Catholic Poetry Room stained glass

This week’s poem in the Catholic Poetry Room, an ekphrastic after Carl Bloch’s “Baptism of Christ”, is by Mark D. Bennion.

I like to think of His arms open when I die,
the span like an eagle or albatross
gliding over water. I imagine I’ll hie
into that embrace—the stilling voice,
fervent shoulders, a conductor’s eyes

and the crimson robe of wine vat and grace.
Yet before this scene unfurls in wonder,
before the heavens disclose any trace
of lambskin, dyed wool, and thunder
there is a personal reckoning, my face

and body cast before the mind’s true mirror,
yet even then it might exaggerate or flip
under the scrutiny of my every last endeavor.
I can only trust those arms crossed in baptism
and surrender before I am weighed and measured.


Mark D. Bennion currently teaches writing, poetry, and drama classes at Brigham Young University-Idaho. His work has appeared in various journals, including IrreantumRHINOThird WednesdayU.S. Catholic, and Windhover. His most recent book is Ambrosia: Love Poems. He and his wife, Kristine, are learning how to parent four daughters, two sons-in-law, and one son.


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Since 2019, the Catholic Poetry Room (www.CatholicPoetry.org) has shared a new poem with readers each week. Poems range in style from formal to free verse to ekphrastics, with an honest expression of each author’s spiritual journey. Many Catholic Poetry Room adult readers are new to poetry and find the poems both accessible and enjoyable. The Catholic Poetry Room is also used by Catholic School teachers, who find the poems an excellent way to begin the day with their students, to pray, or use Catholic Poetry Room verse in their academic classes.