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Summary of the Poem
Wings of Unmeasured Grace: An Ode Celebrating the Mercy That Is Infinite as the Eternal One Who Bestows It

The poem is a classical ode that exalts the infinite, boundless nature of God’s mercy, directly inspired by Charles Spurgeon’s assertion that “there is nothing little in God; His mercy is like Himself; it is infinite. You cannot measure it.”

Key themes and progression:

  1. Mercy as an immense, uncontainable force
    It is portrayed not as a small or limited gift, but as a vast, fathomless ocean with no shores—endlessly surging, rising higher than human pride or sin, and ultimately overwhelming the soul in grace.
  2. Cosmic and natural grandeur
    The poet draws on majestic images of the sky (an unmeasurable firmament scattering starlight), ancient forests (ever-green mercy walking among shadows), and the dawn (gilding broken hearts after endless night) to illustrate that God’s pity is as expansive and enduring as creation itself.
  3. Triumph over human limitation
    No sin is too deep, no time too long, no guilt too great to be barred from this mercy. It pardons the unnameable, lifts the beggar, and crowns the unworthy.
  4. Divine infinity as the source
    The mercy flows directly from God’s own infinite nature—the Eternal Mind, the boundless breast—making it impossible for human tools (calipers, gauges, compasses) to measure or contain it.
  5. Liberation and rest
    The poem closes in joyful surrender: by launching into this “boundless deep,” the soul discovers true freedom. God’s mercy embraces worlds, redeems the lost, and invites every weary wanderer into eternal rest.

In essence, the ode is a lyrical celebration and meditation: God’s mercy is not a measured handout but a living, radiant, ever-rising reality—coextensive with His own being—vast enough to swallow every darkness and gentle enough to bear the soul on wings forever.

No petty stream this mercy flows,
But ocean fathomless and wide,
Where horizons melt in liquid gold
And every wave is mercy’s tide.

No shore confines its restless surge;
It breaks on cliffs of human pride,
Yet rises higher, ever higher,
To drown the soul in grace allied.

Behold the vaulted firmament—
No caliper can span its dome—
So vast His pity, star by star
It scatters light through heaven’s gloam.

The ancient cedars bow their heads
In forests deep where shadows play,
Yet mercy walks the mossy floor,
A living green that knows no decay.

Like sunrise born of endless night,
It gilds the ruined heart anew;
No chain of sin, no length of years,
Can bar its entrance, bright and true.

Infinite as the Eternal Mind
From whence all being springs and sings,
It pardons depths we dare not name
And crowns the beggar with its wings.

O Thou whose mercy mocks our gauge,
Whose compass none can hold or see,
We launch into Thy boundless deep—
And find ourselves forever free.

In Thee, O God, no littleness dwells;
Thy mercy, vast as Thine own breast,
Embraces worlds, redeems the lost,
And bids the weary wanderer rest.