The shadow of Good Friday casts a long silhouette over the human experience. It is a narrative composed of wood and stone, of visceral agony and silent endurance. When poets approach the Passion, they often find themselves navigating two distinct landscapes: the terrifying, personal weight of the Cross, and the quiet, crushing sorrow of the Mother holding her Son.
In his contemplation of this burden, Joe Tessitore strips away the veneer of heroic martyrdom. His verse does not celebrate strength; it confesses fragility. The speaker recoils, admitting that the mere thought of the cross brings a fear too great to bear alone. There is a raw honesty in the admission of being a “weakling” before such a colossal instrument of death.
The poem pivots on the realization that spiritual endurance is not a solo endeavor. The crushing weight that “will lay me low” is impossible to bear without the divine invitation to follow. Tessitore leaves us with a haunting epitaph, a warning carved in imaginary stone for those who refuse help:
“He tried to carry it alone.”
It is a stark reminder that the weight of the cross is designed to break the ego, forcing a surrender that the human will cannot manufacture on its own.
Michelangelo's Pieta sculpture showing Mary holding the body of Jesus
While the cross represents the active struggle, the Pietà represents the passive, enduring grief of the aftermath. Tonya McQuade takes us on a pilgrimage through Italy, where this image of the Madonna “so undone” repeats itself a hundred times. It is not just one statue; it is a motif etched into the cultural consciousness—appearing on tapestries, vases, and cathedral walls.
McQuade’s observation moves beyond the cold marble of Michelangelo’s masterpiece to the theology hidden within the stone. She notes the paradox of the scene: the mother examining the bruised body, searching for a reason, yet maintaining a “fiery faith.” The poet captures the tension between the visible reality of death—the “thorny crown” and “naked frame”—and the invisible promise of what comes next.
The marble captures a frozen moment of bereavement. Mary’s eyes, “real and natural,” anchor the viewer in the present sorrow, even as the poet reminds us that the story does not end in the cold arms of the statue.
Michael Charles Maibach narrows the focus further, zooming in on the intimate interaction between mother and son. He touches upon the theological mystery often noted in Michelangelo’s work: the “youthful look” of the mother, which conceals her age, perhaps a sign of her “holy stage.”
There is a cyclic nature to Maibach’s interpretation. He describes Mary cradling the slain body “as if newborn,” closing the loop that began in Bethlehem. The hands that once held the infant now hold the sacrifice. The poem navigates the silent questions she might ask her God—why this role, why this toll?—while settling on the strength of her abiding faith.
Maibach suggests that the answer to the modern search for signs is found in this ancient “true art.” The resolution is tactile and simple: to press the Son to heart. In these verses, the marble softens, breathing life into a scene that has stood silent for centuries, reminding us that grief, when held in faith, becomes a strange and terrible kind of grace.


















