A Poetic Psalter Celebrating the Seven Days of Divine Artistry: From Uncreated Light To Holy Rest: A Septet Of Praise For The Days Of Genesis by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , ,

Awakening the Cosmos – A 7-Day Praise-Poem

  1. Uncreated Light – God speaks; raw light shatters darkness into molten dawn.
  2. Vault of Breath – Waters part, sky domes; sapphire firmament cradles unborn storms.
  3. Green Awakening – Seas recede, land rises; seeds burst into orchards of quiet fire.
  4. Lamps of Eternity – Sun, moon, stars hung as censer, coin, and nails in night’s scroll.
  5. Choir of the Deep – Oceans teem; leviathan and minnow sing in silver symphony.
  6. Image-Bearer – Dust breathes, man and woman walk as kings naming miracle and ache.
  7. Holy Pause – Creation halts in perfect hush; Sabbath dew crowns the finished world.

Day 1: The Uncreated Light
Before the ledger of time was inked,
You spoke, and darkness learned its name—
not absence, but a velvet womb
where silence pooled like liquid obsidian.
Then light—
not the sun’s borrowed coin,
but the raw mint of Your breath—
struck the void like flint on steel.
It scattered in shards of molten gold,
each photon a syllable of Your joy,
and the abyss, astonished,
blushed into morning.
Praise the Voice that split the night
and taught the dark to dream.

Day 2: The Vault of Breath
You lifted the waters like a curtain
and stretched a sky between—
a hammered sheet of sapphire,
thin as a lover’s sigh,
yet strong enough to hold
the thunder’s unborn roar.
Clouds drifted in like sheep
fresh-shorn of storm,
their underbellies bruised with rain.
The deep below kept its ancient counsel,
mirroring the heavens in a glass of salt.
Praise the Architect who set a dome
where breath could learn to fly.

Day 3: The Green Awakening
You gathered the seas in Your cupped hands,
and land rose—
not timid, but eager—
shoulders of granite, hips of loam,
a body ready to be clothed.
Seeds cracked open like secrets,
unfurled green tongues to taste the sun.
Orchards erupted in quiet fire,
petals the color of bruised dawn;
vines stitched the earth with emerald thread.
Every root a prayer,
every leaf a hallelujah.
Praise the Gardener whose whisper
turned dust to orchestra.

Day 4: The Lamps of Eternity
You hung the sun like a censer
swinging incense of molten noon;
the moon, a silver coin
pressed to the lip of night.
Stars—
not pinpricks, but nails
driven through the dark to hold it open—
spilled their ancient light
across the scroll of space.
Galaxies wheeled in slow sarabande,
comets trailed white fire like bridal veils.
Praise the Lamplighter who taught time
to keep its appointments.

Day 5: The Choir of the Deep
The seas convulsed with delight—
scales flashed like shattered mirrors,
wings of gulls stitched sky to wave.
Leviathan sang bass in the abyss,
while minnows piped descants
in silver filigree.
Eagles carved the wind with knives of bone,
their shadows racing over dunes.
Every creature a note
in the wild hymn of becoming.
Praise the Composer who tuned the waters
to a symphony of breath.

Day 6: The Image-Bearer
You stooped,
gathered dust as a sculptor gathers clay,
and breathed.
The clod flinched,
then stood—
adam, red as the earth he came from,
eyes wide with borrowed starlight.
Beside him, woman—
rib curved like a crescent moon,
laughter already blooming in her throat.
They walked among the beasts
as kings in a court of miracles,
naming lion, naming lamb,
naming the ache inside their chests.
Praise the Potter who signed His work
with a heartbeat.

Day 7: The Holy Pause
You ceased.
Not from weariness,
but from the perfection of enough.
The world spun on its axis
like a top You set in motion,
humming with finished grace.
You sat—
if sitting is what gods do—
and the silence was a sanctuary.
Sabbath settled like dew on cedar,
like mercy on the wounded world.
Praise the Rest-Giver
who taught creation
the art of being still
and knowing.

Jesus, My All by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , ,

Jesus, You are my hope—
the dawn that breaks the night,
my glory—crown of light
that turns my shame to white.

My victory—sword and shield
when battles rage within,
my song—melody unsealed
that silences my sin.

May praise rise like incense sweet
from heart and soul and mind,
a ceaseless flame, a steady beat,
all day long entwined.

