Hallelujah of the Cleansed: How Christ’s Precious Blood Proclaims Supreme Victory, Inner Freedom, and the Father’s Everlasting Welcome by Debbie Harris

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Hebrews 9:13-14 (KJV)
For if the blood of bulls and of goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh: How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?

Hebrews 10:19-22 (KJV)
Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, By a new and living way, which he hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that is to say, his flesh; And having an high priest over the house of God; Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water.

Romans 8:37 (KJV)
Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him that loved us.

Psalm 40:2 (KJV)
He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings.

Behold the soul that once knew miry’s hold,
A fleeting shadow in the ancient night—
Yet scarcely touched by darkness, lo! behold:
The Victor’s light erupts in boundless might.

No chain endures; the mire dissolves in flame,
A vapor gone before the rising sun.
Christ’s blood, triumphant, speaks the Father’s name—
And every stain, each whisper, is undone.

More than conqueror, he stands in royal gleam,
Feet firm on crystal, crown of glory bright;
Conscience a mirror reflecting heaven’s beam,
No echo left of guilt or endless night.

The High Priest reigns with joy upon the throne,
His wounds now fountains pouring endless grace;
The Father calls with laughter of His own—
“Beloved, enter, claim thy rightful place!”

No striving mars this everlasting day;
No fear can dim the splendor of His face.
The heart, once shadowed, now in light holds sway—
A dance of peace in heaven’s warm embrace.

O ransomed one, arise in victory’s song!
The cross has shattered every darkened chain;
Eternal morning breaks, the night is gone—
In Christ’s dear light, thou reignest, free again.

Rejoice, ye heavens! The triumph overflows;
From every height the hallelujahs ring.
More victorious than tongue or thought can know—
The soul ascends, forever bathed in spring.

Narcissus at the Mirror Pool by Debbie Harris

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In Thespian woods where Cephissus flows,
A river-god whose currents softly gleam,
There bloomed a child of more than mortal grace—
Narcissus, born to Liriope the nymph.
His mother, trembling, sought the seer’s sight:
“Will he live long?” Tiresias, sightless, smiled
And spoke the riddle wrapped in shadow’s veil:
“Long years, provided he shall never know himself.”

The boy grew tall, a slender flame of youth,
Sixteen summers on his cheek like rose-light,
Hair black as midnight rivers, skin like dawn
Polished on ivory. Every eye that met him
Burned. Young men sighed, maidens wove his name
In secret songs. Yet pride, cold as winter stone,
Sealed his heart. He turned from every plea,
From every hand outstretched, with scornful laugh:
“Why grasp at me when I am not for you?”

Among the spurned was Echo, mountain nymph,
Once bright of tongue, who chattered through the hills
To shield her lord from Juno’s jealous gaze.
Punished, she lost her voice—could only take
The final words of others, fling them back
Like pebbles skipped across a silent lake.
She saw Narcissus once, hunting alone,
And love struck through her like an arrow’s fire.
She followed, hidden, aching to confess,
But when he called to companions lost—“Is anyone here?”—
Only her borrowed voice replied: “Here… here…”

He frowned. “Come closer.” Echo’s heart leaped wild.
“Closer… closer…” She stepped into the light.
Arms wide, she ran toward embrace. He recoiled:
“Away! I’d sooner die than lie with you.”
Away… with you… The words cut deeper than knives.
She fled, and fading, fading, body wasted
Until she was no flesh, only repeating sound—
A voice that lingers still in empty vales.

But Nemesis, goddess of righteous return,
Heard one rejected lover’s whispered curse:
“Let him who spurns all love himself love vainly,
And never gain the thing his heart desires.”
The prayer was granted.

One noon, tired from the chase, Narcissus wandered
To a sequestered glade no shepherd knew,
Where silver water lay in perfect stillness—
No ripple marred it, no leaf broke its glass.
He bent to drink. And there—impossible beauty—
A face looked up: eyes dark as his, lips curved
In perfect symmetry, curls falling just so.
He stared. The image stared. He reached. It reached.
A smile—he smiled. A sigh—he sighed in turn.

