A Modern Literary Poem on Ephesians 5:11–12 by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , ,

Ephesians 5:11-12 (KJV)


And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them.
For it is a shame even to speak of those things which are done of them in secret.
We are not called to tolerance of night—
that gentle lie the age keeps whispering,
as if all darkness held some equal right,
as if the fruitless works deserved our pitying.
No. The Gospel speaks with sharper light:
Have nothing to do with barren deeds concealed,
but drag them out where truth can burn them white.
Expose them. Let the hidden shame be revealed.
For silence is a kind of slow consent,
a velvet chain that lets the poison spread.
The child of light was never meant to bend
before the fashionable lies we’re fed—
that every vice is private, every choice
a sacred lane no one should dare condemn.
Yet Paul still cries across two thousand years:
the things they do in secret, do not name,
for they are worse than speech can bear to hold.
Instead, stand firm. Let daylight do its work.
Where rot festers, bring the flame of bold
confrontation—love that does not shirk.
This is no hatred wearing mercy’s mask.
It is the surgeon’s cut that saves the limb,
the father’s warning before the fatal task,
the rescuer who drags the sleeper from the rim.
Arise, then. Walk as children of the day.
No truce with what devours and gives no life.
The Gospel calls us not to look away,
but to expose, reprove, and pierce with light—
until the darkness breaks beneath the light.
Will you expose it now—or join its night?

The Alabaster Box Broken: Her Lavish Sacrifice That Moved and Pleased the Savior by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , ,

In the hush of Simon’s house in Bethany where lamplight danced and swayed,
the evening air lay thick with roasted lamb and bread’s warm, yeasty breath.
Wine’s dark tang kissed every tongue; low laughter rose and played
while shadows stretched like fingers long across the earthen floor beneath.
She came unbidden, silent as a sigh through candle-glow,
an alabaster box clutched tight—its surface cool and smooth as bone.
Pale as moonlit marble, sealed with promise none could know,
it trembled in her calloused hands, a secret all her own.
Then came the sound—sharp, sudden, like a heart that breaks in two—
the alabaster cracked and split; the crash rang clear and cold.
Out poured the nard, pure spikenard oil from distant eastern lands,
very precious, worth a year’s wages—
in golden streams, thick, glistening, rich as dew—
and oh, the fragrance! Headstrong, rare, and fiercely bold.
It flooded every nostril, heavy spice that clung and curled,
a living perfume storm that drowned the meat-smoke, bread, and wine.
It wrapped the room in velvet heat, a sweetness wild and pearled,
that settled on the skin like oil of love made flesh divine.
She knelt. Her tears fell warm and salt upon His dusty feet;
her raven hair, soft as midnight silk, let loose in one swift flood.
She wiped the costly balm with strands that brushed and kissed and beat,
while oil ran slick between her fingers, warm and thick as blood.
The men recoiled. Their voices sliced the fragrant, trembling air—
“Three hundred pence!” they hissed, like knives dragged sharp across a stone.
“Given to the poor!”—their outrage bitter, raw, and bare,
while all around the perfume sang its sweet, insistent moan.
He turned. His gaze was steady flame that pierced the rising din.
The scent still rose in spirals slow, a prayer made visible.
“Leave her,” He said, voice low and deep as thunder held within,
“She hath done what she could. Let no one trouble her or kill
the beauty of this moment. She has poured her all on Me,
anointed beforehand for My burial, soon to lie within a borrowed tomb.
Wherever this good news is told across the earth and sea,
her deed will live—her broken box, her love that broke the gloom.”
The shards lay scattered, gleaming white against the oil-slick floor.
The fragrance lingered, clung to robes, to hair, to memory’s breath.
We tasted salt and spice and grace; we felt the holy pour
of one who gave her everything, who loved Him unto death.
She hath done what she could.
Her sacrifice—extravagant, selfless, drenched in love—
moved the Savior’s heart and filled it with delight.
He was well-pleased.
And still the fragrance rises.

