Ho, Every Thirsty SoulFive Poetic Explorations of Divine Abundance, Repentance, and Creation’s Jubilant Response in Isaiah 55 by Debbie Harris

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Ho, Every Thirsty Soul: Five Poetic Explorations of Isaiah 55

In a world full of empty promises and fleeting satisfactions, Isaiah 55 stands as one of the Bible’s most radiant invitations: “Come, everyone who thirsts, come to the waters… buy wine and milk without money and without price.” This chapter pulses with grace—free pardon, an everlasting covenant, thoughts higher than our own, and the unshakable promise that God’s word “shall not return to Me void” but will accomplish every purpose He sends it to fulfill.

To honor its prophetic beauty and depth, I’ve crafted five distinct poetic renditions of Isaiah 55, each in a different form:

  • A classic hymn in Common Meter (ABAB quatrains)
  • Modern rhyming couplets with a powerful refrain on verse 11
  • Sonnet-inspired sections with dramatic turns
  • Dignified blank verse in unrhymed iambic pentameter
  • A hypnotic pantoum of interlocking repetitions

Together they trace the chapter’s arc—from desperate thirst to cosmic jubilation—while placing special emphasis on the triumphant certainty of God’s effective word (v. 11), where rain and snow become metaphors for unstoppable divine purpose.

Whether for personal devotion, group study, worship inspiration, or quiet reflection, these poems seek to make the ancient oracle sing anew. Read, listen, and let the invitation draw you near.

1. Common Meter Hymn – ABAB Quatrains (8.6.8.6)

Title: Come, Every Soul That’s Parched and Poor
Form Summary: Traditional hymn structure in alternating rhyme (ABAB) and Common Meter (8-6-8-6 syllables), evoking classic congregational singing like Isaac Watts or Charles Wesley—balanced, singable, and familiar for worship or recitation.

Come, every soul that’s parched and poor,
Draw near the waters flowing free;
No silver needed at the door—
Buy wine and milk abundantly.

Why spend your wages on mere bread
That fails to fill, that fades away?
Come feast instead where souls are fed,
Delight in what will never stray.

Incline your ear, draw close to Me,
And live the life that death defies;
My covenant with David see—
Steadfast mercies that never die.

Seek while I’m near, call while I’m found,
Forsake the wicked path you trod;
Return to Me—grace will abound,
Pardon from our forgiving God.

My thoughts not yours, My ways so vast,
As heavens rise above the sod;
My plans endure when yours are past,
Beyond the reach of mortal nod.

As rain and snow from heaven fall
And do not hurry back on high,
They water earth and bless it all,
Bring seed to sprout beneath the sky—
So My word from My mouth proceeds,
It shall not to Me void return;
It will accomplish all My needs,
Succeed in every aim I yearn.
No force can stop its fruitful course,
It prospers what I send it for—
Unfailing power, without remorse,
Brings life forever, evermore.

Then joy shall lead you forth in peace,
The hills break song, the mountains ring;
Trees clap their hands in wild release,
Where thorns once grew, new life shall spring.

This everlasting sign shall stand,
My name proclaimed through every age—
The grace that calls across the land,
Turns wilderness to verdant stage.

2. AABB Couplets with Refrain

Title: My Word Goes Out and Will Not Fail
Form Summary: Modern rhyming couplets (AABB) throughout, with a dedicated repeating refrain centered on verse 11—creates a song-like, memorable drive with built-in emphasis on the unstoppable power of God’s word, ideal for contemporary worship or spoken-word delivery.

Come, thirsty ones, come hungry, come near,
Waters are waiting, crystal and clear.
No money required, no price to pay,
Wine, milk, and bread—freely today.

Why chase after nothing, why labor in vain,
For food that crumbles, for fleeting gain?
Listen and eat what truly satisfies,
Let your soul feast where richness lies.

Draw close and hear, incline your ear,
Live the true life, cast out all fear.
My promise to David, faithful and sure,
Covenant everlasting, forever secure.

Nations will hasten, drawn by My light,
Glory upon you, shining so bright.

Seek Me while near, call while you can,
Turn from your sin, embrace My plan.
Mercy abundant, pardon so wide—
Come back to your God, let grace abide.

My thoughts are higher, My ways divine,
Beyond your small dreams, beyond your design.

Refrain
My word goes out and will not fail,
It won’t return empty, weak, or pale.
It does what I purpose, prospers My will,
Accomplishes all—unstoppable still.
Rain and snow nourish, then they return,
So My word succeeds, let the truth burn.

Joy will escort you, peace lead the way,
Mountains will sing, hills shout hooray.
Trees clap in triumph, thorns turn to trees,
Myrtle and cypress sway in the breeze.

An everlasting sign, My name endures,
Grace calls the thirsty, forever assures.