O fatal thirst that was not thirst for water!
He loved, and knew not what he loved, yet burned.
“Why do you flee when I pursue? Why mock
My reaching hand?” The face gave back no answer
But mirrored anguish, mirrored longing, mirrored him.
He tore his hair. The image tore its hair.
He beat his marble breast until it bloomed
With purple bruises. Still the other suffered
The same self-wounding blows.

Hours bled to days.
He neither ate nor slept, but lay beside
The pool, consuming himself with sight alone.
“How many times I’ve kissed those lying lips!
How many times embraced the empty air!
You are myself—yet separate. Cruel jest!
If only I could leave my body here
And join the one I love…” A tear fell down,
Rippling the face he worshipped. It dissolved.
He cried aloud: “If I must lose you, let me die!”

Death heard. The flame of life withdrew by slow degrees.
His cheeks grew pale, his limbs transparent as mist.
The nymphs who once had loved him came at last
To mourn beside the pool. They found no body—
Only a golden flower bent above the water,
White petals framing a deep yellow heart,
Nodding forever toward its own reflection.

So ends the tale Tiresias foretold:
The boy who never knew himself lived long—
Yet died the moment recognition dawned.

And still the flower leans, year after spring,
Toward its mirrored twin in every stream,
Teaching the quiet lesson of the pool:
Too much of self can drown the soul entire.

The Mind of Christ Versus the Mirror of Narcissus: A Poetic Call to Count Others Better Than Ourselves by Debbie Harris

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In ages where the self doth reign supreme,
And narcissism’s mirror blinds the eye,
Where “me, myself, and I” compose the theme,
And echoes of the ego fill the sky—
How shall we turn from pride’s deceitful gleam,
To esteem each fellow higher than ourselves on high?

From sacred scrolls, a wisdom old and true:
Let lowliness of mind thy spirit guide,
Count others better than thyself, pursue
The path where selfish vanities subside.
In Philippians’ decree, the charge anew:
Through strife or vainglory, let naught abide.

For Christ Himself, the King of heaven’s throne,
Did humble take the form of servant low,
Esteeming us above His glory known,
And bore the cross where love’s true rivers flow.
So mirror Him: in meekness, seeds be sown,
That unity in grace may ever grow.

In world’s vain clamor, hush the inward boast,
Extend thy hand to lift the weary soul,
Prefer thy fellow’s need above thine host,
And find in sacrifice the heart made whole.
Thus narcissism’s chains are loosed, and lost,
As heaven’s light redeems the earthly toll.

O let us then, in biblical array,
Forsake the “I” for “we” in fervent prayer,
Esteem each fellow in the gospel’s way—
A classical call to love beyond compare.

The Torn Curtain of the Holy of Holies: Christ’s Death and Our Unhindered Approach to God by Debbie Harris

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When Jesus breathed His final, anguished cry,
The darkened sky grew black as judgment fell;
The earth convulsed, the rocks themselves did sigh,
And in the temple tore the ancient veil.

No mortal arm could rend that woven sea—
Sixty cubits high, a tapestry of heaven’s hue,
Thick as a palm, embroidered mystery,
Blue, purple, scarlet—colors God once drew.

From summit down the fracture ran divine,
Not man’s endeavor climbing from below;
God’s finger split the barrier’s sacred line,
And flung the gates of glory open wide and low.

Through countless years the curtain stood apart,
Guarding the mercy-seat where Presence burned;
One priest alone, with trembling, contrite heart,
Might pass with blood—lest holiness be spurned.

Yet now the Lamb, in agony arrayed,
Has offered once for all His riven side;
His flesh the curtain, in the garden frayed,
His blood the crimson road where sinners ride.

