The Great Cloud of Witnesses: A Heavenly Throng Encircling the Race of Faith by Debbie Harris

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Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us,
Hebrews 12:1 (KJV)

Beneath the vault of heaven’s boundless dome,
Where silver stars in silent vigil gleam,
A mighty cloud of witnesses has come—
Not mist of earth, but souls in living dream.

They rise like dawn along the eastern rim,
Abel with lamb, his offering still bright;
Enoch, who walked with God and never dimmed,
Transported pure into eternal light.

Noah stands firm on waves that roared and broke,
His ark a cradle ‘mid the deluge’s roar;
Abraham lifts his gaze through fire and smoke,
Counting the stars that promise evermore.

Sarah laughs soft where barren years once reigned,
Her child a miracle in withered arms;
Moses ascends where Sinai’s thunder waned,
His face aglow with unconsuming charms.

Rahab’s scarlet cord gleams like a rose in flame,
A thread of mercy binding foe to friend;
The prophets, scarred yet singing God’s great name,
Their voices blend where earthly trails descend.

They throng the galleries of timeless air,
A vast assembly, radiant and vast—
Not spectators cold, but witnesses who share
The fire that kindles faith steadfast.

Surrounded thus, we shed our heavy chains,
The clinging sin, the weights that drag us low;
We loose the burdens born of doubt and pains,
And rise to run where living rivers flow.

The track lies clear, marked out by ancient grace,
Through shadowed vales and peaks of golden day;
With eyes on Him who fixed His gaze in place—
The cross’s shame, the joy that lights the way.

O cloud of glory, shimmering and near,
Your stories gleam like constellations wide;
We press on swift, for love has conquered fear,
And heaven’s chorus calls us to abide.

So run, beloved, with heart aflame and free,
Till we shall join that throng beyond the veil,
Where every witness bows in ecstasy
Before the Lamb who makes all sorrow pale.

Endless Treasures Hidden in Christ: In Whom Are All the Riches of Wisdom and Knowledge(Colossians 2:3) by Debbie Harris

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To Pep—
dear friend, fellow poet, and faithful disciple in Christ—
who once spoke these words in gentle counsel:
“Study Christ, for His treasures are endless.”
Your encouragement still points the way,
especially mine, as it kindled and shaped my own seeking heart. I will see you in Heaven!

Colossians 2:3 – in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.

In Christ the vaults stand open though concealed,
not barred to any heart that dares to seek,
but draped in gentle mystery, revealed
layer by layer where the humble speak.

All treasures of wisdom, old and ever-new,
rest hidden here—not strewn in fleeting dust
of mortal striving, nor in pages we pursue,
but gathered whole in Him, the living trust.

Knowledge glimmers like deep-buried gold,
untouched by years, unspent by passing days;
each truth a jewel that draws us from the cold
of self toward wonder, awe, and endless praise.

No doctorate can plumb these depths alone,
no counsel map the soul’s true remedy.
Study Christ—let every line be known
within His arms, where wisdom sets us free.

A gentle voice once spoke it clear and true:
His riches never fade, they multiply.
Turn here, O seeker, find forever new
the endless store that satisfies the cry.

For in Him hidden, yet unveiled to those
who knock, who seek, who rest before His face—
the treasures flow like rivers no one knows
until they drink, until their thirst finds grace.

The Precious Word of God: An Epic in Heroic Couplets on the Divine Allegories of Scripture by Debbie Harris

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O Holy Spirit, breathe upon my soul,
Inspire these lines to make Thy glories whole!
Open our eyes to see, our hearts to burn,
As once Thou didst when ancient prophets learned.

In countless forms Thy living Word appears,
More rich than treasures, brighter than the spheres.
First, living Bread from heaven’s table sent,
When man by earthly food alone is spent.
“Man shall not live by bread alone,” He cried,
But by each word from God’s own mouth supplied.
Thus souls are nourished where all else would fail,
And life eternal springs where death prevailed.

