Wings of Unending Grace: Lifting Ordinary Days into Songs of Praise by Debbie Harris

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This poem joyfully celebrates how the grace, mercy, forgiveness, and unending love of the Lord Jesus Christ transform an ordinary, everyday day into a soaring song of praise. Through vivid wing imagery, it shows guilt dissolving, the soul being lifted like eagles, and the believer flying through the hours — redeemed, radiant, and called by their true royal name.Format:
The poem is written in 7 quatrains (4-line stanzas) with a flowing, hymn-like rhythm and gentle rhyme scheme. It moves naturally from dawn through midday to evening, creating a clear daily journey while maintaining a celebratory, uplifting tone throughout.

Bless the Lord, O my soul,
and forget not all his benefits.
— Psalm 103:2

At dawn’s bright light, grace comes exultant,
unfolding wings of wonder on the heart.
No ledger holds the riches we are given—
only this healing joy that sings its part.

Guilt’s heavy chains dissolve like morning vapor,
ancient venom swept on mercy’s rising wind.
Forgiveness lifts us, strong and swift as eagles,
turning weary stubble into flight again.

Midday’s furnace cannot clip these pinions:
harsh voices fade beneath the upward call.
God’s love pours out in wide, redeeming rivers,
and we rise higher than the tempter’s thrall.

Forgiveness is the wind beneath our feathers,
a door flung open by the nail-pierced hands.
The heart once bowed now dances, leaps, and soars—
spilling heaven’s joy across the lands.

Oh, every ordinary hour is blazing
with blood-bought freedom, wild and wonder-bright!
Grace at the gate, mercy in the current,
forgiveness singing, “Rise! Take flight!”

Thus flies the soul—redeemed and radiant—
their true name spoken in crimson flame,
each faltering day a soaring celebration
of love that calls them by their royal name.

The Radiant Hope of Our Eternal Homeland by Debbie Harris

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Let the bright hope of Heaven,
our everlasting home,
where our souls claim true citizenship,
awaken in your heart
an exuberant and grateful joy—
like dawn breaking golden
on the shores of endless, radiant light.

O what matchless hope we have
in Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord!

Jesus Christ Reigns High Above Every Throne by Debbie Harris

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The Lord Jesus reigns!
High above every throne and name,
King of kings, undefeated flame —
He reigns!
Christ is my victory,
Sword that shatters every chain,
Grave that could not hold its gain —
My victory!
Christ is my salvation,
Blood that washes guilt away,
Mercy dawning, endless day —
My salvation!
Christ is my hope,
Anchor in the fiercest storm,
Promise steady, true, and warm —
My hope!
Christ is my triumphant righteousness,
Pure and spotless, freely given,
Robes of salvation’s glory I am clothed in —
My triumphant righteousness!
He reigns, He reigns, forever He reigns!
My heart, my song, my all —
Jesus Christ, the risen Lord!

Only Christ (sonnet form) by Debbie Harris

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This is a Shakespearean (English) sonnet — 14 lines in iambic pentameter with the classic ABAB CDCD EFEF GG rhyme scheme.It declares that only Christ can give true kindness, forgiveness, mercy, love, grace, a transformed heart, hope, peace, and provision. It affirms Jesus as the one and only Savior — the Way, the Truth, and the Life — and closes with an urgent call to sinners to repent, believe, and live.

In Christ alone true kindness finds its source,
Forgiveness flows unstained by human hand,
Mercy that heals the sinner’s deep remorse,
And love no mortal heart can understand.
Grace, free and full, no merit can attain,
A bond of sonship none but He can give;
A heart, a soul, a renewed mind made clean—
All these in Jesus Christ alone do live.

Hope springs eternal where His word is heard,
A peace surpassing every storm and strife,
Provision rich from His unfailing Word—
One Saviour only, Lord of death and life.

O sinners, turn and come to Christ the Way;
Repent, believe, and live this very day.

Only Christ by Debbie Harris

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Only Christ” flowed from a deep conviction that nothing and no one else can satisfy the longings of the human heart. Only Jesus offers true kindness, forgiveness, transforming grace, and lasting peace. May this simple poem point many to the One who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

John 14:6 – Jesus said to him, ‘I am the way, and the truth, and the life…

Acts 4:12 – And there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.

Romans 10:13 – For ‘everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.

2 Corinthians 5:17 – Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come.

There is a kindness only Christ can give.
There is a forgiveness only Christ can give.
There is a mercy only Christ can give.
There is a love only Christ can give.
There is a grace only Christ can give.
There is a relationship only Christ can give.

