A Glorious Christmas Tribute to Jesus Christ: The Eternal King of Kings and Lord of Lords Born in Bethlehem’s Manger by Debbie Harris

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A Glorious Christmas Tribute to Jesus Christ: The Eternal King of Kings and Lord of Lords Born in Bethlehem’s Manger” is a devotional Christmas poem that celebrates the Incarnation and divine majesty of Jesus Christ. The poem opens with the humble Nativity scene: the eternal King of Kings and Lord of Lords lying in a manger under the guiding star, worshipped by angels and shepherds despite His lack of earthly splendor. It emphasizes the mystery of the Incarnation—the Eternal Word becoming flesh to redeem humanity from sin. Subsequent stanzas exalt Jesus with biblical titles: Prince of Peace, Alpha and Omega, Living Bread, Saving Word, and Lamb of God. It recalls the Magi’s gifts foreshadowing His death and kingship, and proclaims His virgin birth, divine nature, and atoning sacrifice. The poem culminates in joyful adoration, offering glory, laud, and honor to Christ the eternal King, with a plea for Him to reign in believers’ hearts. It closes on a triumphant note of worship, inviting all to bless the majestic Lord of Lords on Christmas night and forever. Overall, the poem is a heartfelt hymn of praise that contrasts Christ’s humble birth with His supreme sovereignty, inviting readers to rejoice in the Savior’s coming and eternal reign.

In Bethlehem’s humble manger low,
Beneath a star that burned with heaven’s glow,
The King of Kings in swaddling lay,
The Lord of Lords, the Light of Day.

No crown of gold upon His brow,
Yet angels sang and shepherds bowed;
The Eternal Word in flesh appeared,
To conquer sin and dry each tear.

O Jesus Christ, Thou Prince of Peace,
Thy love shall never fade nor cease;
From David’s throne Thou reign’st supreme,
Redeemer of the world’s lost dream.

The wise men brought their gifts of praise,
Foreseeing glory through endless days;
Myrrh, frankincense, and gold they bore
To worship Him whom heavens adore.

Thou art the Alpha and Omega, Lord,
The Living Bread, the Saving Word;
By virgin born, yet God divine,
Thy blood has made the sinner Thine.

All glory, laud, and honor be
To Christ the King eternally;
Hosanna in the highest strain—
Come, reign in us, and reign again!

This Christmas night we lift our song
To Thee, O Lamb, where saints belong;
Forever crowned with majesty,
Our King of Kings, our Lord of Lords—bless Thee!

I Am His And He Is Mine by Debbie Harris

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This concise poem is a joyful expression of Christian faith and devotion to Jesus Christ.

It opens with a declaration that the name “Jesus” causes the speaker’s heart to sing—an immediate, exuberant response of praise and delight.

The poem then affirms a profound truth: “For I am His and He is mine.” This line conveys complete ownership and belonging: the speaker belongs fully to Christ (“I am His”), and Christ belongs fully to the speaker (“He is mine”). It reflects the biblical reality of salvation, where the believer is redeemed, adopted, and united with Christ in an unbreakable covenant relationship.

In just a few lines, the poem distills the heart of the gospel: joy in the person of Jesus, and the security of belonging to Him forever. It is a simple yet powerful testimony of faith, gratitude, and assurance in one’s relationship with the Savior. ✨

The name Jesus
makes my heart
sing!
For I am His
and He is mine!

Hidden Crowns And Treasures In Holy Scripture by Debbie Harris

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The poem is a single, powerful line proclaiming the glorious truth that believers, royally redeemed by Christ, have priceless eternal treasures—wisdom, forgiveness, crowns of glory—waiting to be discovered in the pure and flawless Word of our Triune God (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit).

It’s an invitation to seek and find heavenly riches hidden in Scripture. 👑📖✝️

1 Peter 2:9 (ESV)
But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.

Ephesians 1:7 (ESV)
In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of our trespasses, according to the riches of his grace.

Matthew 13:44 (ESV)
“The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and covered up. Then in his joy he goes and sells all that he has and buys that field.”

Psalm 12:6 (ESV)
The words of the LORD are pure words, like silver refined in a furnace on the ground, purified seven times.

Proverbs 30:5 (ESV)
Every word of God proves true; he is a shield to those who take refuge in him.

Matthew 28:19 (ESV)
Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.