More precious Gold than Ophir’s hidden store,
Refined seven times, its purity evermore.
Like Silver tested in the furnace flame,
Its truth endures, untainted, without blame.
A hidden Treasure buried in the field,
For which the finder sells all else to yield;
With joy he purchases that matchless gain,
And heaven’s riches flood his heart again.

As Fire it burns with purifying blaze,
Consuming dross, yet kindling holy praise.
A Hammer mighty, breaking stubborn stone,
Shattering hearts where pride has claimed its throne.
Both fire and hammer from one source proceed—
The Word that wounds, yet heals the soul in need:
It crushes sin, then lights the inward flame—
O wondrous work of mercy and of claim!

Sweet Honey flows from out the Rock divine,
Sweeter than any comb where bees entwine.
No earthly sweetness matches such delight;
It cheers the weary, turns the dark to light.
A Lamp it shines to guide the pilgrim’s way,
A steady gleam through night’s most perilous fray;
“Thy word is a lamp unto my feet,” we sing,
A Light unto my path—O Light of kings!

Strong Meat it offers those mature in grace,
Who press beyond the cradle to the race.
Yet Milk it gives the newborn child of God,
Pure, gentle, growing faith where once we trod.
A Mirror true, no flattering lie it shows,
Revealing heart and conscience as it glows;
The one who looks and forgets his true face
Remains unchanged; the doer finds God’s grace.

As Medicine it heals the broken frame,
Life to the seeker, health to all who claim;
Its balm restores where sickness held its reign,
And makes the wounded spirit whole again.

As Seed it falls on every kind of ground—
By wayside, rocks, or thorns where weeds abound—
Yet in the good soil, fertile, deep, and true,
It springs to life, a hundred-fold anew.
Like Rain and Snow from heaven’s heights it falls,
Descending soft to answer heaven’s calls;
It waters earth, makes deserts bloom and sing,
Accomplishes God’s will in everything—
No empty return, but harvest rich and vast,
The Word that crowns the future and the past!

A Sword of the Spirit, two-edged, keen, and bright,
It pierces soul and spirit, wrong from right;
In warfare fierce against the powers of night,
The saint wields it—and claims the victor’s right!

And living Water, crystal, pure, and free,
It washes clean where guilt once stained the knee.
The Word as water sanctifies the bride,
No spot, no wrinkle left when once applied.

Thus every form Thy precious Word assumes:
Bread, gold, and silver; treasure, fire, and blooms
Of honey; lamp and light, and hammer’s claim;
Meat, milk, and mirror, medicine’s healing name;
Seed, rain, and snow, sword, water—rich and vast.
All meet in Thee—the soul redeemed at last.

O seeking soul, forsake the world’s poor gain!
Embrace this Word and never thirst again.
Let every image—feed, refine, reveal,
Heal, plant, and cleanse—Thy heart and mind anneal,
Till Christ alone is formed in thee complete,
And endless glory crowns the Word we meet!

Blessed Are They Which Do Hunger and Thirst After Righteousness II by Debbie Harris

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As the deer pants for the water-brooks so clear,
So pants the soul for God, the living Spring;
In dry and weary land, no water near,
It thirsts for righteousness, the heart’s true King.
Blessed are they who hunger, thirst, and seek,
For they shall be with satisfaction filled.

No bread of earth, no fleeting worldly store,
Can slake the famine deep within the breast;
But come to waters free, as prophets swore,
Buy wine and milk where God Himself is guest.
Seek first His kingdom, seek His righteousness,
And all these things shall unto you be pressed.

The soul, like cracked earth longing for the rain,
Cries out for purity that God bestows;
Not works of flesh, but faith’s redeeming gain—
Christ made our sin, that we His right might know.
The LORD our Righteousness, exalted high,
Imputes His robe where sinners once did lie.

Like manna fallen in the desert waste,
So falls His grace upon the humbled heart;
No striving self can frame what God has placed—
A gift of mercy, never to depart.
The soul ascends, in holy longing drawn,
To taste the fullness promised in His dawn.

O Lord, revive this thirst that never dies,
As streams in desert make the wasteland sing;
Till every chamber of the spirit lies
Flooded with righteousness the Savior brings.
Satisfied forever, blessed and whole,
The hungry soul beholds Thee face to face.