From Barren Clay to Silver Showers: A Poem of Righteous Sowing by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , ,

Hosea 10:12 (KJV)
Sow to yourselves in righteousness, reap in mercy; break up your fallow ground: for it is time to seek the LORD, till he come and rain righteousness upon you.

(A Rhymed Reflection on Hosea 10:12)
In furrowed fields where wild weeds tangle free,
Sow seeds of righteousness with steady hand;
Break up the hardened crust of fallow lea,
And turn the barren clay to fertile land.
Reap not in wrath, but mercy’s gentle rain—
Let justice bloom where thorns once held their sway.
The time is ripe; the season calls again:
Seek now the Lord before the close of day.
Plough deep the soul’s neglected, stony sod,
Cast every idle stone and root of pride.
For He who waits with patience from above
Will split the heavens, pouring grace worldwide.
Then righteousness shall fall like silver showers,
And every heart renewed shall sing His praise—
A harvest heavy with eternal flowers,
Where mercy crowns the labor of our days.
So labor while the morning light is bright,
And trust the Sower who makes all things new;
In broken ground His glory takes its height—
The Lord will come and rain His goodness true.

In Crimson Dawn of Grace: New Hearts, New Minds, and the Triumphant Life of the Redeemed by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , ,

To my King and High Priest, Jesus Christ — who has made us kings and queens in Your kingdom.

In crimson dawn of grace where shadows flee,
We stand as royally redeemed, set free—
Not slaves to dust, but heirs of heaven’s throne,
New creatures born; the old self buried, gone.
Our hearts, once stone, now pulse with holy fire,
Our souls refreshed by living streams that never tire,
Our minds renewed, illumined by the Word,
We cherish righteousness as heaven’s greatest treasure, long deferred.
O joy unbounded! In the sacred scroll we pore,
On statutes pure as gold, on wisdom’s endless store;
Each precept sings, a melody divine,
And in our spirits leaps the triumph of the Vine.
No weary yoke, but eagle’s wings of might,
We walk His ways through storm and starry night;
In victory’s stride, with banners high unfurled,
We live the law of love that conquers all the world.
For Christ has crowned us kings and queens to reign,
In robes of righteousness, unmarred by sin’s dark stain;
With gladness we obey, with laughter we ascend,
God’s kings and queens—forever crowned, forever blest.

A Biblical Lament in Rhyme:The Serpent’s Subtle Poison –A Cry Against Toxic Suspicion,False Discernment Disguised as Wisdom,and the Urgent Call for the Churchto Clothe Herself Again in Christ’s Own Mercy by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , , , , ,

A Biblical Lament in Rhyme


O children of dust, why wield the iron rod,
And pour out suspicion instead of the blood?
The Lamb has been slain, His mercy your price—
Why hoard what He purchased at infinite cost?
He clothed you in garments of righteousness pure,
Yet you cast on your brother or sister a cloak of manure.
You count every fault with a critical eye,
While grace that redeemed you goes begging nearby.
Discernment is holy, a lamp from above,
A sword sharp with truth, ever tempered by love.
It sees the wolf coming in wool soft and white,
Yet prays for the sinner returning by night.
But toxic suspicion, that serpent of old,
Spins webs of division and fear from its hold.
It whispers in shadows, “Beware of them all,”
And turns tender mercy to vinegar gall.
“Judge not,” said the Master, “or judgment you’ll reap,”
The measure you give will be measured in heaps.
Yet you search hidden hearts that the Lord alone knows,
And pile heavy burdens where mercy should flow.
This is the Accuser’s most crafty device—
To dress up his shame in the robes of “discernment precise.”
He calls it wise caution; the saints bleed instead,
While love that should bind them lies wounded and dead.
Repent, ransomed people! Put on Christ’s own heart,
Who dined with the tax-man and touched the unclean.
Who looked on the fallen and spoke words of peace:
“Neither do I condemn—go and sin no more, cease.”
Let grace like a river flow out from the Stone,
Once smitten for sinners, now life-giving throne.
Wash clean every rust of suspicion and fear,
That the world may behold that His people are here.
Blessed is the soul who discerns yet extends
The same boundless mercy that heaven descends.
Unashamed they’ll stand when the Judge appears,
Clothed in the grace they have scattered for years.
But woe to the heart locked in bitter distrust—
It eats its own venom and turns into dust.
The door it refused to another extend,
Shall one day be shut when its own cry ascends.
Selah.

