Jesus Christ: Our True Wealth, Victory, and Eternal Hope by Debbie Harris

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Jesus Christ is our wealth,
Our success, our victory, our hope.
Not golden streets or treasures untold,
But in Him our every need is met.
He clothes the lilies, feeds the sparrows,
Holds the stars and stills the sea.
So why should we chase empty shadows
When the Giver of life lives in me?
Riches may come, or riches may flee,
Yet in Christ we lack for nothing.
His grace is enough, His strength is our song,
In every storm, in every testing.
He is the Bread that satisfies,
The Living Water, pure and free.
All that the world could never buy
Is ours in Him—eternally.
Jesus Christ is our wealth,
Our success, our victory, our hope.
This truth the faithful heart receives:
In Him we triumph—forever victorious!

The Demonic Snake of Progressivism by Debbie Harris

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In silken coils the serpent lies,
Its scales aglow with stolen light.
It whispers lies to open eyes:
“Old chains are wrong—forget the Christ.”
It sheds its skin with every age,
Discards the Cross like worthless dust.
It feeds on pride, on guilt, on rage,
And calls its poison “righteous trust.”
It twists through laws and schools and screens,
Rewriting truth with clever guile.
It mocks the King who died for sins
And builds its throne on human denial.
Yet every vow of perfect peace
Brings sharper fangs and tighter chains.
It speaks of love but will not cease
To crush the souls the Savior claims.
It promises a future bright,
While choking roots that lead to grace.
It slithers on through endless night,
Defying Him who took our place.
The Lamb who conquered death and grave
Exposes every twisted lie.
His blood alone has power to save—
The serpent’s venom cannot vie.
Beware the snake that never sleeps,
That beauty hides its ancient spite.
It offers heaven, yet it reaps
The ruin of the souls Christ bought with life.
Its name is sweet, its venom cold—
Progressivism, crowned in gold.
But those who cling to Christ, the bold,
See only darkness losing hold.
For Jesus reigns, the Serpent’s head
Was crushed beneath His righteous feet.
In Him alone is freedom spread—
The final victory is complete.

Great Is Thy Faithfulness: The Triumphant Hymn of New Mercies Revealed in Jesus Christ by Debbie Harris

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Lamentations 3:22-23 (KJV)
It is of the LORD’S mercies that we are not consumed,
because his compassions fail not.
They are new every morning:
great is thy faithfulness

In the shadowed vale where ruin’s ashes lie,
Where Jerusalem weeps beneath a starless sky,
And exile’s bitter gall floods the weary breast,
Yet rises there a hymn from the prophet’s chest:
“Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed,”
Though tempests rage and empires lie entombed;
His compassions, like eternal rivers, flow,
Unfailing as the tides that come and go.
They are new every morning—fresh as dew
That pearls upon the lily white as snow,
Or dawn’s first blush that gilds the eastern height,
Banishing the specters of the night.
Great is Thy faithfulness, O God most high!
A steadfast anchor when all hopes run dry;
Thy mercies, like the manna white and pure,
Descend anew, our faltering faith to cure.
In ancient cadence, like the psalms of old,
Where David sang of mercies manifold,
Or prophets traced redemption’s grand design,
This truth outshines every faith’s most sacred rite:
Thy love, a golden thread through sorrow’s loom,
Weaves hope eternal from the grave’s dark gloom.
When nights of lament stretch long and deep,
Thy morning mercies bid the soul to leap—
Victorious, triumphant, rising ever higher,
Igniting hearts with resurrection fire!
O faithful One, whose compassions never cease,
Renew us daily in Thy perfect peace;
That in every season, we may boldly proclaim:
Great is Thy faithfulness—forever the same,
In Jesus Christ, the living source of mercy true,
Whose ceaseless grace and faithfulness make all things new!

A Solemn Call to Reprove the Unfruitful Works of Darkness: A Poetic Reflection on Ephesians 5:11 and the Danger of Cultural Compromise in the Church by Debbie Harris