Royally redeemed

treasures await

you in the flawless

Word of Our Triune God!

Every Mountain a Jewel, Every Sea a Song: The Whole Earth Crowned with the Beauty of Our Saviour(Colossians 1:15–17, KJV) by Debbie Harris

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Colossians 1:15–17 (KJV)


Who is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of every creature:
For by him were all things created, that are in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers: all things were created by him, and for him:
And he is before all things, and by him all things consist.

The whole earth was created
and crowned with the beauty
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Every blade of grass
a thread in His royal robe,
every mountain ridge
a jewel set upon His brow.

The oceans roar His praise
in thunder-language of waves,
the forests lift green hands
and tremble with His name.

Sunrise spills molten gold
across the waking lands,
a daily coronation
for the King who holds the worlds.

Stars burn as candles
round His midnight throne,
and every breath of wind
whispers, “All for Him,
all by Him,
all through Him alone.”

The whole earth—
a single, shining diadem
laid at the feet
of Jesus Christ,
the everlasting Lord.
Amen.

Behold the Beauty: Jesus Christ, the Living Holy Ornament and Slain Lamb Worthy of Endless Alleluias by Debbie Harris

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Jesus Christ is the most beautiful, transforming, and redemptive living treasure that adorns the inside of us. He is our precious Savior, Lord, and King. Therefore, let us come with joyful adoration, singing “Alleluia!” to the Lamb who was slain, worshiping Christ alone, now and forever

The most beautiful, transforming,
redemptive living Holy ornament within is Jesus Christ our precious,
beloved Savior, Lord, and King.

Come sing Alleluia as we
adoringly worship Christ alone!

Alleluia to the Lamb who was slain!

From Lukewarm Bath to Roaring Fire: Refusing the Slow Death of Cultural Compromise by Debbie Harris

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The poem is a prophetic lament and rallying cry against the slow, deadly compromise that has overtaken much of the church in the face of secular culture.

It opens with the classic “frog in the kettle” image: Christians have grown so accustomed to gradual moral and theological erosion (soft language, fear of offense, accommodation to abortion, sexual revolution, and gender ideology) that they no longer notice they are being spiritually cooked to death. Instead of wielding the sharp sword of God’s Word, the church has muffled it with cushions, whispers, and qualifiers, rendering itself powerless and silent while evil advances.

Yet the tone sharply turns. The Lion of Judah is not tame or polite; He still roars, and His Word remains a hammer, not a sentimental relic. The blood of the martyrs calls not for retreat but for fresh courage.

The poem then becomes a direct summons:
Rise from the lukewarm bath, shake off the stupor, and reclaim biblical boldness. True love and true truth are inseparable; one without the other is either cowardice or cruelty. The church must again speak with fire about sin, righteousness, judgment, and the cross, refusing to lower the sails of conviction no matter how fiercely the cultural winds howl.

It closes with an unapologetic confession of Christ’s absolute lordship over every sphere of life (womb, marriage bed, gender, throne, chromosome, and heartbeat), and a defiant affirmation that though the world may curse and cancel, the Word of God stands forever.

In short: the poem mourns the church’s church’s slow suicide by compromise, remembers the untamed power of the gospel, and calls every believer to leap from the kettle into the roaring fire of faithful, costly, joyful obedience.

The frog in the kettle never felt the flame,
slow heat, soft words, the gentle hiss of shame.
“Tone it down,” they smiled, “don’t rock the narrowing boat,”
so the church learned to whisper what once shook Jericho’s throat.

We traded the sword of the Spirit for a cushion and sigh,
wrapped truth in wet blankets till the fire dared not fly.
Abortion was “complex,” marriage “evolving,” grace grew cheap,
while babies went silent and children were taught to leap
into rainbow-colored graves dug by judges in black,
and we nodded politely—God, forgive us our lack.

But the Lion of Judah is not house-trained or tame;
He roars through the ages and still calls sin by name.
The blood of the martyrs is seed, not museum dust;
the Word is a hammer, not a sentimental crust.

So rise, you watchmen, from the lukewarm bath,
shake off the stupor of culture’s slow wrath.
Let the sharp two-edged blade flash white in the sun;
love without truth is no love—truth without love is no gun.

We will speak of the holy with fire, not frost,
of the wrath and the mercy that met at the cross.
We will call every prodigal home through the dark,
and refuse to strike sail when the culture cries “Hark!”