In every breath, in every thought,
Your name alone I sing;
my hope, my glory, victory wrought—
Jesus, my everything.

A Thanksgiving Prayer To Our Triune God by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , ,

This poem is a lyrical prayer of gratitude addressed to the Triune God—Father, Son (Jesus), and Holy Spirit—celebrating God’s abundant provision and presence. Structured in five stanzas, it weaves agricultural imagery (harvest, wheat, grapes) with theological depth to express thanks for both physical and spiritual blessings.

  • Stanza 1 (Father): Thanks God the Father for creation’s bounty—dawn, rain, and the harvest—symbolizing His generous provision.
  • Stanza 2 (Son): Thanks Jesus as the Vine and broken bread, linking the Lord’s Supper to redemption and life from death.
  • Stanza 3 (Spirit): Thanks the Holy Spirit as wind and fire, for inner renewal and the warmth of faith.
  • Stanza 4 (Trinity): Praises the unified Three-in-One God as eternal Light, giver of breath, sight, and enduring love.
  • Stanza 5 (Response): Overwhelmed by gratitude (“so much to be thankful for”), the speaker offers imperfect words as worship to the King.

Core Theme: Profound thanksgiving for material and eternal gifts, rooted in the distinct yet united persons of the Trinity, culminating in joyful praise.

Father of mercies, whose open hand
spills dawn across the stubbled land,
we thank You for the furrow’s yield,
for wheat that bows, for rain that healed.

Jesus, the Vine, whose blood runs red
in every grape the harvesters tread,
we thank You for the table spread,
for broken bread that raises dead.

Spirit, wild Wind, who fans the flame
in every heart that speaks His name,
we thank You for the kindled coal
that warms the marrow of the soul.

Three Persons, one unshadowed Light,
You hold the day, You hold the night;
for breath, for sight, for love that stays,
we lift this triune hymn of praise.

So much to thank You for—too much
for any tongue, yet every crutch
of word we lean on bends and sings:
all glory to the King of kings.

The Inestimable Treasure That Never Ends Is Jesus Christ, Our Savior, Lord, And King by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , ,

Summary of the Poem

The poem celebrates Jesus Christ as the ultimate, inexhaustible treasure—priceless, eternal, and infinitely renewing.

It portrays Him in three majestic roles:

  • Savior: who redeems us through His sacrifice on the cross,
  • Lord: who reigns with sovereign power yet tender care,
  • King: whose kingdom and glory have no end.

No matter how deeply we draw from His mercy, grace, wisdom, or love, the supply never diminishes—the more we take, the more He gives. The poem invites every weary soul to come empty-handed and be filled from this boundless, inestimable treasure: Jesus Christ, our Savior, Lord, and King.

In fields of grace, beneath the sky’s wide dome,
A treasure lies no map has ever shown—
Not gold that dims, nor gems that lose their fire,
But Christ Himself, the heart’s unspoken choir.

We dig with faith through layers of our days,
Past guilt’s dark soil and fear’s entangling maze;
Each spade of prayer strikes deeper than the last,
Unveiling light that centuries outcast.

The more we take—His mercy, truth, and peace—
The more He gives; the store will never cease.
A single glance reveals a thousand more,
Each facet new, each promise to explore.

Exhaust the stars? Then count the grains of sand.
Exhaust the sea? Then hold it in your hand.
But Jesus? No. His depths defy the sum;
Eternity itself cannot be done.

So come, weary seeker, bring your empty cup—
He fills, refills, and lifts your spirit up.
The treasure waits, unspent, unbound, untrod:
Forever found, forever ours—our God.

The Hope Of The Rapture by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , ,

The hope of the Rapture gives

us a ceaseless victorious hope!

Until He comes rejoice in our

blessed Savior’s many benefits

To Observe the Silent Cry in Any Human Heart and Answer with Unseen Mercies Knotted in Moonless Corners, No Boast, No Trumpet, No Record, Only the Wordless Sentence That Turns Us into the Hidden Hands of Grace by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , ,

To see a need—
a child’s bare foot on frost-bit stone,
a widow’s lamp guttering low—
and meet it,
not with heralds or hammered brass,
but with the hush of bread broken in back rooms,
coins slipped through cracked doors,
bandages knotted in the dark.

No trumpet.
Only the soft click of a latch
behind the giver who vanishes
before the given can name the gift.

