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The poem challenges the common Christian teaching that feeling offended always signals personal pride, immaturity, or rebellion that must be quickly repented of and silenced. Instead, it argues that offense can sometimes function as a divine signal—a “trumpet” from the Holy Spirit—alerting the believer to something wrong in the spiritual environment, particularly when authority has become abusive, manipulative, or domineering under the guise of “godly submission” and “correction.”

Drawing on biblical examples (Jesus as the stumbling stone to corrupt religion, prophets whose words provoked offense to expose falsehood), the poem urges discernment rather than automatic self-blame. When “correction” demands blind compliance, punishes questions, weaponizes shame, or refuses dialogue, the resulting sting may not be a flaw in the hearer but heaven’s own confrontation with what is masquerading as righteousness.

The poem encourages believers to pause, test the fruit (restoration vs. control), weigh the spirit behind the words, and protect their God-given conscience. True godly correction is humble, open, and freeing; counterfeit correction is controlling and silencing. In such cases, the “offended” heart becomes a barometer—an awakened, watchful instrument registering misalignment—and the offense itself can be a prophetic call to stand courageously rather than shrink in false submission.

Ultimately, the poem affirms that not every offense must be forgiven into silence or buried as sin; some are holy alarms that must be allowed to ring, inviting the believer to rise, discern, and refuse to bow before what heaven itself is already confronting.

They taught us young that offense spells defeat,
A crack within the soul where pride’s deceit
Reveals itself in every wounded sigh—
“Repent,” they say, “and bow, and hush, comply.”

Yet not all barbs are born of rebel will;
Some pierce like wind that finds the window’s sill,
Not self-inflicted, but from skies above,
A trumpet blown by hands of holy love.

When “submit” is whispered as a chain,
When questions earn the brand of dark disdain,
When “you’re unteachable” becomes the rod
To silence every seeking child of God—

Then feel the sting, but do not curse your frame;
It may be heaven calling out your name.
Not pride that rises, but a watchful fire,
A signal flashing through the soul’s desire.

The Christ who walked was scandal to the proud,
A stone they struck until their voices loud
Proclaimed Him wrong, while truth stood firm and bright—
Offense was not His failing, but their night.

The prophets spoke and kingdoms shook with dread;
Their words were swords that cut through comfort’s thread.
They stirred the sleepers, broke the false accord—
Offense became the echo of the Lord.

So when the thorn sinks deep and bids you pause,
Do not rush headlong to your heart’s own flaws.
Inquire instead with trembling, honest breath:
“Is this the Lamb who leads me past my death,

Or does it press me toward a shadowed throne
Where fear, not grace, claims lordship for its own?”
Test every word by fruit that Spirit bears—
Not shame that binds, but love that frees and cares.

For true correction comes with open hand,
Restores the fallen, helps the weary stand.
It welcomes light, invites the searching mind,
And never chains the conscience God designed.

But when the voice demands you close your eyes,
When clarification meets with swift disguise,
When “rebellion” labels every honest plea—
Then heaven stirs the barometer in thee.

Rise, then, and stand where trembling hearts have knelt;
The sting you bear may be the truth you felt.
Not flaw to bury, not a sin to flee—
But trumpet sounding: “This is not from Me.”

Selah.
Let the alarm ring clear and unafraid.
Some offenses are the stand that must be made.