Let this desire increase through every trial,
As rivers join the sea in boundless flow;
Endless in Thee, where grace removes all guile,
The thirsting find their rest, their all, their know.
For they who hunger thus shall surely see
The promise kept: “They shall be filled with Me.”

Blessed Are They Which Do Hunger and Thirst After Righteousness by Debbie Harris

This is drawn straight from Matthew 5:6 (KJV), capturing the core promise and the soul’s holy longing that the poem expresses throughout.

And here is the poem paired with it:

Blessed Are They Which Do Hunger and Thirst After Righteousness

Before the dawn in golden hush descends,
A lark ascends with trembling, silver tone;
So wakes the soul where deepest longing blends,
To seek the righteousness that Christ alone
Bestows in gaze of mercy pure and bright.

As pilgrims lost in desert’s burning sand
Dream of green palms above a silver spring,
Where waters mirror heaven’s endless band,
The soul thirsts deep—its heart a fragile thing,
A vessel cracked, yet yearning for the tide
That from the Savior’s wounded side once flowed.

Behold the rose at morning’s gentle call,
Unfurling petals soft as whispered prayer,
Drinking the light till crimson flames enthrall,
Yet ever reaches toward the sun’s warm glare—
Thus yearns the soul, with passion whole and true,
To wear the spotless robe of Christ anew.

The mountains rise in solemn, snow-crowned grace,
Their peaks transfixed by stars in velvet night,
As if to taste the heavens’ holy place—
So climbs the spirit, breathless in its flight,
Drawn by a sacred hunger none can still,
For righteousness no mortal hand can frame,
But falls like manna on the soul’s wide hill,
A gift divine, in gentle blessing came.

O Savior, make this longing ever live—
The wind through emerald vales in silver flight,
The tide that kisses shores with joy to give,
The dawn’s bright flame that sets the sky alight—
Till every chamber of the heart is filled,
Overflowing with Thy righteousness complete,
And blessed peace the longing soul has willed,
Satisfied forever at Thy feet.

Let hunger grow, not fade in time’s long race,
But shine more radiant, like a river’s course
That finds the boundless sea in glad embrace—
Endless, alive, and held in love’s true source.

We Are All the Least of These: A Confession of Empty Hands and the Wings of Undeserved Grace by Debbie Harris

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Lord,
You take the least of these—
the small, the overlooked, the trembling ones—
and give us wings.

And if we are all honest,
we are all the least of these.
For this is how salvation is wrought:
knowing we are all indeed sinners,
the least of these.

Broken, empty-handed,
we come—
and still You call us
beloved.
Praise Your name!
Praise Your name forever.

He Is Still Sitting at the Well: A Poem of the Samaritan Woman, Living Water, and the Invitation That Never Fades by Debbie Harris

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Noon burned the stones where Jacob’s well lay deep,
She came alone, the sun a heavy rod,
Avoiding eyes that judged her soul in sleep,
A woman marked by sorrow and by God.

Five husbands gone like shadows from her hand,
The sixth no husband, only fleeting fire;
She drew her water in a barren land,
To slake a thirst no mortal could inspire.

He sat there waiting, weary from the road,
A stranger Jew who spoke when none would dare;
“Give me to drink,” He said, His voice bestowed
A grace that pierced the noonday’s scorching air.

She marveled, questioned borders drawn by men—
“How can You ask, when race divides us still?”
Yet He replied, “If you but knew Me then,
You’d ask of Me, and drink to quench your will.”

The living water rose within His words,
A spring that leaps to life and never ends;
No jar, no bucket, no more empty herds
Of broken loves where loneliness descends.

“Sir, give me this,” she cried, her heart awake,
That I might thirst no more in shame’s dark chain.
He saw her past—each vow that bent and brake—
And spoke her secrets, yet without disdain.

“You’ve had five husbands, and the one you keep
Is not your own.” She trembled at the sight
Of truth laid bare, no wound too wide, too deep
For Him to touch with undeservèd light.

