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Winner of the Coretta Scott King Award, and New York Times bestselling author Nikki Grimes introduces Glory, Too, a soul-stirring collection of poetry that delves into the depths of faith, hope, and the human experience by one of America's preeminent black poets. In a marriage of poetry, faith, and worship, Ms. Grimes' poems illuminate the Scriptures that grace every Sunday of the year. Her inimitable voice and imagination offer glimpses of glory we might not otherwise see, throughout the seasons of the year. With lyrical precision and spiritual insight, she invites readers on a journey of reflection, weaving together themes of grace, redemption, and the enduring power of God's love throughout the year. As the companion volume to her previous book Glory in the Margins: Sunday Poems, Glory, Too resonates with authenticity and depth, giving testimony to the transformative power of poetry and the enduring hope found in the embrace of God's eternal grace. High Style Louboutin stilettos are recognizable at a distance. Those shiny red soles tell you everything. When Gucci handbags are in a room, they virtually shout. Now, I'm not much for labels, but I've noticed how God's garments stand out. Take the suit, a second skin made of holiness—a rare fabric, that usually itches, at first until the wearer gets used to it; Beyond that, God's personal style is all about the layered look: the silk of compassion, golden threads of kindness woven through the vest, humility cinching in the waist, meekness and patience falling to the ankles, and love thickly draped across the shoulders. The clothing God designs is never mistaken for anyone's but his. And when we're wise enough to don his attire, we look like more than a million.
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Seitenzahl: 77
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2025
“Here are poems that come from within the soul. Nikki Grimes is not just a disciple and believer, she is the voice of the beloved. Her work points the reader in the direction of salvation. One will shout hallelujah or quietly say amen when turning the pages of Glory, Too. After reading the poetry of Nikki Grimes one has a strong desire to go out into the world and spread the good news.”
—E. Ethelbert Miller, writer and literary activist, 2023 Grammy Nominee in the category of spoken word and poetry
“Nikki Grimes’ poems are like a magnifying glass held up to the Scriptures, helping us see more closely and clearly. They are like a prism, revealing colors previously hidden to our busy eyes. They call us to align ourselves with a holy direction. In one poem she invites us to ‘say yes to the jewel that is Jesus,’ and by the end of the collection my heart was overflowing with this yes.”
—Christine Valters Paintner, PhD, Online Abbess of Abbey of the Arts and author of more than 20 books on the contemplative path
“Author C. S. Lewis insisted that a good poet doesn’t say, ‘look at me’; a good poet says ‘look at that’—and points. This is exactly what Nikki Grimes has done in this collection. Get ready to see things in the Scriptures that you’ve never noticed before. Patterns and metaphors, images and insights, the tiny, tiny seed in the fertile soil of your heart. Nikki is a wayfinder, my friends. Don’t miss the invitation to join her on the journey.”
—Sarah Arthur, author of Between Midnight and Dawn: A Literary Guide to Prayer for Lent, Holy Week, and Eastertide
“Devotional, emotional and crystalline, the poems of Nikki Grimes’ Glory, Too are thoughtful meditations on important Biblical verses. Her poetry will excite young readers still absorbing the beauty and the messages of the Bible, but it will also make longtime students of the Bible see familiar passages with a fresh eye.”
—A. M. Juster, poet, author of Wonder and Wrath
For Kendall Buchanan, the brother of my heart
2025 First Printing
Glory, Too: Poems
ISBN 978-1-64060-964-8
Copyright © 2025 by Nikki Grimes
The Iron Pen name and logo are trademarks of Paraclete Press.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Grimes, Nikki, author.
Title: Glory, too: poems / Nikki Grimes.
Description: Brewster, Massachusetts: Iron Pen/Paraclete Press, 2024.
Summary: “In a marriage of poetry, faith, and worship, Ms. Grimes’ poems illuminate the Scriptures that grace every Sunday of the year. Her inimitable voice and imagination offer glimpses of glory we might not otherwise see, throughout the seasons of the year” -- Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2024036535 (print) | LCCN 2024036536 (ebook) | ISBN 9781640609648 (trade paperback) | ISBN 9781640609655 (epub)
Subjects: LCGFT: Religious poetry.
Classification: LCC PS3557.R489982 G58 2024 (print) | LCC PS3557.R489982 (ebook) | DDC 811/.54--dc23/eng/20240823
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2024036535
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2024036536
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All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in an electronic retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any \other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
Published by Paraclete Press
Brewster, Massachusetts
www.paracletepress.com
Printed in The United States of America
SPRING
Worship Walking
Allegiance
Harmonious
Math Mystery
X-Ray Vision
Rebel Rabbi
Kryptonite
Where Meaning Resides
Conundrum
Paradox on Parade
Glimpse of Glory
Familiar
The Dawn of Despair
Jewel
Cocky
Reverence
Source
Fool’s Errand
Shadowed Perspective
Angel Talk
Holy Architecture
Trouble Makers
Woman Calling
Unvarnished Healing
Proof
Bones to Pick
Dark Torches
The Problem of Evil
SUMMER
Wading In
Greed
Infinite Surprise
Daily Delusions
Waiting for the Word
Divine Adventure
Haiti
High Style
Fish Fry
Road Trip
On the Way
Summer Blockbuster
Renovation
Relentless
Potter’s Business
Clever Choices
Pursuit of Peace
Looking for the Exit
Broken
Noah Spins
FALL
Imaginary Numbers
Particular Perfection
Hold Hope
Words and Will
Jenga
Eden Tells Us
Sound the Trumpet
Neighborly
In Search of Wiggle Room
Flip the Switch
Conflicting Comforts
The Real
Sturdy Steed
Ambush
Reputation
Scarred Service
Zacchaeus
Abide
Attentive
To Hear Paul Tell It
Whatever
Our Hunger Satisfied
WINTER
Strength Is Ours
Word
Weaponry
School Is In
Heavenly Haute Couture
Consequential Choices
Mystical Moments
A Magi Speaks
Nazareth Surprise
No Damascus Road
The Glory Story
Human Wisdom
Purpose
Seed
Priestly Profession
Reality Check
Under Reconstruction
How’s My Driving?
