It Is Finished! by Debbie Harris

Tags

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

It is finished.

The final breath, the veil in two,
The ancient curse forever through.
No more the shadow, no more the chain—
The Lamb has conquered, the Lion has slain.

It is finished.

The debt is paid in crimson flood,
The grave is empty, the tomb is good.
What hell had stolen, heaven restores;
The King has risen—death is no more.

It is finished.

Glorious dawn breaks over the night,
Hope like a river, endless and bright.
Every promise, every word kept true,
The battle is won—beloved, for you.

It is finished.

Victorious thunder rolls through the skies,
The saints arise with jubilant cries.
No power can sever what grace has sealed;
In Christ alone, the victory is revealed.

It is finished—
and all is made new.
Hallelujah.
The story is true.

It Is Finished: The Sinless Son Bearing the Curse, Forsaken of the Father, That Guilty Sinners Might Be Reconciled Through His Precious Blood by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , , ,

In shadowed hour when heaven wept,
The Lamb of God to slaughter crept;
From Eden’s curse to Calvary’s tree,
He bore the weight of sin for me.

Betrayed with kiss in garden night,
Arrested by the temple’s might;
False witnesses their lies did weave,
While Pilate washed, yet could not cleave
The guilt that stained his trembling hand—
The Just One judged by sinful band.

Scourged with cords of twisted thorn,
His back laid bare, His flesh was torn;
The soldiers’ mockery filled the air,
A purple robe, a crown of care;
They spat upon the King of kings,
Who formed the stars and gave them wings.

Up Golgotha the cross He bore,
His shoulders crushed, His strength no more;
Simon compelled to share the load,
As women wept along the road.
“Nail Him!” the raging crowd did cry,
While heaven’s hosts in silence sighed.

They pierced His hands, they pierced His feet,
And raised Him high where thieves did meet;
Between two criminals He hung,
The sinless One for sinners stung.
“Father, forgive,” His mercy spoke,
While blood in crimson rivers broke.

The sun withdrew its golden light,
Three hours of darkness cloaked the sight;
“My God, my God,” the anguish rang,
As Psalmist’s words from cross He sang;
Forsaken, crushed beneath the wave
Of wrath that we alone should crave.

He thirsted there in body frail,
Yet thirsted more for souls to hail;
The vinegar they gave in scorn,
While soldiers diced His garments torn.
“Behold thy mother,” to the son
He spoke, though pain had scarce begun.

Then, “It is finished!”—victory’s shout,
The work of ages now complete;
No more the veil, no more the doubt—
The temple’s heart in twain was rent,
The earth convulsed, the rocks were rent,
As heaven’s justice found content.

O depth of love! O holy wrath!
The Father turned from perfect Son,
That we, the rebels, lost in path
Of death and dark, might see the dawn.
He who knew no sin was made our sin,
That we in Him God’s righteousness might win.

The spear that pierced His sacred side
Released the flood—both blood and tide—
The water pure, the blood that saves,
For all who trust what grace has paved.
No work of ours, no tear, no vow
Could pay the debt—’twas finished now.

Behold the Man upon the tree:
The Bridegroom slain for His bride to be;
The Shepherd struck, the sheep scattered wide,
Yet gathered back by wounds that cried
Of mercy vast and love so deep
It stilled the storms and woke the sleep.

O soul, draw near this wondrous cross,
Count all but loss for such a cost;
Let pride dissolve in sorrow’s stream,
And boast alone in Christ’s redeemed.
For here the curse became the cure,
The grave prepared a conqueror.

Though Friday dark with death did reign,
The stone shall roll, the dawn shall break again;
But on this day we bow and mourn
The price that purchased our return.

All glory to the Lamb once slain,
Whose blood has washed away all stain;
To Father, Son, and Spirit three—
One God in perfect Trinity.
Amen.

Before The Throne Of Grace In Heroic Couplets by Debbie Harris

Tags

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

We come not as the condemned before the bar,
Where Justice wields her unrelenting scar;
No guilty hands hang limp in dark despair,
No downcast eyes await the sentence there.

But lo! we stand before the Throne of Grace,
Where Mercy shines upon the sinner’s face.
Why, then, O soul, this sadness veiled in night,
When Heaven’s King invites thee to His light?

If thou wert called to justice’ awful seat,
Thy trembling frame might justly fear defeat;
But now the Sovereign in His silken love,
Robed in compassion from His throne above,

Bids thee approach with joy, with sacred fire,
And let thy countenance in gladness shine entire.
No more the weight of sin thy spirit binds—
The blood of Christ has loosed all guilty chains.

Lift up thy head, let holy delight arise,
Let praise ascend as incense to the skies;
For thou art favored, called, and dearly known,
Before the King who claims thee as His own.

Rejoice, beloved, in this boundless grace,
And meet His gaze with unveiled, radiant face.
The Throne that once would strike now bids thee sing—
Draw near, O soul, and worship Christ the King.