The Messiah stands before you now, He said,
I AM—the One who breaks the chains of night.
Her veil of midday solitude was shed;
She left her pitcher, ran into the light.

“Come see a Man who told me all I’ve done!”
She called through streets where once she hid her face.
The outcast voice became the rising sun,
And many ran to meet Him in that place.

They heard Him speak, they tasted of the stream,
The water flowing free from shame’s old well;
No longer slaves to yesterday’s bad dream,
They found in Him the truth they could not tell.

O wanderer, you too have come at noon,
Carrying jars of disappointment’s weight,
The cycles spin, the hope consumed too soon,
The heart grown dry beneath the desert’s hate.

He waits still at the well you daily tread,
Not judging, but inviting: “Drink of Me.”
The past that haunts you, every tear you’ve shed,
He turns to rivers flowing full and free.

No longer run to lovers who betray,
To wells that promise much and give but dust;
The Living Water calls your name today—
Come, taste, be filled, in Him alone you trust.

The shame you buried, He will bring to bloom,
The broken story woven into grace;
What once was drought becomes eternal room
For joy that time nor tide cannot erase.

So leave the jar, the old familiar pain,
Run tell the city what your eyes have seen:
A Man who knows you, yet loves without chain,
The Savior waiting—He has made you clean.

And if the world still whispers, “You are lost,”
Let Heaven’s answer thunder through your veins:
One encounter shifts the ledger’s cost,
And living water floods the arid plains.

He sits there still, though centuries have fled,
By every well where thirsty hearts draw near;
Come now, beloved, lift your weary head—
The hour is here. The Living Water’s here.

Risen In Glory, Alleluia by Debbie Harris

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Risen in Glory, Alleluia!
An Easter Anthem
(For SATB choir and piano, with optional brass/handbells)

Verse 1
In the shadow of the cross we stood,
Where love poured out in crimson flood;
The Savior slain, the curtain torn,
The weight of sin forever borne.

Pre-Chorus
The stone was sealed, the guards kept watch,
Yet heaven’s plan no grave could match;
In silence deep, the third day dawned—
The King of life forever spawned!

Chorus
Christ is risen! Alleluia!
Risen in glory, death defeated!
Risen in power, our chains are broken!
Alleluia! Alleluia! Christ the Lord is risen today!
Sing with joy, the tomb is empty—
He lives forever, come what may!
Alleluia! Alleluia!

Verse 2
Now Mary heard the angel’s word,
“Behold, He is not here—He’s Lord!”
The risen Christ in victory strode,
The path of life, the way to God.

Bridge
What once was lost is now restored,
By wounds that heal, by grace outpoured;
O death, where is your sting this day?
The grave has lost its hold—He reigns!

Final Chorus
Christ is risen! Alleluia!
Risen in glory, reigning on high!
Risen forever, our hope eternal!
Alleluia! Alleluia! Christ the Lord is risen today!
Let every tongue and nation sing—
The King has conquered everything!
Alleluia! Alleluia!
Risen in glory—Alleluia!

Coda
Alleluia… alleluia…
Christ is risen indeed!
Risen in glory… alleluia!

The Royally Redeemed Blessed Hope by Debbie Harris

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1 Thessalonians 4:16-17 (KJV)
For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.

A heraldic banner unfurled in the sky,
Quartered in gold for glory divine,
Azure for heaven’s realm on high,
Charged with the Lion of Judah rampant, crowned;
A cross potent at center, potent and bright,
The Jerusalem cross with arms outstretched wide,
Symbol of wounds redeemed in endless light,
Proclaiming the promise o’er the ancient word.

The heavens rend with glory’s piercing light,
A royal shout proclaims the King’s return;
The Lord descends in majesty and might,
With archangel’s voice and trumpet’s golden burn.

From silent graves the crowned ones rise anew,
In robes of white, with crowns of righteousness;
Redeemed by blood, their royal birthright true,
They soar on wings to greet their Sovereign’s bliss.

Then we, His subjects watchful through the night,
Feel sudden grace exalt us from the dust;
Caught up as one in clouds of living light,
We join the throng where royal praises thrust.

