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he sonnet affirms the unchanging nature of Christianity and its core Gospel message. It declares that the good news of salvation—unchanged for 2,000 years—requires no updates or adaptations to fit modern times, cultures, or philosophies. While empires fall, ideas fade, and societies evolve, the truth of Christ crucified remains fixed and sufficient. God’s Word endures eternally, unaltered by human councils, trends, or shifting eras. The poem urges faithful proclamation of this timeless message: Christ crucified, risen, and reigning—offering the same salvation today as always, despite any contemporary mockery or pressure to conform.In essence, it celebrates the Gospel’s immutability as a strength, not a flaw, and calls believers to proclaim it boldly in every generation.

The ancient Gospel rings through changeless years,
No varnish fresh, no tint of modern hue,
The selfsame tidings that once quelled men’s fears
Still pierce the heart as sharp as ever true.

Though empires rise and crumble into dust,
Though fashions whirl and philosophies decay,
The cross stands fixed where mercy met with trust,
And blood once shed still washes sin away.

No council’s vote, no age’s shifting creed
Can add or take one jot from what was given;
The Word endures, the message all men need—
Christ crucified, Christ risen, Christ in heaven.

Proclaim Him still, though mocking voices rise:
The same salvation lives, the same, the prize.