Tags
Biblical Truth, Christ Centered Devotionals, Christian Poetry, christianity, faith, Inspirational, Royally Redeemed, theology
The sonnet condemns a sinister and wicked ritual occurring between April 21st and 26th, where a secretive Satanist group abducts and prepares an innocent victim for sacrifice. It describes the period as a time of evil, marked by the binding and defilement of the victim in a dark ceremony that honors Satan and extinguishes human light. The poem expresses horror and revulsion at this cruel practice, calling it a profane and merciless act. Despite the bleakness, it ends with a glimmer of hope, wishing for justice to intervene and liberate the victim from this unholy torment.
The shadowed days of April’s cruel embrace,
From twenty-first to sixth, a vile rite grows,
A wicked cult in secrecy does trace
The steps of evil where no mercy flows.
A victim bound, their innocence defiled,
Prepar’d for sacrifice to sate the flame,
In rituals where darkness is beguiled,
And Satan’s name is whispered without shame.
Oh, how the heart recoils at such a deed,
Where human light is snuffed by hands profane,
A ceremonial curse, a twisted creed,
That revels in the innocent’s deep pain.
Yet hope endures—may justice strike them low,
And free the soul from this unholy woe.