No chain of earth, no tear of mortal strife—
We stand as kings and queens before His life:
Forever robed in His redeeming grace,
The Royally Redeemed in His embrace.

The Unconquerable Throne: Adoring the Pierced and Reigning King While the World Groans Under Missile Rain and Shadowed Swarms by Debbie Harris

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Throne of Uncreated Flame

Beyond the curtain of our night,
Where galaxies in silence spin,
A throne ascends through realms of light,
Where dawn and vesper melt within.

Its frame is jasper, veined with fire,
A carnelian heart that glows;
Around it arcs a rainbow spire,
Emerald-hued, where mercy flows.

No mortal eye could bear the blaze
That pours from Him who sits enthroned;
Yet seraphim, with wings ablaze,
Hide trembling faces, overawed.

Their sixfold pinions beat as one,
A storm of feathers tipped in gold;
Their voices rise like molten sun—
“Holy, holy, holy,” told.

The cry ignites the crystal sea,
A glassy mirror vast and still,
Reflecting lightning’s jagged spree
And thunder’s deep, unbroken will.

Seven torches dance before the throne,
Seven spirits, living flame;
Their sparks ascend like seeds unsown,
To kindle stars and call His name.

Twenty-four elders, robed in snow,
Their crowns of purest gold they fling;
They fall as waves of worship flow,
Before the Ancient of all Being.

And then the scroll, sealed sevenfold,
Lies weeping in the hand of night—
No one in heaven, earth, or hold
Could break its chains of shadowed might.

Until the Lion steps from Judah’s line,
The Root of David, fierce and bright;
Yet lo, a slaughtered Lamb divine
Stands bleeding still in deathless light.

His wounds are rubies, open, deep,
Each scar a river red and wide;
The elders fall, the creatures weep,
As heaven’s chorus swells with pride:

“Worthy the Lamb who tasted death,
To take the scroll and loose its seal!
Worthy the One who gave His breath,
That broken hearts might rise and heal!”

Ten thousand times ten thousand sing,
A sea of voices, white as foam;
Myriads upon myriads ring
The throne where love has made its home.

King of kings—no diadem of man
Can crown the brow that bore the thorn;
Lord of lords—the scepter in His hand
Is mercy’s rod, by justice born.

Amid the Tempest’s Roar

Amid the clamor of the age,
Where banners bleed and nations seethe,
Where drones in shadowed swarms engage
And rockets carve their paths of grief—

Smoke coils thick from shattered fields,
The earth recoils beneath the weight;
Shaheds and Sejjils streak like yields
Of hellish harvest, sealing fate.

In Ukraine’s frost, the swarms descend,
Iranian waves crash on Israel’s shore;
Hezbollah’s barrages never end,
While Gulf skies burn with missile lore.

Tehran reels as bunker-busters fall,
Beirut ignites in rocket rain;
From Kharkiv’s ruins to southern wall,
The air itself cries out in pain.

Yet turn thine eyes, O weary soul,
Beyond the smoke, the drone’s cold hum;
Above the thunder’s blackest roll
Shines forth the Throne where mercies come.

There Jesus sits in robes of flame,
His wounds like rubies, ever bright;
His scepter stills the wildest claim,
His gaze dissolves the endless night.

No drone can breach that crystal sea,
No rocket pierce those emerald walls;
The Lamb who triumphed over death’s decree
Reigns high where every tumult falls.

Fix here thy heart, let not alarm
Steal peace from those He calls His own;
For He who calms the fiercest storm
Has promised: “Fear not—I sit enthroned.”

In this dark hour, let worship rise
Like incense through the battle’s drone;
The King returns with pierced hands and eyes—
Our hope, our peace, forever known.

O Jesus Christ, our eyes would rise
To drink the splendor of Thy face;
Till faith gives way to open skies
And we behold Thee, full of grace.

Let lightning flash, let thunder roll,
Let every creature, far and near,
Proclaim with one unbroken soul:
“The Lamb is worthy—ever, here!”

May this frail song ascend as myrrh,
A trembling vapor to Thy throne;
Until the veil of time shall stir
And we shall know as we are known. Amen.