3. Sonnet-Inspired Sections with Volta Turns

Title: The Waters Call You Near
Form Summary: Three quatrains followed by couplet “turns” (volta moments) in a loose Shakespearean-inspired structure—builds dramatic progression with shifts at transcendence, the word’s power, and final joy; literary and contemplative.

The thirsty, the empty, the broken, draw near—
Waters abundant, no coin to exchange;
Wine gladdens hearts, milk mends what is drear,
Bread for the soul—no need to arrange.

Why pour out labor on husks that decay,
Chasing mirages that mock and evade?
Hearken instead, feast richly today,
Delight in the fatness no market has made.

I offer a covenant, David’s own kind—
Mercies unchanging, a witness to all;
Nations will run, by My glory entwined,
Seek while I’m near, before shadows befall.

Let wicked forsake crooked roads and dark thought,
Return to your God—pardon flows like a flood.

My thoughts tower high, My ways far above,
As heavens o’er earth in vast wonder extend;
Rain falls, snow drifts, fulfilling their love—
So My word departs and returns not unbent.

It accomplishes all that My heart has designed,
Prosperous, certain, no purpose declined.

Then joy overflows, peace guards every stride,
Hills burst in song, trees clap side by side;
Thorns yield to cypress, briers to myrtle’s pride—
An eternal sign that grace has arrived.

4. Blank Verse (Unrhymed Iambic Pentameter)

Title: So Shall My Word Go Forth
Form Summary: Unrhymed iambic pentameter in continuous flow—dignified, epic, and meditative like Milton or Shakespeare; allows pure prophetic gravity without rhyme’s musical distraction, emphasizing the solemn weight of the text.

Come, every soul athirst in barren lands,
Draw near the waters that forever flow,
Unpurchased wine to cheer the heavy heart,
And milk to strengthen what despair has worn.
Why spend your substance for that which is not bread,
Your labor’s fruit on what cannot satisfy?
Incline your ear and come to Me and eat;
Let your soul feast upon the good I give.

Hear now and live—the life beyond mere breath—
I make with you My covenant of grace,
The steadfast mercies promised unto David.
Behold, I set him witness to the world,
A prince and leader nations will obey.

Seek the Lord while He may yet be found,
Call upon Him while He is drawing near.
Let the wicked forsake his evil way,
The unrighteous his thoughts—return to God,
And He will have compassion, pardon free.

For as the heavens are higher than the earth,
So are My ways exalted over yours,
My thoughts beyond the grasp of mortal mind.

As rain and snow descend from heaven’s height
And do not rise again until they drench
The waiting soil, awaken seed to life,
Give bread to eat and grain for sowing time—
So shall My word go forth from out My mouth:
It shall not to Me void or empty come,
But it shall do the thing that I intend,
Accomplish every purpose I dispatch.
Irresistible, it carves through stone and doubt,
Brings forth its harvest, certain and complete.

Then you shall go in joy that knows no bound,
Led forth in peace that watches every step.
The mountains sing, the hills break into praise;
The trees of field clap hands in wild acclaim.
Where thorn and brier once wounded pilgrim feet,
The cypress rises tall, the myrtle spreads—
An everlasting sign, My name endures,
Proof of the grace that calls the thirsty home.

5. Pantoum (Interlocking Repetition)

Title: The Waters Call You Near (Echoes of Grace)
Form Summary: Pantoum with repeating lines that interlock across stanzas—creates hypnotic, circular emphasis, especially suiting the certainty and return motif of verse 11; experimental and meditative, like a chant that builds assurance.

Come, all who thirst, the waters call you near,
No price to pay, no empty purse required.
Buy wine and milk, let satisfaction cheer,
Why chase the husks that leave the soul expired?

No price to pay, no empty purse required,
My thoughts are not your thoughts, My ways divine.
Why chase the husks that leave the soul expired?
As rain descends, so does My word align.

My thoughts are not your thoughts, My ways divine,
My word goes forth and shall not return void.
As rain descends, so does My word align,
It prospers all the purpose I employed.

My word goes forth and shall not return void,
It accomplishes exactly what I please.
It prospers all the purpose I employed,
Unfailing harvest, joy that never cease.

It accomplishes exactly what I please,
Buy wine and milk, let satisfaction cheer.
Unfailing harvest, joy that never cease—
Come, all who thirst, the waters call you near.

Come to the Waters(Isaiah 55 – Contemporary Couplets) by Debbie Harris

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Come, all you thirsty, worn and dry,
Step up to waters flowing by.
No cash in hand? It doesn’t matter—
Buy wine and milk, free from the platter.
Why waste your money, waste your days
On food that vanishes, on empty praise?
Listen instead, come close and feed
Your soul on goodness guaranteed.