There is a transformed heart, soul, and mind
Christ alone can give.
There is a hope only Christ can give.
There is a peace only Christ can give.
There is provision only Christ can give.

There is only one Savior of the world —
Jesus Christ our Lord.
He is the Truth, the Way, and the Life.

O sinners, all come to Jesus our Savior.
Repent and live.

Nothing Held Back by Debbie Harris

“Nothing Held Back” portrays a soul in total, unreserved surrender to Christ. Kneeling at the altar, they shatter every barrier and pour out their entire life — joys, pains, treasures, and tears — like costly alabaster oil and holy wine. With no portion kept, no glance backward, they offer everything in pure worship. The poem builds to a triumphant close: even at the end of time, they stand complete before the Lamb, burning with ceaseless love and praising His name — nothing held back.It’s a call to radical, beautiful devotion.

Upon the altar’s ancient stone they knelt,
No veil between the heart and heaven’s gaze;
The fragrant oil of years within them welled,
And broke in rivers none could ever praise.

No measure weighed, no portion kept aside,
The alabaster shattered at their feet;
A costly flood no earthly thrift could hide,
Perfume ascending, fierce and pure and sweet.

They poured the hidden store of joy and pain,
Like wine upon the dust of sacred ground;
Each drop a flame, each tear a golden rain,
Till every chain of self lay broken, drowned.

No backward glance across the shoulder thrown,
No trembling hand that clutches what was theirs;
The whole heart offered, radiant and alone,
A living flame ascending through the airs.

In silence deep, where only heaven hears,
The offering rises, vast and undefiled;
A soul laid bare through penitential tears,
Yet clothed at last in glory reconciled.

And when the final breath at last is drawn,
When time itself dissolves in holy light,
They stand complete before the Lamb of dawn—
Nothing held back, consumed in love’s pure sight.

Nothing held back, they burn with ceaseless flame,
Nothing held back, they praise His matchless name.

Will The Salt Stay Salty?Not By Clutching Yesterday’s Heat, But By Staying Near The Source That First Made It Sharp Which Is Jeus Chist, Our Lord by Debbie Harris

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Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of men.

Matthew 5:13 (KJV)


You are the salt of the earth, the hidden grace
That seasons sorrow, checks the creeping rot,
Preserves the good where virtue finds no place,
And cuts through dullness with a living edge.
But if that salt grows flat, its fire grown cold,
No skill restores the savor it once gave;
It crumbles useless on the common mold,
Fit only to be scattered on the grave.
O faithful ones, once bright against the night,
What happens when your witness turns to show?
When love grows safe, and truth bends to delight,
And holy fire becomes a hearth’s dull glow?
The world will walk across what it revered
And trample underfoot what should have steered.
Yet even now, a single spark may rise—
A contrite heart, a prayer that will not cease—
To draw the salt from ashes to the skies
And wake the ancient flame of truth and peace.
Will you be remade, restored to burning worth,
Or trampled underfoot as worthless earth?

Revelation 4:11A Victorious Celestial Ode by Debbie Harris

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Revelation 4:11 (KJV)

You are worthy, our Lord and God,
to receive glory and honor and power,
for you created all things,
and by your will they were created
and have their being.

O radiant Lord, enthroned in blazing light,
Thou art worthy to claim eternal praise!
Glory and honor, majesty and might,
Crown Thee forever through unnumbered days.
Before Thy throne the fourfold creatures cry
“Holy!” in thunderous, triumphant strain;
The elders fall, their golden crowns they fly,
And cast them down in glad, adoring rain.
For by Thy sovereign will the heavens sprang,
Galaxies wheeled in fiery dance unfurled;
The oceans roared, the verdant mountains rang,
And life awoke across a waking world.
Each star that burns, each creature great and small,
The eagle’s soar, the lion’s royal roar,
All sing the anthem of their Maker’s call—
Thou hast created; Thou sustainest all.
Victorious King, whose word alone prevailed
When ancient darkness trembled at Thy voice,
No power of chaos has Thy throne assailed,
For all things serve Thee, and in Thee rejoice.
Hail, worthy One upon the sapphire throne!
Let every realm and every tongue confess:
All glory, honor, power are Thine alone,
Forever worthy, Lord of righteousness!
Amen. Amen.

