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Passionately Pursuing Christ

~ Christ Centered Poetry by Debbie Harris

Passionately Pursuing Christ

Tag Archives: christianity

There Is Therefore Now No Condemnation: A Declaration of Victory Over the Voice That Accuses Day and Night by Debbie Harris

15 Sunday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christ-centered poetry, Christian Poetry, Inspirational, Royally Redeemed, Spiritual Warfare

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bible, Biblical Truth, Christian Poetry, christianity, faith, Inpirational, Inspirational, Royally Redeemed, theology, worship

The poem confronts the inner voice of accusation—the relentless “prosecutor” (Satan) who rehearses past sins, declares the soul guilty, and urges it to shrink from God in shame. Drawing directly from Scripture, it proclaims the accuser’s defeat: he has been cast down (Revelation 12), and his charges are powerless against God’s elect.

The core truth is victory through Christ’s finished work:

  • God Himself justifies; Christ died, rose, and intercedes (Romans 8:33–34).
  • There is now no condemnation for those in Christ Jesus who walk by the Spirit (Romans 8:1).
  • Believers are invited to approach the throne of grace boldly, not in terror, but with confidence in mercy and help (Hebrews 4:16).

The enemy’s reminders of failure are answered by pointing to the cross, where the blood of Jesus speaks a better word—mercy, redemption, and “paid in full.” Accusation loses its grip as faith strengthens, obedience flows from love already received, and the soul rests hidden in Christ.

In the end, the poem calls the reader to run to God rather than flee, declaring shalom—unbroken peace—because the accuser is subdued forever by the triumph of the Lamb. It is a hymn of liberation, assurance, and bold access to grace.

Romans 8:1
There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit

A voice arises in the night so deep,
Relentless prosecutor of my shame,
Rehearsing sins that make the weary weep,
And whispers, “Guilty—God withdraws His name.”

Yet Revelation speaks the accuser’s fall,
Cast down from heaven’s courts where he once stood,
His charges hurled against the brethren all,
But powerless now beneath the cleansing flood.

Who dares to lay a charge on God’s elect?
The Judge Himself has justified the soul;
Christ died, He rose—His blood pays every debt,
And shuts the mouth of condemnation’s toll.

Come boldly then unto the throne of grace,
Not cringing low in terror of the past,
But confident, for mercy finds its place
In wounds that heal and love that holds steadfast.

No condemnation shadows those in Christ,
Who walk by Spirit, not the flesh’s chain;
The cross declares the verdict: “Paid in full”—the price—
And Satan’s arrows fall in futile rain.

When he reminds of failures long ago,
Point swift to Calvary, where mercy flows;
His lies grow faint, his power melts like snow,
Beneath the blood that better witness shows.

So run, O soul, to grace’s open door,
Not fleeing wrath, but claiming what is thine;
The throne rejects thee nevermore—
For Jesus’ blood forever speaks: “Thou’rt mine.”

Shalom—peace unbroken, hope renewed,
In Christ alone, the accuser is subdued.

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Free Verse; Neglect Not So Great a Salvation: The Urgent Invitation Before Time Closes and Judgment Opens by Debbie Harris

15 Sunday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christ-centered poetry, Christian Poetry, Exalting Jesus Christ, Heaven, Holy Bible, Inspirational

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Christian, Christian Poetry, christianity, jesus-christ, Poetry, scripture

Neglect Not So Great a Salvation: The Urgent Invitation Before Time Closes and Judgment Opens
(Free verse summary)

This free verse poem is a quiet, introspective meditation on the fragility of life and the gentle but insistent call of God to salvation. It portrays human existence as a fleeting mist or breath on glass—brief, easily erased—while a still, small voice speaks in the silences between heartbeats, asking why we delay.

