May the Spring-Filled Fragrance of Our Fleeting Lives Be Christ Alone by Debbie Harris

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May the springtime scent of our fleeting days
Rise not for self, nor earthly praise,
But pour forth only Christ’s sweet fame,
The one true fragrance, ever the same.

Let every bloom that opens wide
Hide no perfume of human pride;
May petals fall, yet leave behind
The aroma of the Crucified.

Like dew that settles soft and still
On tender grass by heaven’s will,
So let our lives distill His grace—
Christ alone, in every place.

No other savor, no other name,
No blended note to share the claim.
Just Jesus—pure, complete, divine—
The only fragrance worth the time.

A World in Need of Rescue: Receiving the Free Gift of Salvation and a Transformed Heart by Debbie Harris

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For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
— Romans 6:23 (KJV)

For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast.
— Ephesians 2:8-9 (KJV)

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
— John 3:16 (KJV)

Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.
— 2 Corinthians 5:17 (KJV)

The whole world needs rescuing, Lord.
And the Rescuer’s name is Jesus Christ our Lord.
His free gift is Salvation
and a transformed soul.

Arise, Ye Warriors of the Lamb: Be Valiant for Truth Amid the Reign of Lies by Debbie Harris

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Awake, ye warriors of the Lamb,
Who wear the cross upon your soul;
No silken bed, no fleeting fame,
No timid heart shall reach the goal.
The trumpet sounds, the standard flies,
The ancient foe in darkness schemes;
Yet Christ Himself before us lies—
The Conqueror of our broken dreams.

In armor bright with heaven’s fire,
The belt of truth about your waist,
The breastplate guards the heart’s desire,
The gospel shoes make footsteps haste.
Lift high the shield that quenches flame,
The helmet strong to guard the mind;
The Spirit’s sword, God’s living name,
Shall cleave the lies that truth would bind.

The Captain marches, scarred and crowned,
His hands still bear the nail’s cruel print;
Through storm and shadow, blood-bespattered ground,
He leads where cowards fear to sprint.
No chain of fear shall bind the brave,
No whisper of the serpent’s art;
Though worlds may mock and powers rave,
His voice alone commands the heart.

Be valiant, then, for truth this day,
When falsehood cloaks itself in light;
When error wears a saintly sway
And wolves in sheepskin prowl the night.
Stand firm where compromise would creep,
Where silence seems the easier road;
The cross demands, the watchmen keep—
Their charge is heavy, yet their load.

Though wounds may scar and trials press,
Though brethren fall and banners tear,
The King who died will yet confess
The faithful ones who tarry there.
A crown of life awaits the true,
Where every tear is wiped away;
He turns our broken dreams anew—
In victory Christ holds the day.

Then charge, ye soldiers of the King,
With voices joined in battle cry;
Let every tongue His praises sing,
Till darkened realms to daylight fly.
No fortress built by mortal hand
Shall stand against His sovereign might;
We march beneath His high command—
Till every knee bows at His sight!

Love Your Neighbour II by Debbie Harris

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O love your neighbour, though their wealth abound
And mock the humble bounds where you are found;
Let envy not consume your quiet breast,
Nor covet what in providence is blessed.
Rest content within your modest place,
And grudge them not their luxury or grace—
For greed that eyes another’s store with spite
Doth dim the light where charity burns bright.

Or if abundance crowns your days with store,
While near you languish those in want once more—
Regard them not as lesser souls below;
One blood the Lord hath given all to know.
The garment gleams with finer weave than theirs,
Yet every heart beneath His mercy shares.
Embrace them kindred, though in tatters dressed;
Love them as Christ hath loved the lowliest.

Yea, though your mercy meet ingratitude,
And scorn repay the good you have pursued—
Endure, press on, nor falter in the strife;
Love’s truest test is in the hardest life.
Heap coals of fire on hearts that turn away;
Seek not their favor, but your Master’s day.
If humankind reject your offered hand,
Heaven’s welcome waits—your labour shall not stand
Unseen or unaccepted in His sight.

