Bibliodraw: Drawing the Bible
Exploring the Bible, a chapter a day, through drawing and writing
Tuesday, November 4, 2025
Samuel: Chapter 7
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
Samuel 6: In Writing
Drop the lights
Take down the walls
Uncover the sky.
Tomatoes ripen--
Seedlings wait to be planted--
God pulses through the rising
Vine, through the purpled geranium bud
Through the flower-shaped milk
Ducts, that fill and ache and drip--
Through the cat that prowls its territory
And the fallen leaf that scrapes the floor--
The light that breaks through the grid
Of leftover schach
And through the hospital window
Where Ram breathes in his sap rise
Feels the air enter and rush through his wind
Pipe, feels the wind brooding deep
As worldwide people ping
Photos of the sky
To the phone he will not touch.
Monday, October 20, 2025
Samuel: Chapter 6
What do you see
making its way towards you?
Will you rise
Or will you fall?
For full chapter, click here
This chapter continues several of the leitworts of the previous chapter, repeating the thematic hand (y'd) and heavy-honor (k'v'd). Yet the root k'v'd, which previously echoed the despairing "honor is lost from Israel" of the defeated Israelites, here gains deeper resonance, stretching back all the way to the Exodus, with Pharaoh's heavy (k'v'd) heart: "Why harden you hearts as Egypt and Pharoah did" warn the Philistine magicians.
And indeed, the Philistines take heed. Now, instead of taking the Ark as they did before, they send it (sh'l'kh)--another leitword, that echoes Pharaoh's sending forth the Israelites. The power of God's hand loosens the human hand. Relinquishin the control they previously celabrated, the Philistines embody their elided shame in forever-gold, offereing it to God.
Yet the relinquishment is not total: rather, it is a provisinal test. They free the Ark, placing it on a wagon drawn by two nursing cows, and see if it can override the biological imperative of motherhood to make its way back (the last of the chapter's keywords), rising and fallng to Isralite terratory. This "seeing" is the last remnant of transgresive control, and remains dangerous. The Isralites, overjoyed to see the Ark coming towrads them through the fields, are punished for their casual gaze.
The story which was introduced with the declaration that "God continued to show himself to Samuel in Shilo" closes with a punishment for those who gaze on God unbiddne outside Shilo's confines.
Thursday, October 16, 2025
Samuel 5: In Wirting
No one you
warns
about the shame--
the body turned swamp,
turned quicksand --
how the hollows gape
every time you walk, every time
you climb. Sliding, sliding,
drown—
after breaking, the body
will not seal. Bleed
for a month, three months
eternity. The terror
of sitting. Of shitting.
Put ice. Witch
hazel. Cry your eyes closed.
No one warns you
how the jointed boat
pelvis will creak, rock.
leak. How bodies
once mended, a ridge
of stitching remains,
like a seamed sock
rubbing your shoe.
How you can hate
your own stench
wash and wash,
and never feel clean.
Lord
of hosts
Lord
of knowings
teach
me the multiplicity
of this
body that opens
and
shuts without volition, quivering
like
a vibrating string.
Lord
of endings
beginnings
and thresholds
where
I lie toppled
eyes fixed upward
curled
hands conches
feet transforming
back to
the tail
that
will buy me back my voice.
Sunday, September 28, 2025
Samuel: Chapter 5
If in the previous chapter, Israel was punished when they celebrated their prowess and control over the Ark, now the Philistines' turn has come. As in the previous chapter, the emphasis is on the word "take" lakakh, highlighting the physical manipulation of what should be sacred, beyond human ken; the human propensity to grab. The Philistines "take" the Ark from Even HaEzer, they "take" it to the Temple of Dagon, and they "take" Dagon when he topples at the foot of the Ark.
In response, God severs Dagon's "hands". There will be no handling. The public debasment of Dagon is followed by a private debasment of the Philistened. God's "hand" spreads throughout the Philistine city in a plague (echoing the Exodus,when the "hand of God" kills the livestock ). The Israelites had hoped for a Lord of (military) Hosts Who fights in the open, "trumpeting" the arrival the Ark to their camp, as though it were a weapon. When the Ark finally acts against the Philistenes, it is specifically through the hidden, the invisible. The Philistines are struck with hemeroids, their most private bodily functions made public in a general outcry (homeh) that echoes Israel's despairing cry in the previous chapter. The Ark is avenged through shame, the debasement of the Philistines both elided and inscribed in the text by the difference between the written and read form of the word for "hemeroid"--read as t'horim (hemeroid), written as afli (sahdowed, dark), as though the word is too shameful to be written, but highlighted by its very absence. The "dishonor" (I-kavod) experienced by Israel in the previous chapter is countered here by the " very heavy (kaved) hand of God".
