small star. There are much bigger and brighter lights than me.”

But every single one of those much bigger and brighter lights stayed right where they were. The Little Star, however, began its long journey toward the children calling out from across the universe.

“Can’t anyone else hear them?” the Little Star asked the universe.

“Oh, yes, all of us hear them,” a stunning supernova said as the Little Star flickered on its way, “but we are far too busy being spectacular Superstars. We’ve got no time for two children on the other side of universe.”

The supernova looked at the Little Star and chuckled.

“And just who do you think you are?” it asked. “God? A Messiah? You’re so small and hardly shine at all. You belong in a manger. In fact, I can barely see you. How could you possibly help anybody?”

The Little Star seemed to hear the entire universe laughing but it kept on going and had soon left the skeptics and their doubts far behind him.

“Perhaps they are right, but maybe I am exactly what the children need,” it thought. “Perhaps I am the only one who can help them because I am the only one who wants to help them, the only one who cares. I might just be the Little Star that shines the light of Truest Love.”

On the blue planet, the children were still standing side by side in the darkness, looking up toward the bottom of the sky.

“Do you see God yet?” Fiona asked.

“No,” Liam answered, “Maybe God doesn’t hear us. Maybe God’s not listening.”

“I wonder if God’s even real,” she said. “Maybe God is only make-believe, like unicorns and magic dragons.”

But they kept on looking because they wanted God to be very true and absolutely real and on the way to save them. 

Soon the Little Star saw a galaxy called the Milky Way, which looked like a humongous spinning pinwheel. “I think I’m almost there,” it thought.

And then, yes, it saw the blue planet in a solar system, circling a sunny star, but half of the blue planet was covered in the darkness of night.

The Little Star knew exactly where to find the children and just what to do when it got there.

“I’m ready to give up looking for God forever,” Liam sighed. “I don’t see anything but a very large lightning bug.”

Fiona looked as the light grew closer. “That’s no lightning bug,” she said.

“Here I am,” the Little Star told them as it flew through their half-opened window.

“Here is who?” Liam asked. “What are you?”

“I am me,” answered the Little Star. “I was on the other side of the universe and heard you praying.”

“You aren’t what we expected,” the children told him. “You are much smaller and far different than we imagined.”

“Well,” the Little Star admitted, “I’m certainly no Tony-winning Super Star breaking box office records on Broadway but I am who I am and I believe I am the answer to your prayer, if you’ll let me try.”

The Little Star’s belief in itself was so strong that Fiona and Liam decided to listen to what it had to say about the light it had brought them. It visited them for a week and they felt their faith growing stronger and deeper. 

During the day, the Little Star stayed in Fiona’s sock drawer—after she removed all of the socks and put them under her bed. “It’s dark in the drawer,” the Little Star explained. “That makes it the perfect place to practice shining my light of Truest Love.”

Just before sunset each day, Fiona and Liam would take the Little Star outside, where it shone in the darkness all night long, right outside their bedroom windows.

But one night the Little Star told them that it would be leaving in the morning.

“Now that I have come to your blue planet,” it explained, “I hear so many others calling out to me from the darkness of their own storms. I must bring my light to them, too, if they will let me.”

The children were crestfallen. “Please don’t go,” they pleaded.

“I will only appear to be gone,” the Little Star assured them. “The light I shine remains even after it seems that I have left you. And I will stay at the very bottom of the sky, as close to you—as close to everyone—as I can.”

The children looked at one another and asked the very same question at the exact same time.

“How can we be sure that you are still with us?”

The Little Star looked deeply into their eyes. “There is one other place where you can always find me, even when all of the other lights in the world seem to go out and storm clouds hide even the biggest, brightest stars, the moon, and the Milky Way.”

“Please tell us where that place is,” they asked.

“You will always find my light shining,” the Little Star told them, “in the eyes of someone who loves you forever.” 

That night Fiona and Liam dreamed dreams that were overflowing with a radiant love-filled light and the sound of singing flowers. When they awoke in the morning the Little Star did indeed seem to be gone. 

