She Sings, and the River Rises

What songs are stirring in your spirit these days? What rivers are you listening for in the midnight hush?

Poetic Theology in the Key of Thirst

The world feels parched these days, literally and metaphorically.

Summer days in my city have been sizzling so far, and many places around the world are facing water shortages.

Too many places also feel parched in other ways. Justice, kindness, breath–these are in short supply as wars rage and people seek hope for the future.

In these days, I find myself turning not to answers but to songs. An ancient biblical song, Isaiah 55, speaks of wisdom that quenches thirst. I hear that wisdom, that word, as a river-song. Not a lecture. Not a system. But a shimmering breath that calls us to be braver, more courageous, in our everyday lives.

Poetic theology, for me, flows in this key, in the ache of longing, in the improvisation of grace, in the rhythm of rivers that rise again and again to call us to be bearers of justice-making and transformation in this dry, desert land.


In the Key of Thirst: A River Rises

an improvisatory poem based on Isaiah 55

Listen.

She calls.
Sings.
Full of ache—
And mercy.

She sings—
Come—you with dry tongues
And empty pockets.
A table is set—enough
And more.
No ticket. No toll.
Just the hush of a listening heart.

She calls.
Sings.

Justice

Falling,
Cascading,
Rolling away stones,
Saturating—dry souls.
Soaking into fields cracked open
From heaped-on
Loads of dusty promises
That weigh almost nothing
But choke out life—

She sings.
And the river rises up—

Singing.

Opens her arms,
Not to cleanse,
But to claim.

Can you hear her?
Feel her misty breath
On your tear-soaked face?

Jazz notes played in reverse,
Riding a single reed,
Curling through the serpentine horn,
Up and out a tilted bell
Into this old world’s midnight.

No chart—just a shimmer to inhale
And follow—
Sometimes running,
Sometimes stumbling,
Sometimes dancing
Toward freedom,
Toward home.

She sings—
Rain finding splintered openings,
Soaking hardened places.

She sings—
Spirals outward,
Inward,
Sounds circling up,
Embracing stormy skylines
With rainbow arms,
Greening the earth
With sprouts of life.

Listen.

The river rises.
She always does.

The smoky voice of longing—
And loss.
The holy heartbeat of memory—
And desire.

It shall not return empty—
Not the song,
Not the breath,
Not the longing
That brought you here.

The river will rise.
She always does.

The river rises

She always does.

Always—

In silence

In song

In you and me


What songs are stirring in your spirit these days? What rivers are you listening for in the midnight hush? May the river rise in us to water the world.

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A New Threshold at DrDeacondog.com

I’ve long believed that silence can speak.
That justice can unfold in contemplative realms.
That theology can be made not only with words and books
but with breath, bread, and bone.

Over the past few months, I’ve been reshaping drdeacondog.com, listening for how to let it hold the fullness of what I now understand my work to be at this time in my life and vocation.

As a professor in her 60s with over 25 years of experience in theological education, I have begun to embody my work as a poetic theologian.

Neither word in this pair is new. Even their partnership dances in ballrooms with other artists, theologians, and leaders.

What is new is my energy for embracing the pair in my work and life.

Poetic theology is the practice of attending to theological questions not only with the mind, but with breath, body, metaphor, and silence.

In the ancient sacred book of Proverbs, we glimpse Woman Wisdom calling out from the threshold of her house. Down the street, another woman stands at her threshold, named in the text as “the strange woman.” My threshold as a poetic theologian emerges somewhere between these two figures as a place where I listen beyond texts and words for beauty and truths that reside in quiet, less-seen, less-acknowledged spaces.

Today, I’m relaunching DrDeacondog.com, not as a platform but as a threshold, a space for reflection, creative engagement, and communal accompaniment.

At this threshold, you’ll find:

  • A page that introduces poetic theology as a way of being and writing
  • A curated section of featured projects and essays
  • An archive of seasonal reflections and poems (with more to come)
  • A vision for the months ahead, including a forthcoming book and workshop offerings

I invite you to visit, read, and pause.

And if something you find there resonates, I hope you’ll stay awhile so we can listen together.

With gratitude,

Jill