Thus follow where the Saviour trod before,
Who loved the thankless, suffered, and yet more:
Through every trial, through scorn or calm serene,
Love your neighbour—let love forever reign.
In selfless giving, pure and undefiled,
You walk beside the meek and holy Child,
And find, within the offering of your soul,
The boundless wealth that makes the spirit whole.

Love Thy Neighbour by Debbie Harris

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O love your neighbour, though their coffers swell
With gold that mocks your humble, scanty cell;
Let not your heart in secret envy burn,
Nor wish their riches unto you return.
Be content in your lowly cot to dwell,
And grudge them not their feast or silken spell—
For coveting the proud one’s store is sin,
And poisons where sweet charity should begin.

Or if your purse be full, your dwelling fair,
And near you crouch the ragged, cold, and bare—
Despise them not as lesser in your sight;
One blood hath God ordained for all delight.
The coat may shine with richer thread than theirs,
Yet souls are equal ‘neath eternal cares.
Call them your kin, though in rags arrayed;
Love them as Christ the outcast ones hath stayed.

Yea, though your kindness meet with cold disdain,
And gratitude repay you but with pain—
Press on in love, nor faint upon the way;
The rougher path doth prove the hero’s day.
Heap coals of fire on heads that spurn your grace;
Seek not their smile, but seek your Master’s face.
If others reject you, Heaven does not refuse—
Your deed ascends, accepted in His views.

Thus tread the steps where Christ Himself hath trod,
Who loved the thankless, bore the cross for God;
Through storm or calm, through thickest scorn or thin,
Love your neighbour—let love the victory win.
For in this labour pure and undefiled
You walk with the meek and lowly Child,
And find, in the giving of your heart,
The richest treasure love can e’er impart.

When Dagon Fell Twice: A Narrative of Divine Triumph Over Philistine Idolatry by Debbie Harris

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In Ashdod’s walls, where Philistine pride did swell,
The ark of Israel’s God they bore as captive prize,
Triumph’s trophy from Ebenezer’s field of blood,
Where once the Hebrews fled and thousands died.
Into the house of Dagon, fish-tailed deity,
Lord of grain and sea, they placed the sacred chest,
Beside his graven form of stone and gilded pride,
As if Jehovah bowed to Dagon’s manifest.

Yet when the dawn with rosy fingers touched the east,
And priests of Ashdod rose to greet their god anew,
Behold! Dagon lay prostrate, fallen face to earth,
Before the ark of Him whose name is ever true.
No storm had raged, no mortal hand had struck the blow—
Silent the night, yet dread the judgment wrought unseen.
They lifted up the broken idol, set him straight,
And trembled not, but thought the fall a chance obscene.

The second morn returned, more terrible than first:
Again the threshold showed the god in ruin low,
Fallen full upon his face before the ark divine,
His head cut off, his hands of power severed so,
Lying upon the very step where men must tread—
Only the headless, handless trunk of Dagon stood,
A mutilated stump, a mockery of might,
While Israel’s God in silence reigned as understood.

Thus was the idol-god obliterated twice:
First bowed in homage, then in pieces dashed apart;
His sovereignty decapitated, hands of strength removed,
His power broken by an invisible, almighty dart.
No craftsman’s tool, no warrior’s blade had wrought this doom—
The hand of the Lord alone had dealt the stroke unseen,
Proving that wood and stone, though carved with pomp and gold,
Before the living God are but as dust and dream.

Therefore the priests of Dagon, and all who cross that hall,
To this day shun the threshold where his fragments fell,
Lest they should tread upon the relics of his shame,
And feel the weight of judgment none can quell.
For there the Lord declared, in emblem stark and plain,
That false gods crumble when His presence draws near;
Dagon lies shattered, headless, handless, overthrown—
The Lord of Hosts alone shall reign, no rival near.

Hymn: The Triumphant Cry of the Ransomed: Forever Perfect by One Sacrifice

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Hebrews 10:14 (KJV)
For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified.

In dawn’s unquenchable aurora, blazing wide,
Where ancient glooms dissolve in floods of tide,
One Offering—supreme, resplendent, whole—
Hath perfected forever every ransomed soul.

Forever perfect! Forever free!
By one offering, victory!