But it was still there. Just as it had promised them. They were certain of that because the Little Star had told them the truth.

Liam and Fiona could see the Little Star’s light shining in each other’s eyes.

Even on the stormiest nights when the clouds hid everything else in the heavens above, they had faith that the Little Star’s small, bright twinkling light of Truest Love was at the very bottom of the sky, as close to them as it could get.

Or even closer.

Because for some reason, they could always feel it shining deep inside them, sending ripples of light through their souls.

“This is such a miraculous feeling,” Fiona said. “Something this wondrous deserves a special name, one that is filled with love.”

Liam agreed and the two of them began compiling a long list of possibilities. Long names, short names, old names and new names that they made up out of their imagination, but none of them seemed to fit.

They finally stopped trying to think of names and just looked into each others eyes, instead. 

“I see a name,” Fiona said, looking at Liam.

“I see one, too,” Liam answered, gazing at Fiona.

“I also feel it,” Liam told her.

“I know,” she replied. “So do I.”

“The name is Jesus, isn’t it?” Liam said.

“Yes,” Fiona agreed, “it is Jesus.”

And the name always was Jesus for as long as they lived.

And even after that.

Forever and ever after that.

(Copyright Ken Woodley 2025)

By Ken Woodley

“I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.”
—Matthew 18:3

Once upon a time on a blue planet deep in space, two children stood looking through a window at the night-time sky. Darkness was everywhere and they heard the darkness thunder.
The date was December 25. A day of no meaning whatsoever for the children, nor anyone else in their world. Just another Tuesday.

One-by-one, all of the stars disappeared.
The children reached for each other when all of the light was gone.
The darkness always scared them when it thundered with storms that swallowed all of the stars with its booming clouds. They held each other’s hands, looked up into the sky and decided to pray.

“How far can you see?” Liam asked when they had finished praying.
“I think I can see to the bottom of the sky, but it’s too dark to be sure,” Fiona told him.
“Can you see God anywhere?” he asked.
“No,” she replied. “Just like all of the other scary nights, I don’t see God at all.”

Their eyes filled with tears.
But, far, far away, a Little Star that had just been born heard the children calling. Their voices sounded so distant, as if they were on the other side of the universe.
“Please,” it heard them pray, “there is a terrible storm thundering toward us in the darkness. If you are really there, please come to us. Let us see you. Be with us and protect us from the thundering darkness.”

The Little Star looked around. None of the other stars seemed to hear the children calling. It was surprised. “Me? They are calling me?” it wondered. “I am such a very small star. There are much bigger and brighter lights than me.”

But every single one of those much bigger and brighter lights stayed right where they were. The Little Star, however, began its long journey toward the children calling out from across the universe.

“Can’t anyone else hear them?” the Little Star asked the universe.

“Oh, yes, all of us hear them,” a stunning supernova said as the Little Star flickered on its way, “but we are far too busy being spectacular Superstars. We’ve got no time for two children on the other side of universe.”

The supernova looked at the Little Star and chuckled.
“And just who do you think you are?” it asked. “God? A Messiah? You’re so small and hardly shine at all. You belong in a manger. In fact, I can barely see you. How could you possibly help anybody?”

The Little Star seemed to hear the entire universe laughing but it kept on going and had soon left the skeptics and their doubts far behind him.

“Perhaps they are right, but maybe I am exactly what the children need,” it thought. “Perhaps I am the only one who can help them because I am the only one who wants to help them, the only one who cares. I might just be the Little Star that shines the light of Truest Love.”

On the blue planet, the children were still standing side by side in the darkness, looking up toward the bottom of the sky.

“Do you see God yet?” Fiona asked.
“No,” Liam answered, “Maybe God doesn’t hear us. Maybe God’s not listening.”

“I wonder if God’s even real,” she said. “Maybe God is only make-believe, like unicorns and magic dragons.”

But they kept on looking because they wanted God to be very true and absolutely real and on the way to save them.

