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  1. “The Cross and the Dawn: A Meditation on the Sorrowful Crucifixion and Triumphant Resurrection of Christ”
    This sonnet portrays the crucifixion’s grim brutality—Christ’s suffering on the cross with nails and splinters—followed by the triumphant dawn of His resurrection. It contrasts death’s darkness with the light of redemption, emphasizing His victory with the refrain “From death’s dark veil, He rose to reign.”
  2. “The Empty Tomb: Mary Magdalene’s Discovery of the Risen Lord in the Quiet of Easter Morning”
    Focused on Mary Magdalene’s encounter with the empty tomb, this poem captures the awe and hope of Easter morning. It describes the rolled-away stone, folded linen, and the realization of Christ’s resurrection, highlighting the power that broke death’s hold and birthed new life.
  3. “Crown of Thorns, Crown of Glory: The Journey from Christ’s Humiliation to His Eternal Exaltation”
    This sonnet traces Christ’s journey from the mocking crown of thorns during His passion to His glorified reign after resurrection. It moves through His crucifixion, burial, and triumphant rise, celebrating His transformation from shame to eternal kingship.
  4. “The Lamb’s Redemption: The Sacrificial Love of Jesus Fulfilled in His Victory Over Death”
    Centered on Christ as the sacrificial Lamb, this poem links His death on the cross to the Passover, portraying His blood as atonement for sin. It culminates in His resurrection, where the risen Shepherd leads His flock, fulfilling redemption’s promise.
  5. “Gethsemane to Galilee: Tracing Christ’s Path from the Garden of Agony to the Shores of Resurrection”
    This sonnet follows Christ from His anguished prayer in Gethsemane, through His crucifixion and burial, to His post-resurrection appearance by Galilee’s shores. It weaves human suffering with divine triumph, ending in the joy of His living presence among His disciples.

Together, these sonnets weave a narrative of Christ’s passion, death, and resurrection, reflecting the Paschal Mystery’s depth and glory.

1. The Cross and the Dawn

The hill stood stark, a shadowed frame,
Where love took on a mortal name.
The wood groaned low beneath His weight,
Splinters bore the sins of hate.
Nails bit deep, the sky turned grim,
Yet heaven sang a silent hymn—
From death’s dark veil, He rose to reign.

The crimson flowed, the earth did quake,
A thief’s last breath, a spear’s cruel rake.
Night draped the world in mourning’s hue,
While angels waited, still and true.
Then dawn awoke with golden fire,
A stone displaced, a soul’s desire—
From death’s dark veil, He rose to reign.

No tomb could hold the Light of men,
No shroud could bind what lives again.
The cross, once cruel, now stands redeemed,
A bridge where grace and glory streamed.
Through endless days, we’ll sing His worth,
The Dawn who conquered death’s rebirth—
From death’s dark veil, He rose to reign.


2. The Empty Tomb

The air was cool, the dawn was near,
A mourner came with trembling fear.
The stone, so vast, now rolled aside,
A hollow cave where hope had died.
She paused—her breath caught in the dew,
The scent of myrrh still lingered through.

No body lay where once He slept,
The linen folded, softly kept.
A whisper stirred the silence vast,
“The Lord is risen—free at last.”
Her heart, once stone, began to race,
She saw His life in empty space.

What power broke the seal of night?
What hand restored the morning’s light?
The tomb, a shell, now sings His praise,
A testament through endless days.
Death’s grip was loosed, its victory torn,
For Christ, the King, that day was born.


3. Crown of Thorns, Crown of Glory

They wove a crown with twisted vine,
A cruel jest for the Divine.
Thorns pierced deep, His brow did bleed,
A king they mocked in bitter need.
The weight of scorn, He bore alone,
A suffering Lamb upon His throne.

The nails were driven, shadows fell,
A cry rang out—redemption’s knell.
Beneath the cross, the faithful wept,
While in the tomb, His form was kept.
Three days of silence, cold and still,
Obeyed the Father’s sovereign will.

Now see the crown that shines afar,
No thorns remain, no earthly scar.
A diadem of radiant gold,
The risen King, foretold of old.
From shame to splendor, death to life,
He reigns above all pain and strife—
The Crown of Glory, evermore.


4. The Lamb’s Redemption

A Lamb was led through ancient dust,
To bear the weight of human lust.
His blood was spilled, a scarlet sign,
Fulfilling law with love divine.
The Passover, once shadows cast,
In Him became the feast at last.

Upon the hill, the altar stood,
A cross of rough and rugged wood.
No blemish marked His gentle frame,
Yet for our guilt, He took the blame.
The earth received that sacred flood,
Atonement sealed in holy blood.

But lo, the Lamb no longer lies,
He lives, He reigns beyond the skies!
The fleece of death could not contain,
The Shepherd risen to sustain.
Through gates of pearl, His flock He leads,
The Lamb redeemed our every need.


5. Gethsemane to Galilee

In olive groves, the night was deep,
He knelt where mortal fears would creep.
The cup was bitter, shadows long,
Yet still He sang redemption’s song.
His sweat like blood upon the ground,
A Savior’s love in silence found.

The cross arose, the dawn was lost,
His life the ransom, paid the cost.
Within the tomb, the stillness grew,
As heaven watched what hell would do.
But stone gave way, the grave was rent,
A triumph death could not prevent.

By Galilee, the waves were still,
He stood alive on yonder hill.
The fishers saw, their hearts aflame,
The risen Lord who called their name.
From garden’s grief to shore’s embrace,
Christ reigns in everlasting grace.