This is the grammar of God’s hands:
verbs without subjects,
sentences that end in silence.
The wound closes.
The hunger forgets its own shape.
The world turns,
and no one marks the pivot
except the One who keeps
a ledger of mercies
written in disappearing ink.

Be that ink.
Be that pivot.
Be the quiet clause
in the long sentence of grace.

Gifts of Grace and MercyA litany in small measures by Debbie Harris

Tags

I.
A stranger’s umbrella, tilted just enough
to shield your shoulder from the sudden rain.

II.
The barista who redraws your name
when the cup comes back misspelled.

III.
A child’s sticky hand slipping a dandelion
through your fingers—yellow flag of truce.

IV.
“I’m proud of you”
slipped under the door like breakfast.

V.
The driver who waits, hazards blinking,
while you fumble the parallel park.

VI.
“You don’t have to explain.”

VII.
A text at 2:14 a.m.: saw the moon, thought of you.

VIII.
“Take the rest of the day—
I’ve got the shift.”

IX.
The librarian sliding the overdue fine
into the return slot, unseen.

X.
“I saved you the corner piece.”

XI.
Your neighbor’s porch light left on
long after their own bedtime.

XII.
“Your laugh still sounds like home.”

XIII.
A cat’s soft purr pressed against your ribs—
small engine of love that never asks why.

XIV.
“Call anytime, even if it’s 3 a.m. nonsense.”

XV.
The cashier who bags the heavy first,
handles the bread like it’s made of glass.

XVI.
“I believe the version of the story
you’re brave enough to tell.”

XVII.
In the waiting room, a stranger meets your eyes—
offers a small nod, I’m here too.

XVIII.
“You’re allowed to be a mess today.”

XIX.
A thank-you note folded small in your mailbox—
Your help meant the world.

XX.
“I kept the light on.”

XXI.
The last seat on the bus yielded
without ceremony, as if it were always yours.

XXII.
“This made me think of you—
no reason needed.”

XXIII.
“I see how hard you’re trying.”

XXIV.
“Go slow. The world won’t run out of you.”

XXV.
At the gathering, someone says, “Tell us again
how you learned every constellation’s name”—
they pull up a chair, ready to listen.

XXVI.
A friend scrawls on a napkin beside your cake:
“Happy birthday—another trip around the sun,
and you’re still shining.”

XXVII.
The friend who always adds your name
to the circle, the plan, the inside joke.

XXVIII.
“You’ve got this—
I’ve seen you climb harder walls.”

XXIX.
“Bravo—you nailed it.”
Clapped across the table like confetti.

XXX.
Someone, somewhere, is praying for you—
quiet syllables rising like incense.

XXXI.
“Well done, good and faithful.”
Echoed in a hallway no one else hears.

XXXII.
A stranger on the sidewalk—
“Your smile just made my morning.”

XXXIII.
Another, passing by:
“That color looks like it was invented for you.”

XXXIV.
Friend’s spare key on the hook:
“Crash here anytime—bed’s already made.”

XXXV.
The friend who steps in when voices rise—
“She’s with me,” spoken like armor.

XXXVI.
A server sliding the check away:
“Dinner’s on the house tonight.”

XXXVII.
Holiday card in the mail:
“Come hungry, bring nothing but you.”

XXXVIII.
A friend who hands you their spare key—
“Keep it. You’re family now.”

XXXIX.
A text that lands at the exact cracked-open moment:
“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted…”
—Psalm 34:18, no sermon, just the verse.

XL.
The quiet one who watches, then says:
“You turn chaos into color—
I’ve never seen anyone sketch hope like you do.”

These are the quiet coins mercy slips
into the pocket of the day—
warm weight, soft clink,
never counted, always enough.

To the Kind-Hearted,Especially Those Who Belong To The Household of Faith by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , ,

In a world that often spins too fast,
you pause—
a gentle hand on a trembling shoulder,
a whispered prayer in the midnight hour.

You are the quiet ones
who carry groceries up three flights,
who text “I’m thinking of you” at 2 a.m.,
who leave the last cookie on the plate
and pretend it was never theirs.

You are the faithful
who rise before dawn to intercede,
who memorize verses not for show
but to stitch them into broken hearts.
Your faith is not a banner—
it is bread, broken and given.