The veil is gone; no shadow lingers there.
No priestly rite, no altar smoke ascends.
We stand before the throne in answered prayer,
Beloved children, welcomed as dear friends.

O child of grace, why do you tarry still
Beyond the threshold, where the shadows play?
The price was paid on Calvary’s dread hill—
His wounds unclose the door for you today.

Enter, beloved, with boldness unafraid;
The Father waits with arms of endless love.
The veil is torn, the distance has been laid
To rest forever in the heart above.

Draw near, draw near—the ancient call resounds
Through time and trial, to every seeking soul:
The cross has bridged the chasm, bent the will
Of separation, making whole our right
To dwell with Him, the Holy One, in light.

The Everlasting, Heaven-Shaking Jubilee: Proclaiming the Joy of the Lord as Our Invincible Strength, Our Triumphant War-Cry, Our Radiant Crown of Glory, and Our Unending Song of Victory by Debbie Harris

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The joy of the Lord erupts in golden roar,
A wildfire feast that no darkness can tame!
It storms the gates of grief and breaks the door,
And every captive heart cries out His name.

No valley deep enough to drown its blaze,
No mountain high enough to block its flight—
It leaps across the years, through endless days,
A banner blazing brighter than the light!

We rise on wings of laughter, fierce and free,
Our feet crush sorrow underneath our dance;
The enemy retreats in trembling plea
While heaven joins our shout of vast expanse.

O joy invincible, our strength, our crown—
In Thee we triumph, and all creation bows down!

The Oil That Flows Only Under the Crushing Weight: A Meditation on the Ancient Press and the Soul’s Yield by Debbie Harris

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In groves where silver leaves whisper low,
olives cling, untouched by storm or woe—
round and whole, they promise little more
than quiet shade, a life without a score.

No hand has bruised them, no stone has weighed;
they hang in ease, unpressed, unafraid.
Yet beauty hides in what the eye can’t see:
the treasure locked where comfort used to be.

Then comes the gatherer with steady tread,
the basket, the mill, the ancient crushing bed.
First the beating—branches snap and bend—
then the wheel, the weight that has no end.

Flesh gives way, the skin splits wide,
bitter pulp and seed are torn aside.
What once was firm now yields its core,
a slow, reluctant golden pour.

Not from the branch in sunlit grace,
not from the fruit in gentle place—
the oil flows only when the press is tight,
when darkness falls and pressure bites.

So too the soul beneath the Maker’s hand:
the crushing comes, though none had planned.
The nights of ache, the days of strain,
the questions sharp like winter rain—

these are not ruin, not the end of flight,
but heaven’s patient, holy might
drawing forth what ease could never yield:
a fragrance pure, a light unsealed.

In Gethsemane the press was named,
where One was broken, yet unashamed—
sweat like blood, the stone rolled near,
and oil of grace began to appear.

So if the weight descends today,
and every fiber cries dismay—
remember this, though tears may fall:
the oil was never meant for all.

It waits for those who bear the stone,
who let the breaking make them known.
From crushed places, sacred, deep,
the anointing rises—strong, complete.

Let the press do its faithful art;
what spills is light to heal the heart.
The oil doesn’t come from easy days—
It comes from where the crushed begin to pray.

The Covenant Flame: Abraham’s Faith Reckoned as Righteousness in the Light of Eternal Promise by Debbie Harris

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From Chaldean shadows, where the zephyr sighed
Through moonlit towers and idol-fires died,
A voice like starlight pierced the wanderer’s night:
“Arise, depart; forsake the known for sight
Unseen. I vow thee seed as numberless
As heaven’s jewels, a blessing to confess
In every tribe.” No map, no guarantee—
Yet Abram rose, his heart in fealty free,
Believing Him who speaks, and worlds obey.

No golden deeds, no spotless life displayed;
The ancient ledger opened, and it weighed
Not merit’s sum, but trust alone. “He believed,”
The sacred page declares, “and was received
As righteous.” Not for flawless steps he trod,
But for the quiet gaze that fixed on God
Beyond the barren years, the empty womb,
The faltering flesh that neared the silent tomb.