For the gates of hell will not prevail, though they howl and they rave;
Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will bury the grave.
So plant both feet on the rock that the builders disowned,
and thunder again what the Spirit once moaned:

Jesus is Lord—
over womb, bed, and throne,
over chromosome, heartbeat, and marrow and bone.
And the world may curse, cancel, or cancel again,
but the Word stands forever.
Amen and amen.

If God Be For Us, Who Can Be Against Us by Debbie Harris

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Summary (one sentence):
A bold, triumphant poem celebrating the invincible truth of Romans 8:31—“If God is for us, who can be against us?”—by declaring that no enemy, power, trial, or even death itself can prevail against those whom God defends, illustrated through biblical victories and culminating in Christ’s ultimate triumph.

Core message: With God as our champion, every adversary is already defeated; therefore we stand fearless and victorious.

Who shall rise when Heaven’s banner flies?
The Almighty stands—His thunder fills the skies!
No horde of hell, no empire forged in pride,
Can breach the rampart where Jehovah hides
His chosen ones beneath the shadow of His sword.

Let Pharaoh’s chariots rattle on the shore,
Let Goliath roar and shake his spear once more—
The sea divides, the stone already sings,
The giant falls before the King of kings.
If God be for us, trembling foes are dust.

The lions’ den grows silent at His word,
The fiery furnace cools where faith is heard;
Three men walk free, a fourth like Heaven’s Son—
The flames bow low, the battle already won.

Though darkness plot and principalities rage,
Though death itself turn every mortal page,
Yet Christ has torn the veil and burst the grave—
The Victor rises, and His risen wave
Sweeps every enemy beneath eternal tide.

So lift the anthem, blood-bought and unafraid:
Our Captain fights, and every debt is paid!
If God be for us—who? Let legions come—
They charge to ruin ‘gainst the Lord of hosts’ own drum.

The gates of hell shall splinter, crack, and yield;
The Lamb Himself rides forth upon the field.
All heaven thunders, earth and grave confess:
Victorious is the Lord our Righteousness!

If God be for us—who can stand against?
Not one. Not ever.
Amen. And amen.

O Boundless Mercy, Matchless Worth: A Hymn of Redemption’s Embrace by Debbie Harris

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The poem traces the breathtaking journey of a soul under the gaze of a holy God.It begins with unflinching honesty: Jesus Christ sees everything, every hidden sin, every hypocritical prayer, every tear we refused to cry, and the spiritual death we carried while pretending to live.Yet the moment a person truly repents (when pride finally breaks, when the heart turns back with nothing to offer but its own ruin), everything changes. Mercy pours like an ocean without shores, grace covers completely, and divine love stoops from heaven to embrace the unworthy. The Judge Himself becomes the sacrifice, paying the price on Calvary.No earthly treasure or human achievement can compare to this gift: to be completely known in all our shame, yet completely loved, forgiven, cleansed, and (astonishingly) crowned with heavenly honor.In short, the poem celebrates the heart of the gospel: God’s boundless mercy and matchless grace transform the most broken sinner into a beloved, glorified child welcomed home forever.

Our Savior sees the hidden stain,
The secret sin, the silent shame;
Each thought that shuns the light of day,
Each wandering step that went astray.

He knows the heart that feigned to pray,
The lips that lied, the hands that strayed;
He marks the tears we never shed,
The living death where hope has fled.

Yet when the broken spirit turns,
When pride dissolves and sorrow burns,
When empty hands at last confess
Their ruin and unrighteousness—

Then mercy, like a boundless sea,
Flows from the throne of Calvary;
Then grace, unmeasured and unstinted,
Covers the soul once foul and tainted.

Love bends the heavens, comes down low,
To kiss the brow once bent with woe;
The Judge becomes the Ransom price,
And God Himself is sacrifice.

No gift beneath the stars above,
No treasure born of human love,
Can match this wonder, pure and free—
Redeeming grace on Calvary’s tree.

O boundless mercy, matchless worth!
The greatest gift on sinful earth:
To be fully known, yet fully loved,
Forgiven, cleansed, and crowned in heaven above.