Soon the Little Star saw a galaxy called the Milky Way, which looked like a humongous spinning pinwheel. “I think I’m almost there,” it thought.

And then, yes, it saw the blue planet in a solar system, circling a sunny star, but half of the blue planet was covered in the darkness of night.
The Little Star knew exactly where to find the children and just what to do when it got there.

“I’m ready to give up looking for God forever,” Liam sighed. “I don’t see anything but a very large lightning bug.”
Fiona looked as the light grew closer. “That’s no lightning bug,” she said.

“Here I am,” the Little Star told them as it flew through their half-opened window.
“Here is who?” Liam asked. “What are you?”
“I am me,” answered the Little Star. “I was on the other side of the universe and heard you praying.”

“You aren’t what we expected,” the children told him. “You are much smaller and far different than we imagined.”

“Well,” the Little Star admitted, “I’m certainly no Tony-winning Super Star breaking box office records on Broadway but I am who I am and I believe I am the answer to your prayer, if you’ll let me try.”

The Little Star’s belief in itself was so strong that Fiona and Liam decided to listen to what it had to say about the light it had brought them. It visited them for a week and they felt their faith growing stronger and deeper.

During the day, the Little Star stayed in Fiona’s sock drawer—after she removed all of the socks and put them under her bed. “It’s dark in the drawer,” the Little Star explained. “That makes it the perfect place to practice shining my light of Truest Love.”

Just before sunset each day, Fiona and Liam would take the Little Star outside, where it shone in the darkness all night long, right outside their bedroom windows.

But one night the Little Star told them that it would be leaving in the morning.

“Now that I have come to your blue planet,” it explained, “I hear so many others calling out to me from the darkness of their own storms. I must bring my light to them, too, if they will let me.”

The children were crestfallen. “Please don’t go,” they pleaded.
“I will only appear to be gone,” the Little Star assured them. “The light I shine remains even after it seems that I have left you. And I will stay at the very bottom of the sky, as close to you—as close to everyone—as I can.”

The children looked at one another and asked the very same question at the exact same time.
“How can we be sure that you are still with us?”


The Little Star looked deeply into their eyes. “There is one other place where you can always find me, even when all of the other lights in the world seem to go out and storm clouds hide even the biggest, brightest stars, the moon, and the Milky Way.”

“Please tell us where that place is,” they asked.
“You will always find my light shining,” the Little Star told them, “in the eyes of someone who loves you forever.”

That night Fiona and Liam dreamed dreams that were overflowing with a radiant love-filled light and the sound of singing flowers. When they awoke in the morning the Little Star did indeed seem to be gone.

But it was still there. Just as it had promised them. They were certain of that because the Little Star had told them the truth.

Liam and Fiona could see the Little Star’s light shining in each other’s eyes.

Even on the stormiest nights when the clouds hid everything else in the heavens above, they had faith that the Little Star’s small, bright twinkling light of Truest Love was at the very bottom of the sky, as close to them as it could get.

Or even closer.

Because for some reason, they could always feel it shining deep inside them, sending ripples of light through their souls.
“This is such a miraculous feeling,” Fiona said. “Something this wondrous deserves a special name, one that is filled with love.”

Liam agreed and the two of them began compiling a long list of possibilities. Long names, short names, old names and new names that they made up out of their imagination, but none of them seemed to fit.

They finally stopped trying to think of names and just looked into each others eyes, instead.

“I see a name,” Fiona said, looking at Liam.
“I see one, too,” Liam answered, gazing at Fiona.

“I also feel it,” Liam told her.
“I know,” she replied. “So do I.”

“The name is Jesus, isn’t it?” Liam said.
“Yes,” Fiona agreed, “it is Jesus.”

And the name always was Jesus for as long as they lived.

And even after that.

Forever and ever after that.




























A Shepherd’s Bell In The Wind

By Ken Woodley

“You must be born from above. The wind blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.”

—The Gospel of John

I heard the wind blowing in the tops of the trees at the dawning of this new day.