The poem recalls the rich young ruler who stood before Jesus, felt the direct pull of truth, yet walked away sorrowful, choosing familiar wealth over unknown freedom. It reflects how we mirror this in subtler ways: postponing response with excuses of “tomorrow,” drowning conviction in noise, letting the heart grow calloused through repeated delay until the once-vivid tug fades—not because God withdraws, but because we stop listening.

Yet mercy remains present and patient. The invitation is immediate—“Behold. Today.”—not conditional on worthiness or convenience. God calls not to restrict but to liberate, offering abundant, eternal life instead of temporary comforts.

The closing urgency is stark: this breath is all we have; tomorrow is an illusion no one reaches. Eternity has no second chances, only this open door of grace that will one day close—not from divine cruelty, but from the simple end of time. The poem pleads gently yet firmly: when the tug returns, do not brush it aside. Turn. Answer. Step through—while the hand still reaches.

Somewhere a voice is speaking,
not loud, not lightning-split sky,
but the hush between heartbeats,
the pause after a name you almost remember.

Life arrives in mist,
lingers like breath on glass,
then wipes clean.
You blink and the room has changed;
the child is grown,
the friend is gone,
the promise you made to yourself
slips further down the calendar.

Many feel it—
that pull when the house is still,
when laughter fades and the ceiling stares back,
when something older than you
leans close and asks,
What are you waiting for?

The rich young man felt it too.
He stood inches from the one who is the way,
saw love looking straight through his polished surface,
heard Sell everything. Follow me.
And sorrow wrapped him like a cloak.
He walked away slowly,
each step measuring treasure against truth,
choosing the weight he already knew
over the freedom he could not yet carry.

We do the same in smaller ways:
scroll past conviction,
turn up the noise,
tell the Spirit Tomorrow, when life settles,
when the kids are older,
when the bank account breathes easier,
when I’m not so tired.

Tomorrow is a thief with soft hands.
It steals the present while promising more time.
And the heart, trained to wait,
grows skillful at waiting—
until waiting becomes habit,
habit becomes hardness,
and the once-clear voice
sounds fainter, not because it stopped,
but because the ear stopped turning toward it.

Yet here, now,
mercy has not moved.
The invitation hangs in the air
like light through half-open blinds:
Behold.
Today.
Not when convenient.
Not when you feel worthy.
Now.

He does not shout to shame you.
He speaks to save you.
Not to chain, but to unchain.
Not to take life, but to give it—
thicker, truer, forever.

Eternity has no clock.
No second chance waiting in the wings.
Only this breath,
this moment,
this door still ajar.

If the tug returns tonight,
do not brush it aside like lint.
Do not say Later.
Later is a country no one has ever visited.

Turn.
Answer.
Step through.

The vapor rises, thins, disappears.
But the hand that reaches for you
does not vanish.
It waits—
until it cannot.

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Classical Rhyme:Neglect Not So Great a Salvation: The Urgent Invitation Before Time Closes and Judgment Opens by Debbie Harris

15 Sunday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christian Poetry, Exalting Jesus Christ, Holy Bible, Inspirational, salvation, Spiritual Warfare

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Tags

Christian Poetry, christian-devotionals, christian-inspirational, christianity, christianity-poetry, evangelism, faith, life, Poetry

This reflective spiritual poem, written in classical ABAB rhyme, meditates on the fragility of human life likened to a vanishing vapor (James 4:14). It portrays God’s persistent, gentle call—often a still small voice—that summons every heart to salvation, yet warns how easily that call is ignored through procrastination, distraction, or love of worldly comfort. Drawing from the rich young ruler’s sorrowful departure, the peril of gaining the world while losing one’s soul, and the biblical urgency of “now is the day of salvation” (2 Corinthians 6:2), the poem pleads against the quiet tragedy of neglect. It contrasts temporary earthly pleasures with the unshakable abundance of eternal life, emphasizing that mercy stands open today, but the door of opportunity will one day close—not from lack of God’s love, but from the end of time itself. The tone is both sobering and hopeful, urging immediate surrender to the Savior’s rescue before the fleeting breath expires and eternity’s irreversible reality begins.