Twice fear betrayed him—Sarah named as sister,
A lie to shield from Pharaoh’s cruel blister;
And Hagar’s tent he sought, impatient hand
To grasp the promise ere God’s appointed land.
Yet heaven’s eye, unblinded by his shame,
Beheld not stumbles, but the steady flame
Of faith that grew, unquenched by doubt’s dark gale,
Strong in the glory of the Promise’s tale:
“He staggered not, but hoped against all hope,
Convinced the Giver could the dead enrobe
With life, and call non-being into form.”

O pilgrim hearts that mourn the inward storm,
Replay no night of failure’s bitter cry;
The cross has rent the veil—your sins pass by
Uncounted, covered in the Lamb’s pure blood.
As Abraham, so we: the promise stood
Before the law, before the circumcision’s sign;
It rests on grace, immutable, divine.

Behold the Christ, the Seed foretold of old,
Who bore our curse on timber stark and cold,
Rose crowned with dawn to vindicate the claim:
His righteousness imputed, bears our name.
No more performance chains the soul in thrall;
We stand accepted—forgiven, loved through all.

Live promise-conscious, then, beneath the skies
Where ancient stars still sing of covenant ties.
Let not the shadow of our falls obscure
The light that shines forever pure and sure.
For in the risen Lord the word is sealed:
Believe—and every wound of sin is healed.
The faith of Abraham, through ages bright,
Becomes our own, our everlasting right

Anchored in Christ: A Tribute to Our Christ-Centered Military and Commander In Chief by Debbie Harris

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To the glory of Christ, who anchors our warriors, leaders, and our nation!

In barracks hushed before the dawn’s first light,
Soldiers kneel where shadows softly fall,
Whispering prayers through the coming fight,
Anchored in a Savior who gave His all.!

From foxholes deep to skies of endless blue,
They carry rifles forged in duty’s fire,
Yet hearts aligned to what is pure and true—
The Prince of Peace, their ultimate desire.

Leaders rise with wisdom from above,
Guided not by fleeting power or pride,
But by the One who taught redeeming love,
Who walked the path where selfless heroes stride.

Up through the chain, to the highest seat of might,
A Commander bows before the King of kings,
Steering this nation through the darkest night,
With faith as compass, hope on eagle wings.

We thank You, Lord, for hands that hold the line,
For courage born of grace that never yields,
For every soul who serves, by Your design,
Defending freedom on these hallowed fields.

Proud and thankful, we stand and lift our voice,
For warriors strong, who wear the victor’s crown—
In Christ their King, the enemy o’erthrown,
The war concluded, glory shining down.

Hymn of Praise to America, the Shining City on a Hill: One Nation Under God, Vast in Beauty, Unyielding in Spirit by Debbie Harris

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From sea to shining sea, the vastness calls,
Where amber waves of grain roll under skies,
And mountains pierce the heavens’ golden halls,
A continent of wonder meets the eyes.

The eagle soars on wings of boundless might,
Above the canyons carved by ancient time,
Where layered stone ignites in crimson light,
And rivers sing of freedom’s endless rhyme.

She stands in harbor’s dawn, torch held on high,
The Lady green against the morning flame,
Her gaze a promise reaching to the sky,
That huddled masses find in her their name.

Carved in the rock of ages, faces grand,
Four giants watch the prairies and the plain,
Their steadfast eyes survey this storied land,
One nation under God, where hope remains.

Yet more than stone or statue, more than view—
A spirit fierce, inventive, unafraid,
That dares the impossible, makes old things new,
And builds tomorrow on the debts repaid.

When night descends, the heavens burst in fire,
Above the monuments that guard the free,
A symphony of color climbing higher,
Proclaiming still: this land of liberty!