Unfair Trade
No Apology
Searching for Amen
Tender Mercies
The word “worship”
trips so easily off the tongue.
I worship. You worship.
We worship together.
What could be better?
But worship is weightier,
never confined to the harmonies
of hymns wafting in the rafters
of the meeting house,
or swaying to the rhythms of the choir
when the whole congregation
is lost in the lyrics
of grace and salvation.
True worship is
sanctifying ourselves,
sacrificing our bodies,
submitting our hearts and minds
for total transformation,
by God. For God.
He’s the only one able
to perform such
complex conversions.
Our part is to let him,
which is easier said than done.
Our wills always
get in the way.
So where do we begin?
By breathing this in:
Worship is living into
“I surrender all.”
Romans 12:1–2
False gods and false prophets
run rampant in the world,
their tongues comfortably curled
around the latest lies.
Their motives may defy our logic,
but God’s truth rests
with those spirits who confess
that Jesus Christ is Lord.
And what is confession?
Words without weight,
or a life lived as witness
to the Son, the Holy one, the Christ?
In today’s vernacular,
confession is
the reluctant acknowledgment
of guilt, of sin,
of that for which
we are ashamed.
But we who test the spirits by the Spirit,
who rightly divide the word of truth
lived and spoken by
the Carpenter-King—
we are not ashamed, or reluctant.
We are workmen and women
prepared to give a reason
for the hope that is within us.
We declare our allegiance to the Lord
for we cannot begin
to live or love like him
otherwise.
1 John 4:1–6
John was confounded when the Lord
presented himself at the river Jordan
alongside those whose souls
were desperate for cleansing.
But in one sense, I suppose
it was a small thing
to be buried in the waters of baptism
when burial in a tomb was not far off,
and both would end by rising
Beloved Son,
the sinless One,
the Lord of all.
A humble act
for the King of Glory,
just one more way
to stand with humanity,
to climb into our skin
as if our sins were his own—
a servant to the end.
No wonder the Father was pleased.
Is it too much, then, that we
Gentiles of every hue and nation,
who celebrate the nonpartisan
Good News of God’s great gift,
should be called to live lives
in harmony with Him,
and to sing together
Hallelujah?
Matthew 3:13–17, Acts 10:34–43
Mark and the other insiders
kept a careful catalog
of the Lord’s provision.
Four thousand fed here,
five thousand fed there.
Even so, they eventually
lost count
You might as well
try to tally
the grains of sand
that edge the sea
as track the Lord’s
miraculous provision.
After all,
Jehovah-Jireh is
his middle name.
Yet, the minute need
rings our doorbell,
we stare down at
our empty hands,
rather than look
to the God-man
who holds the pitcher of plenty,
ready to pour it out
should any believer ask.
Blind as we can be,
I wonder when we
will finally understand
that little is much
in God’s hand.
Mark 8:14–26
“Keep your eye on the curtain,”
says the magician,
and while we do,
he cleverly disappears.
The ruse works every time
because we trust what we see.
But God reminds us,
that’s not the half of it.
More than magician,
God sees into our hearts
and far into the future
he, alone, created.
Hide and seek was never
a game for the Lord,
as Philip learned.
Jesus said, “Follow me,”
and the new disciple headed out
to spread the word, keen to share it
with one Nathanael, who Jesus saw
before Philip ever found him.
“Where did you get to know me?”
asked Nathanael, mistaking Jesus
for someone with limits.
And even when he realized
Jesus was God and King,
he failed to see the future greatness
God had in mind to do.
Like me and you,
Nathanael was too focused
on the mystery of that moment.
But not to worry.
Jesus says, “Keep your eye on me.
In good time,
all will be revealed.”
John 1:43–51
Thirsty for conversation,
Jesus goes to the well,
engages the woman there
in a lengthy chat
—a spiritual faux-pas—
a Jew talking up a Samaritan,
and a woman at that!
“I’ll trade you a spring of living water
for a drink from the well,” he says.
Seeing Jesus without pail or bucket,
she snickers a bit,
wondering exactly how
he plans to perform the magic trick
of lifting water from a well.
“Are you greater than
our ancestor Jacob
who gave us this well?” she asks,
her question rhetorical.
But this stranger from Galilee