Life is a mist that rises at the dawn,
A breath, a gleam, then vanishes from sight;
Yet in its fleeting span the heart is drawn
By still small voice that pierces through the night.

The call comes soft, not thunder, not with flame,
But mercy’s tug when silence wraps the soul;
Many are summoned, yet so few the same
Will yield and let the Savior make them whole.

The rich one stood before the Lord of grace,
His treasures gleaming brighter than the call;
He turned away, sorrow upon his face,
Chose fleeting gold and let redemption fall.

What profit lies in worlds of wealth and fame
If, gaining all, the soul itself is lost?
The heart grows dull, ignores the sacred name,
And silence settles where conviction crossed.

Behold, now is the day, the hour is here—
Not tomorrow’s promise, vague and far away;
Neglect is not rebellion, yet the fear
Is this: the door may close while we delay.

He knocks to rescue, not to bind or chain,
To give abundant life beyond the grave;
Eternity awaits—no end, no pain—
For those who answer, those He died to save.

O traveler, heed the whisper while you may,
Before the vapor fades into the night;
Choose heaven’s call above the world’s display—
Surrender now, and step into the light.

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Not Hearers Who Forget, But Doers Who Persevere: Freedom Flowing from Finished Grace by Debbie Harris

15 Sunday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christ-centered poetry, Christian Poetry, Exalting Jesus Christ, Holy Bible, Inspirational, Jesus Christ, King of Kings

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Tags

bible, Biblical Truth, Christ Centered Devotionals, christianity, gospel, holiness, holy-spirit, pray, theology

Do not be hearers only, swift to forget,
But doers of the word implanted deep within;
For in the gospel’s glass your true face is set—
A new creation, cleansed from every sin.

The old law bound with chains of condemnation,
Exposed the flaw but offered no release;
Yet Christ has fulfilled it—perfect liberation—
The law of liberty, granting perfect peace.

Look long into this mirror, see who you are:
Righteous in Him, beloved, fully known;
Not striving now to earn the Father’s star,
But resting in the grace that He has shown.

If you forget and walk as slaves once more,
Deceived by shadows of the former night,
But persevering, acting from His store,
You find the blessing—freedom’s pure delight.

No threat of failure haunts the child of God,
No pressure weighs upon the ransomed soul;
The doing flows from what the cross has bought—
Alive in Christ, made perfect, free, and whole.

So gaze and remember, let the truth abide,
Live from the glory already given thee;
In every step, His Spirit is your guide—
Blessed in the doing, for you’re His eternally.

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Jesus Christ, the Risen Victor, Crowned in Eternal Holy Beauty and Unconquerable Glory by Debbie Harris

14 Saturday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christ Centered Devotionals, Christ-centered poetry, Christian Poetry, Exalting Jesus Christ, Holy Bible, Inspirational, Jesus Christ, King of Kings

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Tags

Biblical Truth, Christian Poetry, christianity, Royally Redeemed, theology

Jesus stands, the risen Victor over night,
His wounds now fountains pouring living light;
Where death once snarled, His footsteps bloom with grace—
The grave lies shattered at His sovereign face.

All heaven bows before the Lion’s gaze,
The Lamb whose glory sets the cosmos ablaze;
In Him the broken find their final dawn,
Jesus Christ crowned with beauty—victory won.

No shadow dares to linger in His sight,
His voice stills tempests, bids the dead arise;
The ancient curse dissolves beneath His might—
Creation sings anew beneath His skies.

The throne of endless ages He ascends,
Arrayed in splendor no eye can contain;
Through every realm His sovereign mercy bends,
Jesus Christ reigns—forevermore the same.

