The Seriousness of Calling Yourself a “Christian” Without Any Recognizable Fruit by Debbie Harris

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Jesus Christ our Lord is the true Vine,
The source of all life and living sap.
God the Father is the Gardener wise,
He tends and watches every branch with care.

Every branch that stays joined to Christ
But hangs empty — no fruit, no clusters in sight —
Even after many seasons of mercy and grace,
The Father cuts it off and takes it from its place.
He will not let dead wood remain attached.

But every branch that bears some fruit,
He prunes with care, though it may sting and hurt,
So stronger shoots and heavier clusters grow,
And richer, sweeter fruit appears on earth.

We must abide in Christ, and He in us.
A branch cut off can never bear its own.
It withers quickly, turns brittle, dry, and brown,
And lies there useless, barren, and alone.

Jesus is the Vine, and we are the branches.
Whoever abides in Him will bear much fruit.
But apart from Christ we can do nothing —
We wither, fade, and slowly die.

If anyone does not abide in Christ,
He is cast out like a withered, lifeless limb.
Men gather up the dry wood from the ground,
And burn it in a fire fierce and grim.

God is patient, slow to wrath and kind,
He gives chance after chance, as with the fig tree.
He digs, He waters, waits with hope in mind —
But patience ends, the fruitless branch is cut free.

By their fruits you surely know the tree,
Faith without works is dead and hollow too.
The Spirit’s fruit is plain for all to see:
Love, joy, and peace in all we say and do.

So hear this warning deep within your soul:
Do not wear the name “Christian” with a barren life.
If no obedience and no real fruit appear,
The Gardener’s blade will cut you from this life.

Stay rooted deep in Jesus Christ each day,
Let His rich life flow strong through every part.
Then lasting fruit will grow without delay,
And you will please the Father’s loving heart.

I’ve seen it happen with my own eyes,
Branches once green now cut away and dry.
Lives that once walked close to the Lord
Now scattered, withered, passing by.

So let us examine our hearts today,
While mercy still calls and grace remains.
Abide in Christ, bear fruit while you may —
Lest we too are cut off from these earthly plains.

Humanity’s Shadowed Light: Complexities of the Christless Heart by Debbie Harris

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In shadowed vales where no Redeemer trod,
Yet common grace still scatters seeds of good,
Man bears the image, marred but not erased,
And often walks with noble heart and mood.
He loves his children, tends the wounded beast,
Gives alms in secret, risks his life for friend;
Yet in his breast the ancient serpent’s yeast
Still works unseen, and waits its fatal end.

Without the Cross, the soul retains its spark—
Bright deeds of mercy, courage, truth, and art—
But lacks the root that holds it through the dark,
The living Vine that binds the fractured heart.
Thus cruelty, though not in every breast,
Finds easier soil where Christ is not enthroned;
It wears a thousand faces, finely dressed,
In systems cold where love is never owned.

Behold the cultured man of gentle speech,
Who weeps at poetry and feeds the poor,
Yet votes for laws that grind the helpless each,
Or turns away when conscience knocks his door.
The tender mother, fierce in love’s employ,
May still despise the stranger at her gate;
The honest scholar, seeker after joy,
May justify the scaffold and the hate.

O complex race! Half angel, half in chains—
Thou buildest hospitals, yet prisons too;
Thou singest ballads sweet of soft refrains,
Then march to war with hymns of vengeance new.
Thou pitiest horses, dogs, and woodland deer,
Yet traffic souls for pleasure or for gain;
Thou speakest peace, yet harbor secret fear
That turns to cruelty when loss brings pain.

Not every soul without the Savior’s name
Is brute or tyrant walking earth’s sad sod;
Yet all, unanchored, drift toward the same
Slow-cooling love, the gradual death of God.
For conscience fades when not renewed by grace,
And self becomes the measure and the law;
The kinder heart grows weary in the race,
And turns at last to serve its hidden flaw.

Thus shines a twilight beauty, real yet frail,
A borrowed light that glimmers, then grows dim;
Till Christ restore the heart that will not fail,
And flood with dawn what now is veiled and grim.
O fallen race, in whom such glories dwell,
Yet chained to shadows deeper than we see—
Come to the Lamb whose mercy cannot fail,
Lest even thy kindness prove a gilded tree.

The Redeemed Heart: An Ode Against Every Type of Cruelty by Debbie Harris

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In Christ’s dear name, where crimson mercy flows,
Redeemed souls rise, washed clean from Adam’s stain;
No longer thrall to sin’s unfeeling throes,
But bound in love’s bright, everlasting chain.
If thou art His, and bear the Savior’s mark,
Then hate the lash that scars the tender back,
The fist that strikes the child in shadowed dark,
The blade that lays the harmless creature slack.

O cruelty, thou viper from the pit,
Thou mock’st the Lord who healed the broken reed;
Who gathered lambs and bade the sparrow flit
Beneath His gaze, in gentle, sovereign heed.
He wept for Lazarus, for Jerusalem’s woe,
And stooped to lift the fallen, bruised, and low.

Shall we, bought dear with blood on Calvary’s tree,
Endure the groan of woman in her chains?
The orphan’s cry that rends the midnight sea,
The beast that bleeds beneath uncaring reins?
Nay—let the redeemed soul blaze with holy ire,
A furnace hot against each brutal wrong;
For love and hatred twine as sacred fire:
Love to the weak, and hatred fierce and strong.