Maranatha by Debbie Harris

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The night is wide, yet one star holds its place,
a silver promise nailed against the sky;
the dark is deep, but dawn has touched its face
and left a quiet light for every eye.
The cold is fierce, yet somewhere spring lies curled
within the secret heart of the frost;
a single word still trembles through the world
and will not let one living thing be lost.

Maranatha.
Come, Dayspring, rise with healing in Thy wings,
come, Root of Jesse, bloom where winters cease;
come, Key of David, open hidden things
and set Thy captives into sudden peace.
Come, quiet Breath upon the waters blown,
and make the chaos hear Thee and be still;
come, set the longing heart upon Thy throne
and be the rest that only love can fill.

Maranatha.
The table waits with cup and living bread,
the lamps are trimmed, the bridal door ajar;
each heartbeat is a footstep in Thy tread,
each sigh a guiding signal to Thy star.
Come, take the cup and break the bread anew,
come, speak the mercy-name we barely dare;
come, turn the water into morning dew
and make the wounded world divinely fair.

Maranatha.
We have no crown but expectation’s fire,
no gift but waiting hands held open wide;
yet every breath repeats the heart’s desire
that soon the Bridegroom claim His waiting Bride.
Come, Morning Star, outshine our brightest sun,
come, Rose of Sharon, flood the desert plain;
come, fairest Lord, until our night is done
and beauty walks the streets of earth again.

Maranatha.
Come quickly, Lord, yet come as Thou know’st best;
come, Jesus, come, and make the whole world sing.
Come, lay Thy hand upon the trembling dust
and turn our winter into endless spring.
Come, Lord Jesus. Come, and we shall see Thy face, Thy glory, Thy eternity. Maranatha. Amen. Even so, come.

The Wonder That the Maker Dwells Within the Made When Redeemedby Debbie Harris

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Summary of the Poem
Emmanuel: The Wonder That the Maker Dwells Within the Made When Redeemed

The poem is a sustained hymn of awe at the twin mysteries of the Incarnation and the indwelling Christ.

It begins with the Nativity: heaven stooping to earth, the eternal Word becoming a helpless infant in Mary’s womb and Bethlehem’s manger, hailed by angels yet unrecognized by the world.

It then celebrates the meaning of “Emmanuel” (God with us): the tearing of the veil, the end of our exile, and the astonishing reality that the same God who lay in a manger now chooses to live inside believing hearts.

The central wonder is repeatedly sounded: the Infinite contracts to the size of a human span, the Ever-Strong willingly takes the form of weakness for our salvation, and the Creator of the stars makes His throne inside frail, sinful human beings. No cathedral could contain the glory that now quietly resides in the believer’s breast.

The poem closes with an exultant response: though our voices are small and our hearts once were wilderness, every pulse now confesses its hidden Guest, and the soul is moved to perpetual praise because Emmanuel (God with us, God in us) has made the human heart His chosen, eternal home.

In essence, it is a lyrical meditation on the staggering truth that the One who was born in Bethlehem has been reborn in us, turning dust into temple and sinners into sanctuaries of the living God.

O silent night, when heaven stooped to earth,
A maiden’s womb became the gate of light;
The Word made flesh, of uncontested worth,
Lay cradled low beneath the stars’ pure sight.

No crown of gold upon His infant brow,
Yet seraph hosts in trembling rapture sing;
The Shepherd-King, who left His throne to bow,
Hath come to make our mortal hearts His wing.

Emmanuel! The name like incense burns,
God with us now, no longer far above;
The veil is rent, the exile’s heart returns,
And finds its home within eternal Love

.O marvel past the reach of seraph’s song:
The Infinite contracts to span a span;
The Ever-Strong takes weakness for our wrong,
Yet fills with boundless might the heart of man.

Within this cage of dust and fleeting breath,
The Lord of glory deigns to make His throne;
Beyond the grasp of darkness and of death,
Christ walks the secret chambers of my own.

What cathedral vault, what marble dome
Could hold the splendor that my heart now keeps?
The Maker of the stars hath found a home
Where once my trembling, sinful spirit weeps.

O grace too vast for angel minds to scan!
O love too deep for time or tongue to trace!
The great I AM dwells in the heart of man,
And turns a wilderness to holy place.

Then sing, my soul, though voice be poor and small;
Let every pulse confess its hidden Guest;
Emmanuel! My Lord, my Life, my All,
Hath come, and made my heart His chosen rest.

Glory to God in the highest, with us, within us, forever.