The Episcopal Priest Cleans Out His Office
Marjorie Maddox
January 2005

After the years of tear-drying and tissue-passing,

the closed-door conferences above reproach

and beyond remembrance, he packs files of sermons,

reread books, thank-you notes and complaints,

receipts from now-broken air conditioners

that can’t cool this fear

that swirls up the unexpected

dust of the lives

he thought he saved. They don’t want him here,

near the new.


He boxes up truth, turns to leave

a few prayers, inconspicuous as seeds,

that someone old might read in the folds

of a missal, someone young might turn

over in her still-holy fingerpainting hands,

near that warm corner on the east side of the parish

where children congregate to play “This is the church;

this is the steeple; open the doors and where are the people?”


He leaves the door unlocked,

the icons waiting.