How Often Cruel Becomes the Human Heart That Drifts from Christ by Debbie Harris

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How often cruel becomes the human heart
That drifts away from Jesus Christ the Lord,
No longer walks where living mercy starts—
It does not change its wrath to healing word.
It weighs the world by profit, guarded gain,
Sees every need as burden, every plea
As weakness to dismiss or bind with chain.
The wounded pass unseen, in silence flee.
Compassion fades; the gentle word grows rare.
It raises thrones on others’ quiet pain,
Calls justice what is only self’s own care,
And rests untouched by sorrow’s long refrain.
Without that daily communion, day by day,
The soul grows blind to light it once could see.
The heart that will not linger starts to stray
And gathers thorns its own neglect sets free.
Yet let that heart return, draw near the cross,
Speak honestly beneath the Savior’s gaze,
And feel the mercy that redeems all loss—
Then stone gives way to flesh in quiet praise.
The fist unclenches. Anger learns to yield.
The stranger finds a neighbor, not a threat.
What once was cruel now walks through open fields,
A channel where forgiveness freely met.
So keep the Lord in constant, quiet view—
In prayer, in Scripture, in the daily walk.
The heart that stays in Him is born anew;
The one that wanders chooses its own dark.
Stay close. The distance hardens into stone.
Near Christ, the cruel heart is overthrown.

The Widow of Zarephath: God’s Miraculous Provision in the Time of Famine by Debbie Harris

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Where Phoenicia’s sun-baked headlands gleam
Beside the tideless, ever-murmuring sea,
A widow dwelt in Zarephath’s pale dream,
When heaven’s brass withheld its bounty free.

For Ahab’s sin and Jezebel’s dark art
Had scorched the land with unrelenting fire;
The brooks ran dry, the meadows lost their heart,
And famine stalked like some relentless pyre.

With trembling hands she gleaned but two dry sticks,
Her final fuel against the gathering gloom.
Within her jar a remnant meal lay thick—
One handful only—oil in cruse of doom.

Enough to bake one final cake, and die,
She and her son, the last of all her line;
Then let the grave receive them silently,
Where want and sorrow no more intertwine.

But lo, across the dust a stranger came,
Elijah, prophet clad in skins of hair,
His eyes two coals from heaven’s altar-flame,
His voice a trumpet cleaving foul despair.

“Bring water, woman, in thy hollow hand,
And from thy store a morsel of thy bread.”
She paused, as one who sees the last grain sand
Of life run out, and softly, sadly said: “

As God of Israel liveth, whom I fear,
I have not cake, but only this poor dole—
A little meal to bake, my son and dear
To feed, then yield us to the reaper’s toll.”

“Fear not,” the man of God made stern reply,
“But first prepare for me a little cake;
For thus Jehovah, Lord of Hosts on high,
Hath sworn: thy barrel never shall forsake,

Nor shall thy cruse of oil be spent in vain,
Till rain once more descends on Israel’s plain.”

O matchless faith! That widow bowed her head,
And in her hearth the feeble embers glowed.
She mixed the meal with oil, and baked the bread,
And gave the first unto the man of God.

Then, wonder of all wonders! From that hour
The jar brimmed golden as the morning sun;
The cruse poured forth its unexhausted dower,
A ceaseless river when the day was done.

Through many moons the prophet shared her roof,
While round about the starving thousands cried;
Yet in her house abundance stood aloof,
A silent witness to the Lord’s supplied.

But grief, that ancient foe of mortal peace,
Struck sudden as a serpent in the grass.
Her only son lay cold in death’s release,
His cheek grown pale as winter’s frosted glass.

She rent her garments, lifted voice in pain:
“O man of God, art thou come here to prove
My hidden sin, and with this bitter chain
To slay my child, my last remaining love?”

Then Elijah took the lad with gentle might,
And bore him to the chamber where he lay.
Thrice on the body of the breathless wight
He stretched himself, and to the Lord did pray:

“O God, let now this widow’s soul not break;
Restore her son, for Thy name’s glory’s sake!”

The breath returned. The bosom rose and fell.
The eyelids quivered like the dawn’s first beam.
The widow knelt, her heart a surging well,
And cried through tears of joy like morning’s gleam:

“Now by this token do I surely know
Thou art a prophet of the living God;
Thy word is truth, thy God is Lord below,
And heaven itself hath walked where thou hast trod.”

Thus faith, though planted in the dust of need,
Blossoms immortal on the tree of grace.
The hand that opens when the store is least
Receives the fulness of the Lord’s embrace.

O trembling hearts that guard your dwindling mite,
Learn from this daughter of Sidonian shore:
Give all to God, though small it be in sight—
His granaries outshine the ocean’s floor.

What sacrifice in faith is freely made
Returns a thousandfold in light and life;
The widow’s cruse shall never be gainsaid,
Nor shall her story fade in endless strife.

For He who fed the ravens by the brook,
Who raised the dead and stayed the rain’s decree,
Still watches o’er the faithful ones who look
To heaven’s hand in deep humility.