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The Drowsy Watch; Or, The Church’s Slumber and the Roaring Lion’s Unseen Advance An Exhortation (More modern format) by Debbie Harris

12 Thursday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christian Poetry

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bible, christianity, faith, god, jesus

The poem is a passionate, prophetic exhortation in verse, warning the church against spiritual complacency and deception. It laments how an overemphasis on non-judgmental “tolerance” has become a protective excuse that blinds believers to false teachers and infiltrators—described as wolves in sheep’s clothing—who subtly undermine the faithful from within. Drawing on biblical imagery, it criticizes the lukewarm, half-hearted faith that drowsily occupies pews, failing to burn brightly or resist evil, while Satan actively prowls. The poem urgently calls sleepers to awaken, shake off lethargy, discern truth from deception, reject compromise, and reclaim vigilant faithfulness before it’s too late. It concludes with a sobering yet hopeful note: mercy still lingers for the repentant, but judgment approaches, and only the watchful will enter the open door of grace. Written in rhythmic quatrains with an ABAB rhyme scheme and mostly iambic tetrameter, it echoes the style of traditional hymns while delivering a timely, convicting revivalist message.

Matthew 7:15
Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves.

Revelation 3:15–16
I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth.”

Ephesians 5:14
Wake up, sleeper, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.”

Romans 13:11
And do this, understanding the present time: The hour has already come for you to wake up from your slumber, because our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed.

Revelation 3:8, 20
See, I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut… Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in…

We’ve softly cried, “Let none presume to judge,”
Till tolerance became our shielding grudge—
A veil that blinds us to the cunning art
Of foes who mingle with the faithful heart.

As angels false, in brethren’s guise they creep,
While wolves in sheepskin harvest what they reap.
Awake, ye saints! Unseal the sacred tome,
Where truth’s sharp blade dispels the gathering gloom.

The lukewarm soul in drowsy pews reclines,
Half-hearted faith that neither flames nor shines.
Yet Satan prowls the field with restless might,
While churchly sleep invites eternal night.

Arise, O sleeper, from thy torpid bed!
The foe advances; shake the slumbering head.
Discern the light from shadows that deceive,
Lest grace be bartered, truth no more believe.

The hour grows late, the trumpet sounds its call—
Reject the nap, reclaim the fight for all.
For mercy lingers, judgment waits in store:
The watchful eye shall see the open door.

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The Drowsy Watch; Or, The Church’s Slumber and the Roaring Lion’s Unseen AdvanceAn Exhortation in Heroic Couplets by Debbie Harris

12 Thursday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christ-centered poetry, Holy Bible, Inspirational, Spiritual Warfare

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Tags

Biblical Truth, Christian Poetry, christianity, Inpirational, Inspirational, theology

“The Drowsy Watch; Or, The Church’s Slumber and the Roaring Lion’s Unseen Advance”The poem is a stern, prophetic warning in heroic couplets: believers have misused “judge not” as an excuse for blind tolerance, allowing deceptive enemies (false brethren, Satan in disguise) to infiltrate the church undetected. While Satan actively prowls and schemes, the church remains spiritually lukewarm and asleep in the pews. The poet urgently calls the drowsy saints to awaken, open the Bible, discern truth from deception, reject complacency, and rise to the spiritual battle before judgment falls—because only the vigilant will find mercy and the open door of salvation.

Matthew 7:15
Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravenous wolves.

Revelation 3:15–16
I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth.”

Ephesians 5:14
Wake up, sleeper, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you.”

Romans 13:11
And do this, understanding the present time: The hour has already come for you to wake up from your slumber, because our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed.

Revelation 3:8, 20
See, I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut… Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in…

We’ve softly cried, “Let none presume to judge,”
Till tolerance became our shielding grudge—
A veil that blinds us to the cunning art
Of foes who mingle with the faithful heart.

As angels false, in brethren’s guise they creep,
While wolves in sheepskin harvest what they reap.
Awake, ye saints! Unseal the sacred tome,
Where truth’s sharp blade dispels the gathering gloom.

The lukewarm soul in drowsy pews reclines,
Half-hearted faith that neither flames nor shines.
Yet Satan prowls the field with restless might,
While churchly sleep invites eternal night.