Lean in to hear what I will say,
And live the life that won’t decay.
I’ll make with you a bond that lasts,
The faithful love from David’s past.
I’ll raise you up, a light to show,
Nations will run where they don’t know—
Because My glory clothes your frame,
The Holy One has called your name.

Seek Me now while I am found,
Call on Me while I’m around.
Let wicked ways be left behind,
Abandon thoughts that twist the mind.
Turn back to Me—I’ll pour out grace,
Forgive you in My vast embrace.

My thoughts aren’t yours, My ways so high,
They tower far beyond the sky.
Like heaven’s vault above the ground,
My plans stretch wide, profound, unbound.

Just watch the rain and snow descend,
They don’t rush back—they serve their end:
They soak the earth, they make it wake,
Bring seed to sprout for harvest’s sake.
So My word goes out from My lips,
It never falters, never slips.
It won’t come back to Me in vain,
Empty, defeated, or restrained.
It does exactly what I please,
Succeeds in every aim I seize—
Unstoppable, alive, complete,
It carves the path, it claims defeat,
Brings life to deserts, hope to stone,
And turns the lost ones safely home.

Then joy will lead you out in song,
Peace will guard where you belong.
The hills will shout, the mountains ring,
Trees clap their hands and wildly sing.
Thorns and briers fade away,
Cypress and myrtle take their place.
This sign will stand through every age—
My name endures, My grace the stage

The Great Invitation: A Canticle of Grace(An exalted poetic meditation on Isaiah 55) by Debbie Harris

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Ho! Every thirsting spirit, every hollow heart in the dust—
Come! The waters rise unbidden, crystalline, inexhaustible,
From hidden fountains deeper than exile’s night, purer than forgotten dawn.
Come, though your coins are spent, your sacks hang empty,
Come buy—yes, buy!—without silver, without barter, without shame.
Wine that kindles joy in veins grown cold,
Milk that knits the broken frame and floods the famished soul,
Bread that satisfies where shadows once feasted.
Why squander sweat on chaff that scatters?
Why trade your labor for husks that mock the tongue,
For bread that turns to ash between the teeth,
For fleeting mirage that leaves the palate parched?
Hearken—O hearken with the inward ear that never sleeps—
And eat what is good; let your soul delight in fatness unmeasured,
In richness no market can weigh, no vault can hoard.

Bend low your ear, draw near, draw nearer still to Me;
Listen, and live—live the life that death cannot touch.
I seal with you My covenant eternal,
The loyal kindnesses sworn to David My servant—
Mercies steadfast as the polar star, sure as the turning seasons.
Behold: I have appointed him witness to the multitudes,
Prince and commander to peoples yet unnamed.
Nations you have never summoned will run to you,
Drawn by the splendor that clothes you,
Because the Holy One of Israel has exalted you,
Has set His glory upon you like a crown of living light.

Seek the Lord while breath still finds Him near,
While the door of seeking stands ajar.
Call upon Him while He may yet be called.
Let the wicked forsake his crooked path,
The man of iniquity abandon his venomous designs;
Let him return—return wholly—to the Lord,
And compassion will cascade upon him like thunder-rains after drought.
To our God let him turn, for He pardons with prodigal abundance—
Pardon wider than the sea’s embrace, deeper than the graves of memory.

For My thoughts are not your thoughts,
Nor your ways My ways, says the Eternal Flame.
As the vaulted heavens tower immeasurable above this trembling dust,
So My ways rise exalted, My thoughts stretch vast—
Beyond the narrow compass of mortal fear,
Beyond the frantic calculus of earthbound minds.

See how the rain falls, how the snow descends from the high chambers of heaven:
They do not climb back until they have drenched the parched ground,
Until they have quickened seed to sprout, swelled bud to blossom,
Given seed to the sower, bread to the hungry mouth.
So My word proceeds from My mouth—
It shall not return to Me barren, void, or thwarted.
It shall accomplish the delight of My will,
Prosper in the purpose for which I dispatched it—
Irresistible as rivers that sculpt canyons through centuries,
Unfailing as the first light that shatters the longest dark.

Then you shall march forth in joy that cannot be contained,
Led forth in peace that stands sentinel at every step.
The mountains and hills shall erupt in song before you,
Bursting into melody fierce and jubilant;
All the trees of the field shall clap their hands in thunderous acclaim,
Limbs lifted like banners in the wind of triumph.
Where once the thorn drew blood and the brier tore the pilgrim’s flesh,
The stately cypress shall rise, fragrant and evergreen;
Where nettle choked the way and desolation reigned,
The myrtle shall spread verdant, resilient, and fair.
This transformation shall endure as an everlasting sign,
A name unfading for the Lord of Hosts,
A monument hewn not by hands, unshakable by time—
Eternal witness to the grace that summoned the thirsty home,
And turned the wilderness into a garden of unending praise.

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