Sunday Speaks, a poem by Dawn Minott at Spillwords.com

Sunday Speaks

Sunday Speaks

written by: Dawn Minott

 

See the cross on the hill?
Can you hear it—
the echo of nails driven deep,
the labored breath,
the whispered prayers between the pain?
Darkness gathers, pressing in,
watching, waiting, smirking.

Satan leans in close,
fingers steepled, smile slow.
“This time,” he hisses,
“This time, the light goes out for good.”
And for a silent Saturday,
it seemed like he was right.

His breath—stolen.
His body—wrapped.
The tomb—sealed.
The sky—mute.
The earth—still.
Mary weeps,
John trembles,
Peter remembers the rooster’s crow
and drowns in regret.
The disciples scatter like leaves in the wind.
Hope lies buried behind a stone.

But wait.
Listen.
There’s a rumble in the dark.
The grave shudders.
Stone grinds against stone.
The breathless King—
inhales.

And just like that—
Death loses its sting.
The heartbeat of eternity
kicks open the door of death.

And the stone—
the stone rolls back like a defeated tide.
The grave gasps,
Satan stumbles,
Heaven’s angels sing, “He is not here. He is risen.”

Do you hear it now?
The sound of victory echoing through time,
the whisper of mercy rewriting history,
the roar of love that death could never hold?

So let the mourning turn to dancing.
Let the silence break into song.
Let the world know—
Sunday speaks.
And the grave has no reply.

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