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In the august annals of divine revelation, where the eternal intersects the temporal in moments of awe and trembling, three chosen prophets were summoned to an act of profound ingestion: to consume the very Word of God Himself—an encounter at once visceral and mystical, literal in obedience yet laden with inexhaustible layers of symbolism. Jeremiah, amid the crumbling ruins of Judah and the encroaching specter of Babylonian exile, discovered the oracles of the Lord and inwardly devoured them, declaring them the very joy and rejoicing of his heart even as national catastrophe loomed. Ezekiel, languishing in captivity beside the waters of Chebar, beheld a celestial hand proffering a scroll inscribed with lamentation, mourning, and woe; commanded to eat, he found it sweet as honey upon his tongue, though its message foretold unrelenting judgment upon a rebellious house. Centuries later, on the desolate, wave-beaten isle of Patmos, the beloved apostle John received from a mighty angel a little open book, which proved honeyed in his mouth yet embittered his bowels—a foretaste of both divine glory and the apocalyptic sorrows he must proclaim.

These three sacred episodes unveil a transcendent truth: the Word must first be assimilated into the prophet’s sinews and spirit—transmuted from external scroll to internal fire—before authentic proclamation or faithful living can issue forth. For everyday believers today, this means moving beyond casual reading into deep ingestion through slow, repeated meditation, prayerful internalization, prompt obedience, and expectant acceptance of both sweetness and bitterness. By making Scripture part of our very being, ordinary lives can be kindled with the same “prophet-fire” that sustained Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and John.

What follows is a classical poem in rigorous iambic pentameter and ABAB rhyme, meditating upon these holy instances.

When heaven’s clarion voice pierced mortal night,

Three vessels bowed beneath the Almighty’s hand.

They seized the scroll of truth in burning light

And made God’s very words their soul’s command.

First Jeremiah, crushed by Judah’s fall,

When exile’s gloom enshrouded Zion’s throne,

Found heaven’s oracles and ate them all:

“Thy words became my joy, my heart’s alone.”

No parchment passed his lips, yet deep he fed;

God’s fire blazed within his quaking breast.

Though scourge and scorn assailed his weary head,

He spoke undaunted, bearing heaven’s behest.

Then by Chebar’s banks in captive thrall,

Ezekiel saw a hand stretch forth the roll—

Lamentation, mourning, woe for all,

Yet honey-sweet when taken, whole and full.

“Son of man, consume what thou dost find,”

The sovereign voice compelled with thunderous might.

He ate; the scroll became his flesh and mind,

And forth he strode to warn a stubborn night.

At last on Patmos’ wave-lashed, stony shore,

John took the little open book from heaven’s throne.

“Take, eat,” the angel cried; he asked no more.

Sweet as wild honey in the mouth alone,

Yet bitter gall within his belly burned.

He prophesied anew of nations’ doom,

Of kingdoms crushed where once the mighty spurned

The Lamb who rose triumphant from the tomb.

O pilgrim soul, receive this ancient lore:

God’s word must first be eaten, deep consumed—

Not lightly skimmed along the surface shore,

But wholly taken, sweetened and illumed.

Let it dissolve within thy inmost part

Till prophet-fire ignites thy faltering heart.

Then speak undaunted, whether sweet or sore,

For thus alone is heaven’s message borne.