Unmoved Through Every Age: The Presence That Holds by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , ,

One sets the Lord before them, ever near,
a constant light that holds through every hour.
No fleeting fear, no gathering doubt appears
where divine presence calms the restless power.

At their right hand the Sovereign stands secure,
an unshakable pillar when foundations sway.
Though tempests rage and shifting seasons scar,
they stand unmoved, held steady in that sway.

What tremor dares assail a soul so stayed?
What shadow falls where heaven’s anchor lies?
Each step they take is firm, each breath arrayed
in quiet strength beneath unchanging skies.

Let empires rise and crumble into dust,
let ages turn and stars forget their name—
through every trial, every trial’s thrust,
their heart remains, forever in His claim.

The world may spin in wild and furious play—
they shall not ever be moved, come what may.

Complete in the Triumphant Fullness of Jesus Christ Our Lord by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , , , ,

Colossians 2:9-10
For in him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily.
And ye are complete in him, which is the head of all principality and power.

This poem joyfully proclaims that every soul finds total completeness, wholeness, and victory in Jesus Christ our Lord. It depicts believers as fully restored and reigning in Him—lacking nothing—resting secure in His perfect fullness, righteousness, and triumph over every obstacle.

The poem is written in a majestic literary style using consistent iambic pentameter and an ABAB rhyme scheme across six quatrain stanzas. Its smooth rhythm, vivid imagery, and rising refrains create a powerful, celebratory flow that feels both elegant and uplifting, matching the triumphant message.

In Jesus Christ our Lord, the soul stands complete,
No fragment missing, no dominion of defeat;
The fullness of the Godhead bodily resides
Within the One through whom all grace abides.
The ransomed rise, made whole by crimson tide,
No longer chained by law or fleshly stride;
In Him they dwell, lacking no gift, no light—
Complete in Christ, the Everlasting Might.

Triumphant anthems thunder from the heights,
Where principalities before Him bow;
The broken find their shattered days made right,
And empty vessels overflow somehow.
No longer tossed on oceans wild and wide,
Nor haunted by the curse that once held sway,
They wear His righteousness, His peace their guide,
His wisdom lighting every shadowed way.

Majestic Victor, Lion and the Lamb,
Whose glory clothes the heavens and the deep,
The faithful rest secure within the I AM,
Co-heirs with Him who woke from death’s cold sleep.
The serpent’s head lies crushed beneath His heel,
Death’s iron gates swing open at His word;
The ransomed throng in robes of glory kneel,
Yet rise to reign with Christ, their risen Lord.

O mystery divine, O boundless grace,
That mortal clay in union should be filled
With heaven’s treasure, sealed in sacred place,
Where every striving soul is stilled and stilled.
No height, no depth, no power, nothing less
Can sever this completeness from their breast;
They lift their voices in triumphant dress—
Complete, complete in Jesus Christ our Lord confessed.

Let galaxies resound, let ages sing,
Let every tongue proclaim the Victor’s fame;
In Him they live, they move, their anthems ring—
Forever whole and holy is His name.
The battle won, the race forever run,
The joy begun that never shall grow dim:
All glory, honor, praise to God the Son—
Complete in Jesus Christ our Lord, in Him, in Him!

Triumphant Pursuit: Press On to Know Christ, the Spring Rain of Our Souls by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , ,

Triumphant Pursuit: Press On to Know Christ, the Spring Rain of Our Souls is a joyful, victorious Christian poem inspired by Hosea 6:3. It calls believers to passionately pursue deeper knowledge of Christ, celebrating His coming as sure as the dawn and refreshing as spring rains that bring life and abundance.Form: Written in 8 rhyming quatrains (AABB scheme) with energetic, uplifting rhythm — designed for easy reading and heartfelt proclamation.

