Woe to the United States: A Poetic Contextualization of Isaiah 10, Particularly “Woe to Assyria” (10:5)

Woe to the United States A Poetic Contextualization of Isaiah 10, Particularly “Woe to Assyria” (10:5) Grant Showalter-Swanson
Woe to the United States A Poetic Contextualization of Isaiah 10, Particularly “Woe to Assyria” (10:5) Grant Showalter-Swanson

Woe to the United States

A Poetic Contextualization of Isaiah 10, Particularly “Woe to Assyria” (10:5)
By Grant Showalter-Swanson

Woe to the United States –

the guns wielded by ICE –

awash in blood and murder

always made excusable

by a tyrannical regime –

elicits God’s fury.

Woe to the political leaders who make morally wrong policies –

weaponizing the law to oppress the migrant and the powerless;

shielding themselves from the consequences of their wrongdoings.

Woe to the power players of unbridled capitalism

who prioritize the (b)(tr)illionaires and corporations

over the ability of the rest of us to survive –

the infinite wealth of a few

over the livelihood of the many.

Woe to the christians who blaspheme the name of Christ

to justify white Christian Nationalism

and a heretical theology of civil religion –

attributing God’s blessing to the economic

and military might of the United States –

for the benefit of an administration determined

to eliminate electoral democracy

and maintain power-over

indefinitely.

Woe to the MAGA base –

and any republicans, independents, democrats, and non-voters –

who have opted into the group-think

and mind control of a fascist

and authoritarian curation of reality.

Woe to the U.S. citizens who stand by –

apathy and agreement both leading to death –

as the Trump administration

robs the poor

plunders the middle class

reduces health care access and

eliminates health care subsidies

abuses children

controls the bodies of women

demonizes Trans/Queer people

dehumanizes non-white people

criminalizes migrants

colonizes sovereign lands

coerces foreign leaders

justifies genocide

rapes the Earth

and kills with impunity.

God demands that we ask ourselves:

what will you do on the day of judgement

when you must account for your active—

or passive— participation in this regime?

When there is no way to flee from God

behind wealth, religious platitudes,

or feigned obliviousness?

God promises eventual justice, 

for those who oppressed,

hated, or were ambivalent

toward their neighbor?

Neighbor: defined by Jesus

as anyone we encounter,

especially those in need.

 

Repent.

Be transformed by the Spirit.

And live in love toward your neighbor, as yourself.

 

But for those who suffer under this tyrannical regime –

for those who speak out and put their lives on the line

for their neighbors –

do not be afraid.

God promises that the yoke of suffering and oppression

will be removed from your shoulders

and destroyed from this world

in the final realization

of God’s peaceable Kingdom

on Earth as in Heaven.

 

Lord,

may Your will be done,

enacted and embodied

through us, the body of Christ.

Amen.

 

 

 

Grant’s 6 Favorite Books of 2025

1. Best Practical Devotional: For Such a Time as This: An Emergency Devotional by Hanna Reichel

2. Best Scripture Interpretation Text: Reading the Bible on Turtle Island: An Invitation to North American Indigenous Interpretation by H. Daniel Zacharias and T. Christopher Hoklotubbe

3. Best Book of Poetry: Bluff: Poems by Danez Smith

4. Best Collection of Essays: The Lord and Giver of Life: Perspectives on Constructive Pneumatology edited by David H. Jensen

5. Best Academic Text: The Coloniality of the Secular: Race, Religion, and Poetics of World-Making by An Yountae

6. Best Fun Novel: Disco Witches of Fire Island: A Novel by Blair Fell

The Top 11/80 Books Grant Read in 2024

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1. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin

2. Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology by Shane Hawk

3. God for Us: The Trinity and Christian Life by Catherine Mowry Lacugna

4. After Method: Queer Grace, Conceptual Design, and the Possibility of Theology by Hanna Reichel

5. The Development of the Doctrine of the Holy Spirit in the Yoruba (African) Indigenous Christian Movement by Caleb Oluremi Oladipo

6. On First Principles by Origen

7. The Spirit Poured Out on All Flesh: Pentecostalism and the Possibility of Global Theology by Amos Yong

8. So We and Our Children May Live: Following Jesus in Confronting the Climate Crisis by Sarah Augustine

9. Harrow the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir

10. Theology in the Capitalocene: Ecology, Identity, Class, and Solidarity by Joerg Rieger

11. The World We Used to Live In: Remembering the Powers of the Medicine Men by Vine Deloria Jr.

Grant’s 10 Favorite Books of 70 Read in 2023!