To every hand that lifts in needless pain,
To every tongue that wounds the widow’s breast,
To every eye that sees and turns in vain—
The Christ within cries, “This shall find no rest!”
For He who made the eagle, ox, and dove,
And fashioned man in His own image bright,
Commands us guard the weak with jealous love,
And tread down cruelty with warrior’s might.

Thus walk, O soul, in garments white and pure,
A pilgrim marked by pity’s thorn-crowned brow;
Let mercy be thy banner, swift and sure,
Till heaven’s dawn dissolves all shadows now.
In Jesus’ name, where every tear is dried,
No cruelty shall stand—hate it, justified.

To Mother: The Eternal Hearth of Grace by Debbie Harris

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Dedicated to my amazing and brilliant Mom.

O thou, whose gentle hands first shaped the clay
Of this frail vessel breathing mortal air,
Whose voice, a silver thread in dawn’s first ray,
Dispelled the shadows of a world’s despair—
Thou art the hearth where all my winters warm,
The hidden spring that feeds the desert heart,
The steadfast star that guides through every storm,
The quiet strength that bids the soul take part.

Not marble monuments nor crowns of gold
Could match the silent labor of thy days:
The midnight watches, stories newly told,
The unseen mending of a thousand ways.
Thy love, like ancient rivers, deep and wide,
Flows on when all the fleeting empires fade.

Thou gav’st me roots that clutch the sacred earth
And wings to seek the heavens’ farthest dome;
In every triumph, in each quiet birth
Of thought or deed, thy spirit is my home.
Should ages crumble and the stars grow dim,
Still shall my grateful heart remember Him
Who lent thee to me for this little while—
My first, my last, my everlasting smile.

Mother, in thee true beauty finds its home,
And heaven’s quiet grace is fully known.

Awake, O Righteous! A Thundering Cry Against the Intellectual Atrocities of Modern Universities and the Urgent Call to Rescue Our Youth by the Sword of Truth, The Holy Bible by Debbie Harris

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In shadowed halls where once the Muses sang
Of truth and virtue, now the serpent’s fang
Doth pierce the tender minds of youth betrayed,
By cloaked professors in their gowns arrayed.
They preach the lie that God is dead and gone,
That flesh is all, and Heaven but a dawn
Of foolish fable; they exalt the base,
The lust of self, the pride of every race,
The twisted creed that mocks the sacred law
And calls the foulest vice a righteous cause.

Thus universities, those once-bright fanes,
Are turned to temples of demonic chains,
Where youth, once pure as lilies in the field,
Are taught to scorn the harvest God would yield.

Yet rise, O righteous! Lift the ancient sword
Of truth undimmed, the timeless, living Word!
Be not as reeds that bend before the gale,
Nor silent watchmen sleeping at the pale.
The hour demands bold hearts and steadfast feet—
Go forth as lions where the dragons meet!
Storm the groves of Academe with light,
With courage kindled by the Spirit’s might.
Let every father, mother, saint, and sage
Confront the lie that poisons youth’s young age.

Stand in the classrooms, stand in council halls,
Proclaim the Cross that breaks the strongest walls.
Write, speak, and pray with voices like the thunder;
Expose the darkness, rend its veils asunder.
Teach truth at home where universities fail,
Raise sons and daughters armored in the mail
Of righteousness. Let not one soul be lost
To intellectual atrocities’ cost.
Though scorn and cancel may assail your name,
The crown of life awaits the overcoming flame.

Ye scholars of the King, awake and rise!
The battle is not yours, but His who dies
And rose again. Go forth with holy fire,
To rescue minds and set the captives higher.
No compromise with Babel’s gilded tongue—
The righteous must be bold, the righteous strong.
For when the Savior comes in clouds of glory,
He shall not ask if ye were safe and sorry,
But whether ye contended for the faith,
Defended lambs against the wolves of death.

O universities, once Athens’ heirs,
Now fallen towers of unrighteous cares,
Thy day of pomp shall end in smoke and shame;
The Judge shall call each tempter by his name.
Repent, ye teachers! Ere the trumpet sound,
Cast down your idols, seek the holy ground.

But ye, beloved, take up the standard high—
A bold and courageous stand beneath the sky!
The youth may yet be freed by grace divine;
The faithful warriors shall in triumph shine.

Thus ends the call in rhyme of ancient mode:
Corruption’s wage is paid before God’s throne—
Yet victory waits for those who dare to fight
With truth and courage in the Savior’s light.

Friend of God, Stranger to This World: Where True Celebration Awaits in Heaven by Debbie Harris

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A faithful heart performs its sacred art—
Unseen deeds like incense, pure and bold,
Rising through the veil, untouched by earthly praise.

No trumpet sounds, no laurel crowns descend,
No crowds applaud the hands that serve in night.
The friend of God walks where few comprehend,
A stranger here, whose path the world calls slight.

For this world crowns its loud and gilded own,
The flash, the fame, the fleeting golden lie.
But Heaven’s ledger marks the seeds unsown
To mortal sight—each tear, each prayer, each sigh.

There, in the Lamb’s pure light, the veil will part,
And unseen labors bloom in endless day.
The Friend who sees in secret, searches heart,
Will celebrate with joy that none can take away.

So labor on, beloved, in holy shade,
Though earth forget, let not your spirit grieve.
The true ovation waits where stars are made—
In Heaven’s hall, where even silence sings.

Well done, thou good and faithful—enter in.
The crown of life outshines all earthly din.

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.