Tags
bible, Biblical Truth, Christian, Christian Poetry, christianity, faith, hope, Inpirational, Inspirational, jesus, jesus-christ, Poetry, Praise, salvation, theology, worship
The stone is sealed with Roman iron might,
A final barrier ‘gainst the world’s despair;
No psalm ascends, no flicker breaks the night—
The Word made flesh lies silent, cold, and bare.
In linen folds, anointed deep with myrrh,
The King of kings has entered death’s embrace;
His sacred form, once radiant, now interred,
Emptied of glory in this shadowed place.
Creation groans in sympathetic hush,
The sun itself in mourning veils its face;
Within the rock-hewn womb, the divine hush
Conceals the mystery of redeeming grace.
For while we weep with Mary at the door,
And scattered friends in fear and sorrow hide,
The promise spoken echoes faint once more—
“On the third day I rise,” though hope has died.
O holy silence, forge of purest gold,
Where hope seems slain and every promise dies—
Yet here the Victor, veiled in mortal cold,
Proclaims the triumph that the cross supplies.
We wait, suspended ‘twixt the cross and crown,
Our hearts a bridge ‘twixt sorrow and the dawn;
Teach us, O Christ, though joy is not yet known,
That victory lives within the cross’s power.
When dawn shall come and roll the stone aside,
The grave-clothes folded, witness to Thy power—
Then we shall know: in silence Thou didst bide,
And death itself surrendered in that hour.