Arise, O sleeper, from thy torpid bed!
The foe advances; shake the slumbering head.
Discern the light from shadows that deceive,
Lest grace be bartered, truth no more believe.

The hour grows late, the trumpet sounds its call—
Reject the nap, reclaim the fight for all.
For mercy lingers, judgment waits in store:
The watchful eye shall see the open door.

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No Trumpets, Only Lamps: Enduring Faith in a Gospel-Rejecting World by Debbie Harris

12 Thursday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Bible Centered Poetry, Christ-centered poetry, Exalting Jesus Christ, Holy Bible, Inspirational, Jesus Christ, King of Kings

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bible, Biblical Truth, Christ Centered Devotionals, Christian Poetry, christianity, faith, god, jesus, theology

No Trumpets, Only Lamps: Enduring Faith in a Gospel-Rejecting World is a meditative poem in classical rhyming couplets that explores how believers are called to live faithfully in a culture that has largely rejected the gospel.It portrays the present era as “sin-sick” and darkened, where truth is scorned and former wrongs are celebrated. Rather than responding with loud confrontation, forced persuasion, or retreat into isolation, Christians are depicted as quiet pilgrims and watchmen: offering mercy, forgiving preemptively, speaking the gospel gently amid mockery, planting gardens in exile, and setting tables for the estranged.The poem emphasizes humble, costly witness—bearing the gospel as broken bread and cool water rather than a sword or banner, holding a lowly light so that even the spiritually blind may feel its warmth. It acknowledges the heavy nights of discouragement and the weight of rejection, yet counters them with glimpses of unmerited grace and the assurance of God’s unchanging love.The closing stanza turns toward patient hope: the faithful do not crave human approval but labor and watch in quiet expectation, trusting that the Master will return at dawn and find them steadfast.In essence, the poem is an encouragement to persevere with humble, incarnational faithfulness—neither conquering nor withdrawing, but simply carrying the light until the Lord calls His people home.

In this sin-sick age, where gospel truth is spurned,
And men in darkness clap what once was mourned,
We dwell as pilgrims, steadfast, undismayed,
Not by the crowd’s acclaim, but by the Word obeyed.

No trumpets blast to force the deaf to hear,
No flight to hills where silence reigns austere;
But quiet witness in the market’s din—
A steady lamp where shadows gather in.

We offer mercy when the stones are cast,
Forgive before the penitent is asked;
We speak the old, unwelcome, saving name,
Though mocked as folly in this age of shame.

Like watchmen posted on the midnight tower,
We hold the vigil through the darkening hour;
The horn may sound, unheard by sleeping throng,
Yet faithfulness endures, though none prolong.

As exiles planting gardens in dry ground,
We set a table where no kin are found;
The cross remains though scaffolds rise anew—
Its victim’s love the age cannot undo.

Some nights the weight of scorn would make us fall,
The fevered tide seems to have drowned us all;
Yet grace slips in, unbidden, undeserved—
A stranger’s kindness, undeservedly preserved.

So bear the gospel, not as conquering sword,
Nor trophy bright, nor banner loudly roared,
But broken bread in hands that shake with care,
Cool water offered though the lips may swear.

A lowly light, held close that blind may feel
Its warmth before the eye can see it real.
We dwell not craving praise from men below,
But waiting for the dawn that God shall show—
Who bids us labor till the Master come,
And finds us watching when He calls us home.

