martes, 22 de marzo de 2022

Ay Jesus Lady Hagua


Ay Jesús
Quien te Subió En Esa Cruz
Dicen que Judas te vendió
Y treinta monedas cobro
Hoy te pedimos perdón
Por eso que sucedió
Tú fuiste hombre de paz
De justicia y bien estar
Querías a los humanos
Pues todos somos hermanos
Las golondrinas pasaron
Y los clavos te arrancaron
Y las mujeres piadosas
Te echaron ungüentos y rosas
Ay ay ay Jesús
Quien te subió a esa cruz
Ay ay ay Jesús
Quien te subió en esa cruz
Quiero decirte Jesús
Que nos vestiremos de azul
En recuerdo a tu bondad
Y en protesta a la esclavitud
En el cielo y en la tierra
La humanidad se despierta
Y pide igualdad y piedad
Y no más fuerza militar
Ay ay ay Jesús
Quien te subió en esa cruz
Ay ay ay Jesús
Quien te subió en esa cruz
No más guerra no más odio
Naturaleza reinante
Queremos vivir en paz
Y en completa libertad
Dile a tu padre Jesús
Que nos mande más salud
Que la tierra está en crisis
Y necesitamos tu luz
Dile a tu padre también
Que mande más sabiduría
A esos que nos gobiernan
A esos que nos enseñan
Ay ay Jesús
Ay Jesús
Quien te subió en esa cruz
Ay Jesús ay Jesús
Quien te subió en esa cruz
Cantautora Lady Hagua
Mari Carmen Diez Colorado
Palma de Mallorca
19/017/2022

1 comentario:

  1. There are religious undertones in much of the Kremlin's narrative justifying its invasion of Ukraine. It is a fight for the conservative ideals of the Russian Orthodox Church based in Moscow, against an immoral outside world. President Putin has said Ukraine is not only an "inalienable part" of Russia's history and culture - but also its "spiritual space".
    The former Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, has said he finds Patriarch Kirill's sentiment concerning.
    "There are elements in the Russian Christian tradition that can become really toxic when they get in their head a particular kind of Christian nationalism, a sort of messianic approach to the fate of the nation," said Dr Williams during a visit to western Ukraine this week.
    He was part of an extraordinary high-level, multi-faith delegation - including Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Hindu and Buddhist leaders. They met refugees who had fled the horrors in the eastern part of the country.
    Dr Williams has long studied and written about the positive contribution of the Russian Orthodox Church, and appears deeply saddened by the role the Moscow Patriarchate is playing in the war.
    "I think that the increasing influence in the Patriarchate of Moscow of ultranationalist ideals - often including a strand of anti-Semitism - has been going on for some time.
    "And it has now expressed itself in this very uncritical support of Russian national ambitions, a very aggressive attitude towards many other Orthodox churches. The writing has been on the wall for some time," he said.

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