No more the crimson streams on altars spent,
No shadowed hands in trembling sacrament;
But Christ the Victor, robed in living flame,
Illumines His own with His transcendent name.

Forever perfect! Forever free!
By one offering, victory!

Forever perfect—O triumphant cry!
Though grace still works its slow, refining fire,
And pilgrim souls are daily lifted higher,
Yet stands the verdict: spotless, justified!

Forever perfect! Forever free!
By one offering, victory!

In righteousness ablaze they stand arrayed,
With choral throngs where sapphire glories cascade.
The single stroke that rent the veil in twain
Unloosed pure cataracts of rapturous refrain:

Forever perfect! Forever free!
By one offering, victory!

“Hosanna! Worthy is the Lamb once slain!
By one offering endless light we gain!”
Rejoice, ye saints, in ceaseless, diamond glee—
His offering hath crowned eternity!

Forever perfect! Forever free!
By one offering, victory!

The Triumphant Cry of the Ransomed: Forever Perfect by One Sacrifice by Debbie Harris

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Hebrews 10:14 (KJV)
For by one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified.

In dawn’s unquenchable aurora, blazing wide,
Where ancient glooms dissolve in floods of tide,
One Offering—supreme, resplendent, whole—
Hath perfected forever every ransomed soul.

No more the crimson streams on altars spent,
No shadowed hands in trembling sacrament;
But Christ the Victor, robed in living flame,
Illumines His own with His transcendent name.

Forever perfect—O triumphant cry!
Though grace still works its slow, refining fire,
And pilgrim souls are daily lifted higher,
Yet stands the verdict: spotless, justified!

In righteousness ablaze they stand arrayed,
With choral throngs where sapphire glories cascade.
The single stroke that rent the veil in twain
Unloosed pure cataracts of rapturous refrain:

“Hosanna! Worthy is the Lamb once slain!
By one oblation endless light we gain!”
Rejoice, ye saints, in ceaseless, diamond glee—
His offering hath crowned eternity!

Safe in the Shepherd’s Hand by Debbie Harris

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O gracious Shepherd, voice divine,
Who calls Thy wandering sheep by name,
Thou givest life that knows no decline,
Eternal fire no foe can claim.

They hear Thy word, they follow near,
Nor stray where wolves in darkness prowl;
Thy hand enfolds them, strong and clear,
A fortress none shall e’er o’erthrow.

No power of hell, no mortal might,
No storm of sin, no tempter’s art,
Can pluck them from Thy grasp so tight—
Thy hold is graven on Thy heart.

In Thee they dwell, in heart and soul,
One with the Son, forever one;
Thy very self becomes their whole,
Till time and death themselves are done.

Happy the soul that dares to rest
Upon this promise, firm and free:
No hand shall tear it from Thy breast,
He keeps us close, no matter what betide.

False Laughter’s Sting – A Cautionary Verse: Cruel Jesting Unmasks False Friends Far from the Savior’s Loving Way by Debbie Harris

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When mirth is wielded as a blade,
And jests in cruel guise are made,
Take heed, O soul, and mark the sign:
These are no friends of heart divine.

They cloak their barbs in sportive play,
Yet wound the spirit on their way;
No balm of love their words bestow,
But thorns where gentle kindness should grow.

True friendship, like the Savior’s grace,
Speaks soft reproof with warm embrace;
It heals, it lifts, it bears the part
Of every burden on the heart.

But they who mock with laughter’s dart,
Who pierce the meek and bruise the heart,
Walk not the path our Lord has trod—
The narrow way that leads to God.

For broad the gate where scorn prevails,
And wide the road where malice sails;
Yet strait and hard the upward road
That bears the meek beneath His load.

Enter not, then, with such as these,
Whose “jokes” are chains that none may seize;
Choose rather friends whose tongues are pure,
Whose love endures, whose faith is sure.

Thus walk in light, with Christ thy guide,
On narrow paths where grace abide;
For cruel humor’s fleeting breath
Brings death to joy, and dark to death.

Let every word be seasoned sweet,
With mercy’s oil and wisdom meet;
So shall thy soul in peace abide,
And find the narrow way to life.