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Awake, O Wanderer, from the Death You Speak: The Tragedy of “Oh Jesus Christ” in Vain, the Grief It Brings to Divine Love, and the Call to Words of Life Eternal by Debbie Harris

12 Thursday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christ-centered poetry, Christian Poetry, Holy Bible, Inspirational, Jesus Christ, King of Kings

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Tags

bible, christianity, faith, god, jesus

This solemn, classically rhymed poem laments the casual blasphemy of a professed Christian who flings “Oh Jesus Christ!” as an empty exclamation of frustration or surprise, thereby taking the Savior’s holy name in vain. It portrays the deep grief this irreverence inflicts upon God’s heart, the doubts it stirs in observers about the speaker’s true knowledge of the biblical God, and the ancient biblical truth that the tongue holds the power of life and death (Proverbs 18:21). Through vivid imagery and urgent exhortation, the work warns against reveling in such death-bringing words and calls the wanderer to repentance, urging a return to reverent speech that honors the divine Name and chooses blessing over ruin.

In shadowed halls where faith should gleam,
A professed believer, bold in claim,
Utters lightly the sacred Name,
Profaning what the heavens deem.

“Oh God!” he cries in jest or ire,
Not in prayer, but vain and fleet,
A careless word, a thoughtless feat,
That kindles not devotion’s fire.

Yet deeper still the wound is torn
When “Oh Jesus Christ!” escapes the lip—
In shock, in rage, in casual slip,
The Savior’s name as curse is worn.

Not whispered soft in fervent plea,
Nor lifted high in grateful song,
But flung like dust where it belongs
To no one holy, none but He.

How grievous to the Father’s ear,
That Name which angels veil their face,
Now cheapened in the marketplace
Of fleeting anger, fleeting fear!

The heart of God, so full of grace,
Is pierced anew by every sound—
A blade of irreverence profound,
That turns His mercy to disgrace.

The watchers ’round, with doubting eyes,
Behold this soul in hollow guise,
And whisper low, “Does he surmise
The God of Scripture’s truths and ties?

If he who claims the cross as shield
Can toss the Christ in vain despair,
What light within does he truly bear?
What Lord does such a tongue reveal?

” For life and death dwell in the tongue,
As ancient wisdom doth proclaim—
A spring of blessing, or of flame,
Where songs of hope or dirges sung.

To choose the phrase that mocks the Lamb,
Reveling in death’s sharp-edged art,
Is to invite the shadowed heart
To feast where ruin calls its name.

Why revel then in death’s dark art,
Choosing venom over vital breath?
To wound the soul, invite the wrath,
And chain the erring, wayward heart?

Awake, O wanderer, heed the call!
Let words be bridges, pure and true,
To lift the fallen, guide anew,
Lest in thy fall, thou drag us all.

Repent the careless cry, restore
The Name to reverence once more—
For in each breath, we choose the door
To life eternal, or no more.

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Beware the Serpent’s Honeyed Tongue: Duplicity, Deception, and the Urgent Call to Test Every Spirit Against Scripture’s Revealing Light by Debbie Harris

12 Thursday Feb 2026

Posted by Debbie Harris in Christian Poetry

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bible, Biblical Truth, Christian Poetry, christianity, faith, god, Inpirational, Inspirational, jesus, theology

The poem warns of Satan’s ancient tactic of deception through twisted language and false appearances. He disguises himself as an “angel of light,” borrowing the label “Christian” while preaching a counterfeit version of the faith—one that avoids the full truth of sin, repentance, the cross, and Christ’s exclusive lordship. Using half-truths, misquoted Scripture, and appealing words, the enemy leads souls astray, presenting a softer, more acceptable “Jesus” that fits the world rather than conforms to biblical revelation.The poem urges believers to exercise vigilant discernment, just as the Bereans did, by asking pointed questions and testing every claim against God’s Word alone. Does the teaching confess Jesus Christ come in the flesh? Does it uphold salvation by grace through His atoning blood, without adding human works or excusing sin? By examining fruits and doctrine in the light of Scripture, Christians can recognize the true Christ—the risen Lamb who reigns—and stand firm against every lie. Ultimately, the poem calls readers to cling to the unchanging truth of the Bible, where victory over deception is already secured in Jesus.

The serpent speaks with honeyed tongue once more,
A velvet veil o’er venom sharp and sure;
He cloaks his lies in light the eye adores,
And bids the soul, “Believe—no need to pore
O’er Scripture’s truth in its revealing light.”