A vast sea of breeze skimming along the bottom of the sky.

The leaves reaching for the passing skirt of the wind as it skipped along the uppermost limbs and branches.

I stood in the greening shadows of a night that lingered but could grip its darkness no longer.

Alone and lost without you in this empty lane beneath the trees.

Just through the narrow gate.

Wondering what I might find if I followed your Galilean words that had led me here.

If only the wind—and you—could reach me, I said, though I knew no one could hear me.

If only it would touch me, let me taste its spirit.

If only I could feel its soft caress of love.

I took a few steps and heard a shepherd’s bell ring.

A note of soft beauty.

But I saw no lambs at all.

There was only me walking along this empty lane.

And then it happened.

The wind was all around me.

Whispered something in my ear.

The wind wanted me.

Desired all of me.

No matter what.

“I give myself to you entirely,” I heard the wind declare.

And I knew that it was true because I felt it filling every pore.

As if the sky were wrapping me up with the ribbons and bows of heaven.

Oh, wondrous gift.

But the wind was not alone.

“Raise your eyes, my beloved,” the wind told me.

So I did. 

The light of a new day dawning was brush-stroking the tops of the trees.

“Touch the light. I brought it here with me for you,” the wind urged.

“But I cannot possibly reach such heights,” I protested, raising both arms above my head in sheer futility.

I felt the wind smiling. “Lift your spirit up to the Lord. Lift your heart and raise your soul,” I heard it say. “That is where the light will find you, as if you were the tallest tree that ever grew from the earth.”

And the light did find me.

The light now joined as one with the wind.

The windy light rustling my leaves.

The sun shining right down to my deepest roots.

Newly born in this shimmering forest.

A symphony of shepherd’s bells caroling in my heart as I feel a hand upon my shoulder.

“This way,” I hear you say with the voice of the morning wind in my ear.

By Ken Woodley

“You must be born from above. The wind blows where it chooses, and you hear the sound of it, but you do not know where it comes from or where it goes. So it is with everyone who is born of the Spirit.”

—The Gospel of John

I heard the wind blowing in the tops of the trees at the dawning of this new day.
A vast sea of breeze skimming along the bottom of the sky.
The leaves reaching for the passing skirt of the wind as it skipped along the uppermost limbs and branches.
I stood in the greening shadows of a night that lingered but could grip its darkness no longer.
Alone and lost without you in this empty lane beneath the trees.
Just through the narrow gate.
Wondering what I might find if I followed your Galilean words that had led me here.
If only the wind—and you—could reach me, I said, though I knew no one could hear me.
If only it would touch me, let me taste its spirit.
If only I could feel its soft caress of love.
I took a few steps and heard a shepherd’s bell ring.
A note of soft beauty.
But I saw no lambs at all.
There was only me walking along this empty lane.
And then it happened.
The wind was all around me.
Whispered something in my ear.
The wind wanted me.
Desired all of me.
No matter what.
“I give myself to you entirely,” I heard the wind declare.
And I knew that it was true because I felt it filling every pore.
As if the sky were wrapping me up with the ribbons and bows of heaven.
Oh, wondrous gift.
But the wind was not alone.
“Raise your eyes, my beloved,” the wind told me.
So I did.
The light of a new day dawning was brush-stroking the tops of the trees.
“Touch the light. I brought it here with me for you,” the wind urged.
“But I cannot possibly reach such heights,” I protested, raising both arms above my head in sheer futility.
I felt the wind smiling. “Lift your spirit up to the Lord. Lift your heart and raise your soul,” I heard it say. “That is where the light will find you, as if you were the tallest tree that ever grew from the earth.”
And the light did find me.
The light now joined as one with the wind.
The windy light rustling my leaves.
The sun shining right down to my deepest roots.
Newly born in this shimmering forest.
A symphony of shepherd’s bells caroling in my heart as I feel a hand upon my shoulder.
“This way,” I hear you say with the voice of the morning wind in my ear.