1. When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through: A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry, edited by Joy Harjo, with LeAnne Howe and Jennifer Elise Foerster

2. Poet, the Warrior, the Prophet, by Rubem Alves

3. Decolonial Christianities: Latinx and Latin American Perspectives, edited by Raimundo Barreto and Roberto Sirvent

4. Reading and Writing the Lakota Language, by Albert White Hat Sr.

5. Healing Haunted Histories: A Settler Discipleship of Decolonization, by Elaine Enns and Ched Myers

6. Galatians: A Theological Commentary on the Bible, by Nancy Elizabeth Bedford

7. Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples, by Linda Tuhiwai Smith

8. Complaint!, by Sara Ahmed

9. Faith and Freedom in Galatia and Senegal: The Apostle Paul, Colonists and Sending Gods, by Aliou Cissé Niang

10. Trading Futures: A Theological Critique of Financialized Capitalism, by Filipe Maia

Happy Fourth of July

Be grateful for what you have,

they say.

Okay.

I’m grateful for my marriage

with my husband.

But many folks across the country,

emboldened with power,

want to rip our marriage apart,

calling our love unconstitutional,

along with many other nasty

words, phrases, and threats.

Seeking the goal of allowing

states to make our union illegal,

or perhaps a full-fledged federal ban.

So I’ll be grateful for what I have,

as I’ve been told,

before it all gets legislated away.

Happy Fourth of July

Preparation Prayer

Lord,

prepare my ears to hear the suffering

shield my heart to not take on that pain

warm my soul toward genuine empathy

enliven my mind to interpret and translate

and sharpen my tongue to speak the wisdom

of Your Holy Spirit

Amen.

‘Nature Poem’ by Tommy Pico Review

www.goodreads.com/book/show/32311036

“NDN teens have the highest rate of suicide of any population group in America. A white man can massacre 9 black ppl in a church and be fed Burger King by the cops afterward. A presidential candidate gains a platform by saying Mexican immigrants are murdered and rapists

It’s hard for me to imagine curiosity [in America] as anything more than a pretext for colonialism” (Tommy Pico, ‘Nature Poem,’ 40).

“Look, I’m sure you really do just want to wear those dream catcher earrings. They’re beautiful. I’m sure you don’t mean any harm, I’m sure you don’t really think abt us at all. I’m sure you don’t understand the concept of off-limits. But what if by not wearing a headdress in yr music video or changing yr damn mascot and perhaps adding .05% of personal annoyance to yr life for the twenty minutes it lasts, the 103 young ppl who tried to kill themselves on the Pine Ridge Indian reservation over the past four months wanted to live 50% more” (Tommy Pico, ‘Nature Poem,’ 56).

Tommy Pico’s ‘IRL’

www.goodreads.com/book/show/30968235

“I recoil

at we. Now we

know; We feel love

when; We believed

the Earth was flat

until; We stir with

heavy feeling bc…

I wipe my muddy feet

on the loveseat of We

unless I’m talking

about you and me.

Kumeyaays knew

a rounded Earth based

on the curve of stars

or didn’t, I’ll never know.

It’s a dark part inside me.

Books are fallible, towers

of letters with the power

you give them. It’s heartbreaking

to watch your pillars fall

Watch the crops dry up

and die House set on fire Forced

to dig up yr dead To. Literally.

Dig. Up. The. Old. Graveyard.

n move w/them onto a stone hill

where nothing that grows

can live. Penned in like cattle.

Approaching scientism,

universalism, a supremacy

of any given thought

process—strikes me A

hammer of dark spots. America

never intended for me to live

So that we never intended

to include me”

(Tommy Pico, ‘IRL,’ 70).

Poem in Geez Magazine’s 2021 Advent Devotion

I’m thrilled to share that my poem was included in Geez Magazine’s 2021 Advent book: ‘Songs for the Shadows: A Season of Embracing the Dark.’

If you don’t have a plan for advent devotions already, I highly recommend snagging yourself a copy today: https://geezmagazine.org/blogs/entry/songs-for-the-shadows

My poem is called ‘The Spirit Finds Me in the Darkness’ and is a re-imagining of Psalm 23.

‘Homeland Elegies’ Book Response

www.goodreads.com/book/show/50358133

I especially appreciated Akhtar’s clear explanation of how ‘Economy’ is our National god in the United States. All people, no matter their religion, bow down in deference to Economy before their gods.