“Descending Theology: The Garden” by Mary Karr
We know he was a man because, once doomed,
  he begged for reprieve. See him
grieving on his rock under olive trees,
  his companions asleep
on the hard ground around him
  wrapped in old hides.
Not one stayed awake as he’d asked.
  That went through him like a sword.
He wished with all his being to stay
  but gave up
bargaining at the sky. He knew
  it was all mercy anyhow,
unearned as breath. The Father couldn’t intervene,
  though that gaze was never
not rapt, a mantle around him. This
  was our doing, our death.
The dark prince had poured the vial of poison
  into the betrayer’s ear,
and it was done. Around the oasis where Jesus wept,
  the cracked earth radiated out for miles.
In the green center, Jesus prayed for the pardon
  of Judas, who was approaching
with soldiers, glancing up–as Christ was–into
  the punctured sky till his neck bones
ached. Here is his tear-riven face come
  to press a kiss on his brother.