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In Scripture’s pages rings the clear command:
“Have no part with the fruitless deeds of night;
Instead, expose and firmly take your stand,
Reprove the darkness with the truth’s pure light.”
Once we were lost within that shadowed reign,
But grace has called us now as children bright,
To walk as those whom Christ has made again,
And shine His goodness in this present fight.
No partnership with works that bear no fruit,
No quiet truce with what the Lord condemns;
The creeping creed that wears a virtuous suit
Has slipped inside the church and twisted hymns.
It calls for union with what God rejects,
Affirms the sin that Scripture plainly names,
Redefines the marriage bond and sex,
And hides division underneath kind claims.
Awake, O sleeper, rise from death’s cold sleep,
Let Christ’s own radiance fall upon your eyes;
Expose the hidden shame that lies so deep,
That souls may turn, repent, and truly rise.
Reprove the errors of this passing age,
That place mere culture over timeless Word;
No pact with thoughts that war against the page
Where cross and blood alone are truly heard.
Stand firm, believers, in these evil days,
Discern what pleases Him who rules above;
Walk wisely, making time your friend always,
And let the fruit of light reveal His love.
For righteousness and truth will long endure,
While darkness fades before the coming Judge;
When every hidden work is brought to view,
The light will triumph and the false will budge.
O Church of Christ, be bold to speak and shine,
Reprove, expose, with love and truth aligned;
No compromise with darkness, false and fine—
Proclaim the gospel, rescue heart and mind.
Thus shall the sleeper wake, the dead arise,
And Christ will shine where once the shadows fell;
The fruitless works will wither in His skies,
And souls redeemed will sound His praise as well.

Seen and Delighted In by the Audience of One (version 2) by Debbie Harris

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Unrecognized work done for the glory of God
is always seen and delighted in
by the Audience of One.

He who hung the stars and numbered every hair
marks each hidden hour, each unspoken prayer.
No quiet labor offered in faithful love
escapes the tender gaze of the King who stoops low
to crown the unseen with His own “Well done.”

The eyes of men may glance and quickly pass,
yet Heaven’s Audience lingers with delight.
What seems unnoticed in the weary day
is gathered as sweet incense before the throne—
every act of quiet obedience,
every seed sown in secret faithfulness.

So rest, dear soul, when recognition fades:
All is known. All is cherished. All is grace.
Seen and delighted in
by the Audience of One.

Seen and Delighted In by the Audience of One by Debbie Harris

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Unrecognized work done for the glory of God
is always seen by the Audience of One.

He who formed the stars and numbered the hairs
marks every hidden hour, every unseen prayer.
No labor offered in quiet faithfulness
escapes the gaze of the King who stoops low
to crown the faithful with His own “Well done.”

When Hissing Tongues Swirl by Debbie Harris

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When hissing tongues in venom swirl and sting,
And sland’rous words like serpents twist the air,
May we be those esteeming others higher than ourselves,
And count each neighbor worthier than our care.

Not born of pride or selfish vain conceit,
Nor forged in hollow show for mortal eyes,
But in true lowliness, where grace is sweet,
We lift the least and silence our own cries.

Let swirling gales of spite their fury spend,
And tempests rage where envy loves to dwell;
We stand unmoved, as lights that heaven send,
Where meekness reigns and pride is cast away.

The Vile Gust That Slays the Truth: A Meditation on the Sanctity of Speech in Christ by Debbie Harris

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When from a mortal tongue a curse breaks free,
The whole of what is spoken turns to dust.
The truth it carried dies immediately—
Its power nullified by one vile gust.

The man who claims the Savior’s holy Name
Yet lets corruption from his lips be heard
Finds every sentence robbed of rightful claim,
As though he never uttered any word.

For Christ, the Word made flesh, spoke ever clean;
No oath of darkness marred His gentle voice.
He healed the sick, forgave, and made serene—
His every syllable was life, not noise.

So let the faithful guard the sacred gate,
And keep the well of speech both pure and bright.
Lest hasty poison should invalidate
The very truth that should have brought them light.

O Lord, who tamed the waves and stilled the storm,
Set Thou a watch upon each pilgrim’s tongue,
That what he speaks may stand, unharmed, unsworn,
And rise to glorify the Risen One. Amen.

No More the Distant Bow: Bold Conversation with the King of Kings and Lord of Lords as His Beloved Royal Sons and Daughters by Debbie Harris

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Therefore, brothers, since we have confidence to enter the holy places by the blood of Jesus, by the new and living way that he opened for us through the curtain, that is, through his flesh, and since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, with our hearts sprinkled clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water.

— Hebrews 10:19-22 (ESV)

For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, “Abba! Father!”
— Romans 8:15 (ESV)

O Thou who dwell’st in unapproached light,
Eternal, holy, clothed in majesty,
Before whose throne the seraphim take flight
And veil their faces from Thy purity—
Yet Thou hast bid Thy children draw anear,
Not as base slaves with trembling and with fear,
But as the sons whom blood hath made most dear.

Once stood the veil, a dread dividing wall,
Where sin’s dark shadow barred the sinner’s way;
The priest alone might tremble at Thy call,
And even he with incense veiled the day.
But lo! the Lamb upon the cursed tree
Hath rent that curtain from the topmost height—
Top to the base, in one swift act of might.