Let us know; let us press on to know the LORD;
His going out is sure as the dawn;
He will come to us as the showers,
as the spring rains that water the earth.
~ Hosea 6:3

Let us arise! Let us press on to know
The Lord our God in glory’s radiant flame!
Our hearts are burning, spirits overflow,
Awake, alive, exulting in His name!

We run the race with joy that overflows,
His faithfulness breaks forth, victorious, vast—
As dawn exploding where the sunrise grows,
A blazing triumph lighting all the vast!

Behold, He comes—triumphant as the light
That floods the heavens, brilliant, strong, and free!
His presence surges, dazzling, pure, and bright,
Turning our whole world into victory!

He comes as showers on the thirsty ground,
As spring rains dancing, lavish, pure, and sweet;
They burst in silver glory all around,
And every desert bursts with life complete!

Green waves of harvest roll across the plain,
Lift up your voice, O soul—let anthems ring!
The King is here! His mercy reigns again!

Press on, press on! The dawn has overcome!
The rains are here—the victory is won!

Triumphant in Grace: Building Yourselves Up in Most Holy Faith by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , ,

This triumphant poem expands Jude 1:20-21 (KJV), calling believers to build on most holy faith, pray in the Holy Spirit, stay rooted in God’s love, and eagerly await Christ’s mercy leading to eternal life. It moves from active spiritual building to victorious hope in Christ’s return.Structure note: Seven quatrains in flowing ABCB rhyme with hymn-like rhythm, creating a clear ascent from obedience to triumphant glory.

But you, beloved, building up yourselves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost, keep yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life.”
~ Jude 1:20-21 (KJV)

O beloved, lift your eyes beyond the fray,
Where tempests rage and shadows seek to bind,
Build high your faith upon the Rock today—
A tower of holy fire, unconfined.

With hands of prayer that grasp the Spirit’s wind,
Invoke the breath that shakes the ancient deep;
Let tongues of glory from your spirit ascend,
A ceaseless anthem where the angels keep.

Keep yourselves within the love of God,
A fortress blazing, golden, fierce, and true—
No wave of doubt, no night of fear can mar
The blazing heart where His affection grew.

Wait—O triumphant wait!—for mercy’s crown,
The Lord’s return in splendor, swift and bright;
His mercy like a river rushing down
To carry souls into eternal light.

Behold the dawn! The trumpet splits the skies,
The King descends with healing in His wings;
We rise as one, with victory in our eyes,
And sing the song the ransomed sinner sings.

Beloved, stand! The battle’s won in grace,
Eternal life awaits your lifted face.


Not Unto Us: Sonnet by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , ,

This devotional sonnet, rooted in Psalm 115:1, is a humble prayer that gives all glory to God rather than to humanity. It acknowledges human frailty (“we are but dust”), celebrates God’s glory revealed in creation (rose, ocean, stars), and finds comfort in His sustaining love amid sorrow. The poem ends by directing all honor, blessing, and worship back to God alone. In short: a quiet, reverent offering of praise that moves from human smallness to divine mercy and eternal glory.

Psalm 115:1
Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but unto thy name give glory, for thy mercy, and for thy truth’s sake.

O Lord, not unto us the crown of fame,
Nor mortal lips that boast their hollow song;
We are but dust that trembles at Thy name,
And only echoes what Thy winds prolong.

The rose unfolds its velvet heart in flame
Because Thy mercy bids the morning strong;
The ocean’s pulse, the starry host’s acclaim—
All breathe Thy truth where truth has lingered long.

Yet in our frailty still Thy glory gleams,
A fountain brighter than the noonday sun,
A love that weaves through sorrow’s darkest dreams
And lifts the fallen when their race is run.

To Thee alone the everlasting beams
Of honor, blessing, worship—ever One.