Before The Throne Of Grace by Debbie Harris

Tags

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

We come not trembling to the Judge’s bar,
Where guilty souls in fear and shame would stand;
No thunderous voice condemns us from afar,
But mercy’s gentle scepter rules the land.

Why then, O soul, this sadness on thy face,
When thou approachest Heaven’s Throne of Grace?
If justice held thee in its stern embrace,
Thy hands would hang, thy eyes in dread abase.

Yet now the King in robes of love appears,
Silken with grace, with boundless favor crowned;
He bids thee draw with joy, dispelling fears,
And calls thee near where holy peace is found.

Let not thy countenance in sorrow bend,
But shine with sacred delight and holy fire;
For thou art favored, loved, and called His friend—
Come, child of grace, and lift thy heart entire.

The veil is torn, the blood has spoken peace,
No condemnation waits where grace abounds;
Rejoice, O soul, and let all mourning cease,
Before the Throne where endless mercy sounds.

From Self To Savior by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , ,

They once arose with eyes fixed inward,
weighing each step, each failing, each desire—
a weary ledger of effort and shortfall,
where striving alone consumed their fire.

But mercy breathed across the quiet morning,
and softly turned their gaze from shadowed glass,
from fractured self and restless yearning,
to Christ, the Finished One, the living Rest at last.

He came not to assist their upward climb,
but as their righteousness, complete and whole.
Not to accompany their quest divine,
but to enfold them in union with God’s own soul.

No longer “Am I rising? Am I pure?”
The anxious question dissolved in heaven’s light.
Sin lost its throne; its voice grew mute and poor—
for they were clothed in glory not their own by right.

Their life, once restless, found its perfect rest,
hidden with Christ in God the Father’s breast.
No longer chasing what they might possess,
but drinking deeply from His boundless fullness, blessed.

When eyes upon themselves alone would linger,
they met but lack, the ever-present void.
Yet fixed on Jesus’ beauty, radiant splendor,
completeness flowed where fear had once alloyed.

They wake no longer burdened by the “must,”
but grounded in what Christ has ever done.
Christ-awareness blooms where self withdrew in dust—
and in that gaze, true freedom is won.

This is the gift the cross has fully wrought:
a life no longer orbiting their frame,
but anchored firm in all that Jesus bought—
where Christ alone is lifted high by name.

He is the center, source, and endless sea;
their rest, their joy, their all in all.
And when the truth at last descends with holy glee—
it is not about them… they are small,

yet raised aloft within His eternal design,
delivered from the shadows of each striving chain.
In Him they lack for nothing; they are fully Thine—
and in that glory, resurrection life shall reign.

Maundy Thursday: The Upper Room by Debbie Harris

Tags

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

In Jerusalem’s shadowed upper room,
Where Passover’s slain lamb and blood-marked door
Still whispered of the angel’s dread perfume,
The Master knelt—though heaven’s King of yore.

He laid aside His garments, took the basin bright,
And wrapped a linen cloth about His frame,
Then poured the water, cool as Jordan’s night,
To cleanse the dust from feet worn by the flame

Of desert roads and Galilean wave,
The tax-man’s sandals scarred by Roman dust,
And one disciple’s step already grave—
Yet Jesus stooped to serve them as He must.

His hands that calmed the storm and raised the dead
Now cradled heels with tenderness profound,
Like mother’s touch upon a weary head,
In lamplight’s glow where holy love abound.

Peter protested loud with fervent cry,
“Lord, never shall You wash these feet of mine!”
But gentle answer came from heaven’s sky:
“If not, thou hast no part, no share divine.”

Then yielded he: “Lord, wash my hands and head!”
The Savior smiled beneath the golden light,
Knowing the path of love that lay ahead—
The full extent He’d show before the night.

He took the bread, unleavened, pierced, and striped,
Gave thanks, and broke it with hands yet unscarred:
“This is My body, given for your life.”
The cup of crimson wine He then prepared:

“My blood of new covenant, shed for sin’s release,
For many, for remission full and free.”
The elements passed round in solemn peace,
While grace flowed deeper than the swelling sea.

“A new command I give,” His voice rang clear,
Like thunder clothed in mercy’s softest tone,
“That you love one another, as I have loved here—
By serving, stooping, bleeding for your own.”

Not Sinai’s stone, but love that bends the knee,
That lays down life for friend and enemy.

Outside, Gethsemane’s olives gleamed in moon,
Their silver leaves soon pierced by torch and blade.
Inside, the air bore myrrh and coming doom,
With scent of broken bread and wine displayed.

We stand there still, you and I, in that dim place,
Our feet dust-laden from the world’s long road,
Hearts prone to wander, seeking His embrace,
Yet called to serve as He, our Servant, showed.

The basin waits. The linen waits as well.
The bread and cup He offers once again.
Come, kneel. Come, eat. Come, drink. Come, do His will.
And love as He loved—to the uttermost pain.

For this the night He was betrayed, yet loved
Us to the end, the God who stooped so low—
Washing, feeding, commanding from above,
The Lamb, the Man, the King we kneel to know.

Behold Him here: the Servant-King who reigns
By cross and mercy, in unfailing grace.