“Christian” he whispers from the crowded throng,
A name he borrows, bright and broad and bold,
Yet twists the cross to suit the world’s sweet song,
A different gospel, gleaming, bought, and sold.

Not every bearer of the sacred name
Confesses Christ in flesh come down to die;
Some preach a savior soft, without the shame
Of sin’s full weight, or hell’s unending cry.

He quotes the Scripture, line by cunning line,
But bends the meaning till the truth is lost;
Half-truths entwine like thorns around the vine—
A counterfeit, no matter what the cost.

Ask then, O soul, with Berean-like fire:
Is this the Jesus born of virgin womb?
The Word made flesh, the Lamb on Calvary’s pyre,
Who rose triumphant from the guarded tomb?

Does doctrine hold that He alone can save,
Through blood atonement, grace without a price?
Or add man’s works, or twist the narrow way,
Denying lordship, calling sin but vice?

By fruits ye know them—search the heart’s deep root;
God’s Word alone the measure, pure and bright.
Let not the angel’s glow deceive thy foot—
Test every spirit in the scriptural light.

For Satan’s guile is ancient, ever near,
But Christ the Truth shall stand when all is done;
Cling fast to Scripture, cast out doubt and fear—
The true Christ reigns, the victory is won.

May these verses and lines stir deeper hunger for God’s unchanging Word, that we might stand firm against every deception in these last days. His truth endures forever.

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Recent Posts

  • Upon the Finished Work of Jesus Christ: Wherein the Soul Finds Rest in the Father’s Unchanging Delight and Rejoices with Singing by Debbie Harris
  • Rejoice and Declare It Boldly: Jesus Christ Our Lord Is the Most Beautiful, Perfect, Blameless, Holy, and Just Person in All the Earth — Now and Forever! by Debbie Harris
  • It’s All Mercy and All Grace: Hymn of Praise by Debbie Harris
  • We Are Seated in Triumph: By One Offering He Hath Perfected Forever the Sanctified by Debbie Harris
  • Two Souls: Pleasing God or Man by Debbie Harris

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Blog at WordPress.com.

Kingdom Intelligence Briefing

Preparing the Remnant for the Unfolding of End-Time Prophecy

snatchedfromtheflamescom.wordpress.com/

JONATHAN TURLEY

Res ipsa loquitur - The thing itself speaks

A Purpose-driven achiever

Pursuing my destiny - Maximizing my potential

Society of Classical Poets

A community of poets dedicated to traditional poetry

Malcolm Guite

Blog for poet and singer-songwriter Malcolm Guite

F.O.R. Jesus

Fill up. Overflow. Run over.

Dan Olinger

"If the Bible is true, then none of our fears are legitimate, none of our frustrations are permanent, and none of our opposition is significant."

Letters from the Exile

John Blase

The Beautiful Due

Some creatives

Poetry - Songs - Faith-based discussion - Comments

Riverside Peace

Discover how God works through his creation and Scripture to show us his love.

Petals from the Basket

Ideas and Resources for Everyday Christian Living

His Beloved

"I do not write these things to make you ashamed, but to admonish you as my beloved children" 1 Corinthians 4:14 Copyright © Kayla Rivers All Rights Reserved

Making Joy a Habit

My Journey for Joy through Christ-Centered Living

Gail Johnson

Sharing the hope I found in the center of His wheel

Rooted in Christ

Becoming deeply Rooted in Christ by digging into His word.

RDN

adaughtersgiftoflove

Encouraging and Empowering Women In Christ

Lines of Lazarus

"God is my Help"

l i g h t room

Word(s) . Light . Life

Take your Cross now.

John 3:16 for ME.

Together Sisters

~walking each other home~

Life in a blog

All there is ever, is the now

He Spoke To My Heart

A Collection of Inspirational Thoughts by Jeannine Larcom

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