To the neighbor who shoveled my walk
without a word,
to the stranger who paid for my coffee
when my card declined,
to the elder who called just to say
“God sees you”—

Thank you.

Your kindness is a lantern
in the fog of hurry and harm.
It does not shout;
it simply stays lit.

May every small mercy you scatter
return to you as a harvest of peace.
May the God who notices sparrows
notice you—
and smile.

With all my heart,
thank you.

The Fourfold Crown:A Hymn Of Endless Praise by Debbie Harris

Tags

, , , , , ,

The Fourfold Crown: A Hymn of Endless Praise

Stanza 1 – The Only Wise
To the only wise God, our Saviour,
whose thoughts outnumber grains of sand,
who weighed the mountains in a balance,
who holds the oceans in His hand;
before the architect of evil
had sketched his first rebellious line,
Your love already wrote the sequel
in blood that tastes of bread and wine.

Stanza 2 – Glory
Be glory, bright as midday sun
upon the sea of crystal glass,
where elders fall and saints are stunned
by beauty time cannot surpass;
it flashes from the jasper wall,
it echoes in the seraph’s call,
it crowns the Lamb who bore the fall.

Stanza 3 – Majesty
Be majesty, the royal dread
that makes the cherubim veil face,
yet stoops to wipe the tear unshed
and warm the orphan’s hiding place;
its thunder clothes the judgment seat,
its whisper makes the tempest fleet,
its mercy kisses justice’ feet.

Stanza 4 – Dominion
Be dominion, the gentle yoke
that breaks the oppressor’s iron rod,
the kingdom where the meek are folk
and children lead the way to God;
its banner over us is love,
its law is written from above
upon the heart, and not the glove.

Stanza 5 – Power
Be power, the resurrection might
that rolled the stone and rent the veil,
that turned the midnight into light
and made the grave itself grow pale;
it quickens dust, it wakes the sleeper,
it guards the soul the Reaper’s keeper,
it plunges to the darkest deep, or
lifts the spirit higher, steeper.

Stanza 6 – Now
Both now—
while markets crash and lovers part,
while tyrants rage and poets start,
while mothers rock and soldiers bleed,
Your sovereign hand supplies the need;
the sparrow falls, yet not in vain,
for every loss is wrapped in gain.

Stanza 7 – Ever
And ever—
when clocks are melted into song,
when “is” and “was” no longer throng,
when faith gives way to sight complete
and hope lies down at mercy’s feet;
the fourfold crown will still be worn
by Him who rose with pierced side torn.

Final Refrain
To the only wise God, our Saviour,
be glory and majesty,
dominion and power,
both now and ever.
Amen.

A Canticle Of The Eternal Attributes by Debbie Harrid

Tags

, , , , ,

Jude 1:25 (KJV)
“To the only wise God our Saviour, be glory and majesty, dominion and power, both now and ever. Amen.”

I. Wisdom
To the only wise God, our Saviour,
whose counsel predates the first dawn,
who inscribed the law on spiral arms
before the serpent learned to crawl—
let every question find its home
inside the silence of Your throne.

II. Glory
Be glory: the uncreated light
that clothed the bush yet did not burn,
the splendor Moses could not sight
until his face with radiance turned;
it streams from wounds upon the tree
and crowns the humble bended knee.

III. Majesty
Be majesty: the diadem
of galaxies in circling dance,
the terror veiled in Bethlehem,
the thunder hushed in swaddling bands;
kings cast their crowns, the mountains bow,
the seraphs veil their faces now.

IV. Dominion
Be dominion: the quiet reign
that holds the sparrow in its fall,
the scepter breaking every chain,
the kingdom come in spite of all;
its borders stretch from east to west,
yet fit inside a sinner’s chest.

V. Power
Be power: the Word that split the sea,
the breath that woke the valley dry,
the might that knelt at Gethsemane
and chose the nails instead of sky;
it raises dead men from their shame
and whispers life into a name.

VI. Now
Both now—
in hospital wards and wedding feasts,
in refugee boats and candlelight,
in every heartbeat of the least,
Your mercy keeps the dark at bay;
the clock may race, the shadows fall,
but grace outruns the speed of all.

VII. Ever
And ever—
when suns collapse and moons forget,
when entropy has paid its debt,
when last amen is softly set
into the hush of finished strife;
Your glory, majesty, dominion, power
will bloom eternal in that hour.

Amen.