As in the case Samson, who carries the gates of Gaza on his back, the interaction with the Philistines, Israel's closest neighbors, revolves around liminal spaces. Dagon's severed hands and face are found on the threshold of his temple; the priests of Ashdod avoid the temple doorway; similarly, in the previous chapter, Eli dies at the entrance to the Mishkan, his neck broken when he strikes the doorpost. God here attacks the Philistines through the most hidden limen of all, the portal through which the body excretes what does not belong, a passageway between self and not-self. The battle between Israel and the Philitenes takes place in this charged space between self and other, feeling for boundaries.
Sunday, September 21, 2025
Samuel 4: In Writing
Within the darkness
that presses its nose
against the window
a baby screams
and screams
her father humming
desperate sursuration
Not mine. Not now
Not today.
Lights out. Bedtime
On distant lit pathways
a stroller appears. Disappears.
I’m scared to go to the army,” my son says.
What if I don’t like the food?
And also--I might get killed.
Crouch in a ditch. Pray.
So many promises I want to make.
But nothing to say.
I tell him of the Davidka,
the canon that couldn’t aim
but saved the city with its roar
The siren shriek
haunts the night
but my children have learned
to barely flich.
Today my son has an earthquake drill;
last night, a missile.
Saferoroms sprout like mushrooms
before the rains.
Two helicopters circle
locuslike overhead.
encircled in the angry
howl of aircraft.
I will have mercy
on whom I have mercy
And grace
on whom I have grace.
Yet how we long to lock
salvation in a box
to shoot at will
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Samuel: Chapter 4
The center
does not hold.
What will the future birth?
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
Samuel 3: In Writing
he says, till they try again.
There may be a warning--
there may not. So just know.
Everybody says.
Sun ricochets off the waves
and the siren begins
ereely unconstrained.
Bathers stampede towards the changing huts.
I crouch over my baby
tell the preschooler arms over her head
It's nothing, I say. Nothing
to fear. The wail dies.
See, not even a boom, I sooth.
These days, these weeks,
in a shark mouth
propped open with a stick
ready to snap.
An egret scries the murkey water
then plungers, silver
flailing in her beak.
Two weeks till first grade,
two weeks till kindergarten
We balance at the soupy cusp
of the turning year.
Monday, August 18, 2025
Samuel: Chapter 3
The fraught moment
Before
it all begins
it all ends
For full chapter, click here
This chapter continues where the previous one closed, reiterating and amplifying the prophecy regarding the fall of the House of Eli.
As in the previous chapter, Samuel and the sons of Eli are repeatedly juxtaposed, in an implicit yet insistent link. Every description of the sins of Eli's sons is bookended by descriptions of Samuel's virtue; Samuel here becomes Eli's "son", after the two biological sons fail so completely. He is the beloved usurper, stepping into the place of the rejected priests. In this chapter, Samuel's linkage with the destruction of Hofni and Pinhas becomes more explicit, as he actually speaks the words of doom. With the rise of the "naar" (youth) Samuel, Eli's "nearim" fall.
Their fate was already been inscribed with the previous chapter's prophecy. What this chapter adds is the element of time. Samuel hears God speak "on that very day," and prophesies about "that very day" that will bring destruction that lasts "forever." A key word of the chapter is terem--before, not yet. The light of God has not yet gone out; Samuel has not yet heard God voice, he does not yet know God. We stand at the cusp, in the expectant before. The silence that precedes the storm that will end Eli; before Samuel regularly communes with God.
Sunday, July 20, 2025
Samuel 2: In Writing
And the wind. The drifting bubbles
The kites with streamers
that soar and swoop and crash.
The world perches on stilts
and likes to flip
off the tightrope
spanning the abyss–
fall down to the taut plain
balanced on posts
only to bounce up again.
A costumed woman with a crown of stars
Turns in an undulating banner.
Behind her all things wind-driven and fragile:
Kites, crepe, whirligigs,
sugarfloss that melts to the tongue.
a woman with a rainbow wrapped baby.
My baby runs between the shadows--
I will never wrap him again.
My daughter's keens as her string tangles
my son crying because the tassels tear,
because it flies
because it won't fly
because it falls.
Walls disappear in a sudden gust
that sends kites spinning.
Hold on tight for the next turn