The barrier falls; the way is open wide.
No more the servant’s grovelling, no more
The distant bow, the formulaic tide
Of measured words upon a distant shore.
Now boldly to the throne of grace we press,
Not trusting self, but Christ’s own righteousness,
And cry “Abba, Father!” in free address.

What reverence deeper than a child’s embrace?
What honor greater than to trust Thy love?
The prodigal returns not with downcast face,
But runs to arms that wait from heav’n above.
Thou runnest first—O mystery divine!—
The Father meets the son with open grace,
And calls him home where fear can ne’er confine.

No casual breach of Thy unchanging throne,
But holy converse born of Calvary’s blood.
The cross hath satisfied what law made known;
Now awe is sweetened in the Father’s flood.
Speak freely, soul: Thy groans, Thy joys, Thy tears—
He hears them all, and counts them precious spheres,
For Jesus’ sake, who dried Thy former fears.

Thou art not smaller for this nearness won,
Nor I grown bold beyond my blood-bought place.
Thy holiness remains the noonday sun;
Yet in its light I see Thy smiling face.
The King of kings is still the King of kings,
Yet stoops to hear the least of earthly things—
A Father’s heart in everlasting springs.

So let my prayer be conversation sweet,
Not performance cold, nor slavish tone,
But honest talk where love and reverence meet,
The child made bold because the veil is gone.
For Thou hast not changed roles with shifting mood;
Thou ever Holy, ever Father good—
And I, by grace, am welcome where I stood.

The cross made God no smaller in His might;
It lifted me from distance into light.
Closeness was ever heaven’s chief delight.

In the Heat of Noon: A Samaritan Woman’s Encounter with the Well of Life and the Grace That Calls Us Home by Debbie Harris

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In the hush of midday heat where shadows fled,
A woman came alone to Jacob’s well,
Her steps were guarded, veiled in silent dread,
For whispers chased her where the townsfolk dwell.
Five husbands lost to time’s unyielding thread,
And one who shared her bed without the vow—
She drew no water when the dawn was red,
But sought the sun’s fierce blaze to hide her now.

Yet there He waited, weary from the road,
The Son of Man who needed not her cup,
Yet asked of her a drink, as if bestowed
A gift from one whom shame had lifted up.
“Give me to drink,” He said in gentle tone,
Though Jew and Samaritan should never meet;
He crossed the chasm sin had carved in stone,
And made her heart, though guarded, pause and beat.

She marveled at His words that broke the wall,
“How dost Thou ask of me, a woman scorned?”
He spoke of living streams that never pall,
Of water welling up where thirst is mourned.
“Thou hast had five,” He said with truth unveiled,
“And he thou hast is not thine own by right.”
No lash of judgment in His voice assailed,
But light that pierced the dark without a fight.

She turned to safer ground, to mount or shrine,
“Where shall we worship, Lord—on Gerizim?”
He answered not with rite or earthly line,
But spirit and in truth the Father seeks within.
The hour is come, He said, and now is here,
When true adorers bow not to a place,
But meet the God who draws the soul most near,
In hearts made clean by unearned, boundless grace.

Then, bold as dawn that breaks the prison night,
“I am He,” He declared, the Christ foretold,
To her whose name the righteous shunned in flight,
The Messiah spoke—His glory, pure and bold.
She left her jar, that vessel of her pain,
Forgot the thirst that drove her to the stone;
For One had filled her with eternal rain,
And burdens old were cast, no longer known.

Back to the town she ran, no longer veiled,
The faces once avoided now she sought;
“Come see a Man who told me all I’ve done,”
She cried, and many through her words were caught.
Not polished tale, nor life remade in show,
But honest witness born of grace received—
The outcast now a herald, bold to go
Where once her soul in shadowed fear had grieved.

O soul that hides beneath the noonday sun,
Who carries jars of shame in weary hands,
He meets thee not when all thy work is done,
But in the heat where no one else withstands.
He asks thee first, though He hath all to give,
Reveals thy wounds not to condemn or bind,
But offers drink that bids the spirit live,
And makes the broken heart His dwelling find.

Through finished work upon the cross of old,
The old hath passed; behold, the new is come.
No more performance, no more chains of gold—
In Christ thou art accepted, known, and home.
So leave thy jar, and run with voice restored,
Thy story now a door for others’ light;
The Well of Life hath called thee to Himself—
Precious soul, sought, valued, by thy Redeemer adored,
Bathed forever in salvation’s gift of life and light.