So lift your heart to her, this shining star,
Exceptional not by decree or might alone,
But by the beating pulse of who we are—
One nation under God, forever sown.

Let every peak and river, flag and flame,
Declare anew: America endures,
A beacon bright, forever worth the name,
Whose promise lives as long as courage pours.

The Spirit Thunders: Do Not Bow From Obscure Winepress to the Front Lines of Holy Confrontation and Divine Deliverance by Debbie Harris

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A prophetic poem calling modern believers to uncompromising faithfulness amid widespread compromise. Drawing from Gideon’s hidden calling in the winepress to tear down Baal’s altar and the three Hebrews’ refusal to bow to Nebuchadnezzar’s golden image, it urges a remnant “Gideon host” to reject subtle pressures—pragmatism, popularity, false unity—and stand unbowed. Though isolated and threatened by a roaring furnace of opposition, the faithful are promised the presence of the “Fourth Man” (Christ) in the flames, divine deliverance, and the charge to confront idols, restore holy worship, and reclaim God’s name.

In twilight vales where Midian shadows creep,
A man of threshing-floor and secret keep
Beats wheat in gloom, where vintage presses lie,
Lest raiders seize the fruit beneath the sky.
No trumpet calls him yet, no host arrays;
Heaven marks him silent in his lowly days.
Then voice of flame: “Go, tear the altar down
Thy father built to Baal upon the town.
Uproot the grove where compromise has grown,
And let the sacred fire be kindled known.”

So rises now a hidden, Gideon host—
Not crowned with pomp, nor mustered for the boast,
But called from winepress, cave, and quiet room,
To face the principalities of doom.
They bear no sword at first, but oil divine
That drips from consecrated head and spine.
The old order trembles when they speak;
They name the tolerated sin as weak,
The negotiated peace as coward’s chain,
And bid the idols fall in thunder’s reign.

Yet pressure comes—not sword, but subtle plea:
“Bend but a little; wiser men agree.
The furnace glows, the image gleams with gold—
Bow once, and live; be prudent, not so bold.”
They whisper, “Rebellion!” to the pure;
“Immaturity!” to hearts that will endure.
“Divisive!” cry the builders of the shrine
Whose altars blend the holy with the swine.

But lo, the Spirit thunders through the soul:
DO. NOT. BOW. Let every knee stay whole.
Not to the fear that chills the midnight air,
Nor politics that coil in serpent’s snare,
Nor platforms raised on popularity’s sand,
Nor religious rods that strike with iron hand.
Not Baal’s high place, nor Nebuchadnezzar’s flame,
Nor any yoke that bears another’s name.

As once three Hebrews stood in Babylon’s plain,
Where music swelled and golden image reigned,
They heard the king: “Fall down, or feel the fire!”
Yet answered calm: “Our God is One, entire.
He is able to deliver from thy hand,
But though He slay us, still we take our stand.
We will not serve thy gods, nor bow the head
To molten lie, though furnace blaze be spread.”

The furnace roared, seven times its fury fed;
The binders fell, consumed where they had led.
But in the midst—O vision past all sight!—
A fourth walked free, the Son of Man in light.
No scorch upon their hair, no smell of smoke;
The chains of flame themselves in silence broke.

So stand, O remnant, marked by Heaven’s seal:
Though isolated, though the mockers jeer,
Though systems shake and ancient altars reel,
Though furnace threatens every path severe—
DO. NOT. BOW.
The fire you carry is not yours to dim;
It burns from God, and no formed weapon grim
Shall prosper while you hold the steadfast line.
Tear down, rebuild; let holy altars shine.

Light now the match in preaching, prayer, and praise;
Let worship blaze through all your mortal days.
The trumpet sounds, the Gideon host awakes—
Forward, unbowed, for Zion’s glory’s sake.
The fourth Man walks beside thee in the flame;
Refuse the knee—reclaim the sacred name.

Stand. Confront. Restore.
And do not bow.