Esteeming Others Higher Than Ourselves by Debbie Harris

Tags

, ,

Esteeming Others Higher Than Ourselves — Rekindling the Ancient Biblical Light Amid the Cold Hearts and Fractured Kingdoms of These End of Days

(Inspired by Philippians 2:3 — “Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves.”)

In these end of days, where twilight bleeds across a bruised and broken sky,
Long shadows stretch like accusing fingers over crumbling spires standing high.
Voices rise in fevered clamor, sharp as serpent’s tongue in the gathering gloom,
While a sacred truth lies buried, whispered soft — a single candle in the room.

“Esteem each other higher than yourselves,” the biblical light breaks through,
Golden rays like mercy’s fingers piercing thunderheads of pride anew.
Yet hearts grown cold and calloused turn their gaze to mirrors cracked within,
Where only “I” and “me” flicker dimly, drowning out the call to love and kin.

The stranger stumbles past, eyes hollow under leaden heavens gray,
The neighbor bears deep wounds like open graves that never heal by day.
But eyes stay fixed on fragile thrones of self, refusing to uplift the fall,
While we scroll through fractured kingdoms, chasing likes like fireflies small.

Bridges burn to glowing embers drifting on the bitter wind so cold,
Empathy drowns silent in the rising flood of “mine” — a story often told.
Foreign now this virtue, like an exiled tongue no longer heard,
Humility’s quiet anthem lost within the roaring symphony of word.

Oh, that we might remember in the clamor and the fray so loud,
To bow the head like wheat before the wind, extend the hand unbowed.
Let another’s day bloom brighter, their joy eclipse our fleeting light,
For in such selfless lifting, true strength shines eternal, pure and bright.

Let not the end of days seal this as relic dust beneath the falling stars,
But spark anew the fire — this biblical light that heals our hidden scars.
Esteem each other higher; let sacrificial love rewrite the scroll,
Before the final twilight claims the fragments of the weary soul.

May this biblical light, though foreign as manna in a barren land,
Find its way back home — streaming through the cracks where hardened hearts once stand.
In you, in me, in us together, may its golden glory brightly gleam,
Lest we face the coming darkness merged as shadows in one endless dream.

Two Hearts On Holy Wednesday by Debbie Harris

Tags

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

n Bethany’s quiet house, two paths unfold,
One breaks an alabaster jar of gold—
Pure spikenard cascades like tears of love,
Anointing head and feet of heaven’s Dove.

“She prepares Me for the grave,” the Master mild replies,
“Her deed will echo through the years, wherever My gospel flies.”
No calculation, no holding back the cost—
Just pure devotion, every drop is lost… yet never lost.

But nearby, silver whispers in a colder ear,
Thirty coins for blood, a bargain born of fear.
The same moment births both fragrance sweet and bitter gall—
One heart draws near in worship; one prepares to fall.

O Holy Wednesday, hold these mirrors to our soul:
Will we shatter self in love, or trade the Lord for gold?
Teach us, Savior, in this hush before the garden night,
To choose the breaking open, the perfume poured outright.

For though betrayal struck and pierced Your holy side,
Your mercy met the wound—You bore it, and You died.
The woman’s gift foreshadowed what the cross would fully prove:
That love poured out in fullness is the way that we are moved.

Tuesday Of Holy Week by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , ,

The Temple still rings from yesterday’s whip—
coins scattered, doves freed, tables upturned.
Today the priests and elders draw near,
robes crisp with power, eyes sharp with scorn.

“By what authority do You do these things?”
they demand, voices smooth as Temple stone.
“Who gave You leave to teach, to cleanse, to claim
what we have guarded as our own?”

He turns their trap with one swift question back—
“John’s baptism— from heaven, or from men?”
They whisper, trapped between the crowd and fear,
and answer weakly, “We do not know.”

Then silence falls from Him who holds all right,
yet mercy lingers in the air He breathes.
He tells of sons who say but do not go,
of vineyards seized by tenants filled with greed.

The questioning hearts that still confront the King
test the One who made the very ground.
He grants them courage not to trap, but bow,
and own the authority that turns the world around.
they find the grace to kneel before His throne.

Cleansing The Temple by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , ,

On Holy Monday, shadows lengthen long,
The King who rode in triumph yesterday
Now strides into His Father’s house with song
Of righteous anger, driving merchants away.

Tables overturned, coins scatter wide,
Doves flutter free from cages built for gain;
“No den of thieves shall here My temple hide,”
He cries, while zeal consumes Him like a flame.

Yet deeper still, the temple of His heart
Prepares itself for sacrifice to come—
The whip of cords a foretaste of the part
He soon will play when soldiers nail Him to the wood.

The Lord who cleansed the courts with holy fire
Cleanses now the temple of each soul entire.
He turns over every greed that makes its home,
And makes of every heart a dwelling for His throne.

Let Monday’s zeal ignite in us anew
A pure devotion, costly and most true—
That as the week unfolds in grief and grace,
We may anoint His feet with all we have.