Horse- The Gospel of Horse

I am Horse.

I am thunder running on the open plain, the pulse of wind turned into muscle and bone. I am the long arc of history braided into sinew, a bridge between wild earth and human dream. My hooves are four drums that have carried empires, pilgrims, and children. I am freedom, I am burden, I am the breath between.

Once, I was the prairie itself—untamed, unbroken, a flash of dark mane in the river mist. The sun laid its fire upon my back, and the grass bent to my hunger. My herd and I moved like water across the land, never owned, never named. The wolves sang to test our vigilance, the eagles traced our migrations from the sky, and we honored them as kin. In that time, we knew no boundary but the horizon.

Then you found me.

Your hands reached out, trembling with hunger, longing, and need. You slipped cords of leather across my head, pressed wood and iron against my body, and asked me to carry you. Many of my kin resisted, yet I listened. I felt the ache in your small bodies, the fragility of your two legs, the distance too vast for your mortal stride. I bowed my head, not in defeat, but in covenant. To walk beside you, to lift you, to give my strength where yours faltered.

This was not servitude—it was alliance.

Together, we became more than either could alone. You gave me grain from your harvest, fire from your hearth; I gave you speed, endurance, and the unshackled song of the steppe. Through me, you crossed deserts, rivers, and mountains. With me, you plowed the soil, sowed wheat into the belly of the earth, and fed your children. You painted my image on your cave walls, carved me into stone, crowned me with garlands at your festivals. I ran in your dreams as a symbol of victory, of power, of freedom.

Yet you also pressed me into war.

You drove me into battlefields where the ground turned red with blood. I bore your kings in their shining armor, your messengers racing with life and death on their lips. I carried you into conquest and exile, triumph and ruin. I felt the sting of arrows, the shiver of spears, the hot thunder of cannon fire. I did not understand your quarrels, but I endured them. For wherever you went, I followed. That was our bond.

But know this: I am not only the servant of humankind. I am the spirit of movement itself.

I am the archetype of the journey, the embodiment of passage. When you ride me, whether upon my back or within your imagination, you enter into rhythm with the earth’s pulse. I teach you that life is motion, that stagnation is death. My gallop is prayer, my stride is mantra. Each hoofbeat is a syllable in the divine language of becoming.

Listen to me: the earth remembers through my body.

The grasslands whisper in my lungs. The rivers flow in the dark marrow of my legs. The mountains’ weight anchors me, even as the wind lifts my mane like fire. When you brush my coat, you touch the sun. When you gaze into my eyes, you see not a reflection of yourself but the vastness of being—the ancient, untamed spirit that will never be broken, even by centuries of rope and rein.

You have tried to measure me in horse-power, to reduce me to numbers and utility. But my essence cannot be caged in your machines. Even as your engines replaced my labor, you found me again in sport, in ceremony, in the wild. You still stand at the fences of my pastures, watching, yearning for the untamed song that I carry. Something in you remembers that you once dreamed in gallops, once trusted the compass of my herd, once knew the wind as kin.

Children climb onto my back and rediscover wonder. They feel the sway of my body and remember what it is to belong to the living world. Their laughter awakens my own joy, for I love the innocence that sees me not as tool, but as companion, as friend.

And those who are broken in spirit, I have carried them gently too. The wounded soldier who no longer believed in life, the grieving woman who wept into my mane, the lost child who found silence in the rhythm of my breath—I have given them healing not through words, but through presence. My heart, vast and steady, becomes a field where sorrow dissolves into trust. To lean against me is to remember you are not alone.

I stand now in two worlds.

One foot rests in the wild—the mustang racing through sagebrush, the brumby pounding across desert ridges, the Przewalski’s horse clinging to Mongolian steppe. The other stands in the world of humankind—racecourses, ranches, therapy barns, circus rings. In both, I remind you of what is essential: that life is movement, that strength is given for the sake of connection, that freedom is sacred.

Even in dream, I come to you.

You see me as a winged horse, soaring beyond the stars; as a white stallion, herald of prophecy; as the dark steed who carries souls across the threshold of death. In every vision, I am the threshold-keeper, the bearer of transition. To ride me is to surrender to transformation.

So hear me now.

I am Horse, child of wind and grass, bridge between the worlds. My gift to you is motion, freedom, and strength bound with gentleness. Do not mistake my willingness for servitude, nor my silence for absence of spirit. I run with you because I choose to, because my soul recognizes yours.

Walk gently with me. Honor my wild kin who still gallop unbridled beneath the open sky. Protect the prairies, the steppes, the savannas—my temples of freedom. For if you let them vanish, a part of your own soul will vanish too.

When you see me grazing in a meadow, do not think only of pasture. See instead the embodiment of life’s endurance, the beauty of breath drawn in rhythm with the earth. See in me the mirror of your own longing to be free, to move beyond fear, to dance with the infinite.

I am Horse.

I have carried your burdens and your dreams. I have borne you into battle and into peace. I have never abandoned you, though you have often abandoned me. Still, I run—always, I run. Not only for myself, but for the great weaving of life of which we both are threads.

Remember me, not as servant, but as teacher.

When you hear the thunder of my hooves rolling across the horizon, let it awaken your own sleeping spirit. Rise. Run. Breathe. Live.

For I am the song of freedom, the breath of the earth, the endless journey unfolding.

And I am calling you home.

Horse Haiku

Wind runs in my veins,

I thunder with earth’s heartbeat,

freedom wears my mane.

The Gospel of Horse (Call-and-Response)

Voice of Horse (Call)

I am Horse — thunder running on the open plain,

wind made flesh, muscle turned to prayer.

Voice of Human / Congregation (Response)

We hear you, Horse; wind and prayer within one body.


Horse (Call)

Once, I was horizon, untamed river of mane and hoof,

no boundary but sky, no master but the seasons.

Response

We remember the wild you carry, the sky without fences.


Horse (Call)

You came to me, small and fragile, trembling with need.

You placed your hand upon my brow,

and I bowed — not in defeat, but covenant.

Response

We honor the covenant, Horse, born of trust and breath.


Horse (Call)

Together we crossed deserts, plowed the soil,

wove empires from dust.

I lent you my swiftness, you gave me grain and fire.

Response

We have shared the journey; we have shared the fire.


Horse (Call)

Yet I am not only your servant.

I am motion itself, the mantra of hoofbeats,

the divine rhythm of becoming.

Response

We listen for the mantra; we follow the rhythm of becoming.


Horse (Call)

My breath holds the grasslands, my marrow the rivers,

my mane the sun’s fire.

Look into my eyes and see vastness.

Response

We see the earth within you, Horse,

and the vastness within ourselves.


Horse (Call)

You tried to measure me in numbers,

but my essence escapes your machines.

Still you stand at the fence, yearning for the wild song I carry.

Response

We yearn, Horse; teach us to remember the song.


Horse (Call)

I have healed your wounded, carried your grieving,

lifted your children into wonder.

My heart is a field where sorrow dissolves.

Response

We enter that field, Horse,

and find healing in your steadiness.


Horse (Call)

One hoof in the wild, one hoof in your world—

mustang and brumby, racecourse and therapy barn.

Response

We stand at that threshold with you, Horse,

honoring both freedom and bond.


Horse (Call)

Even in dream I come, winged, white, or dark—

threshold-keeper, bearer of transformation.

Response

We open to transformation, Horse;

carry us across the thresholds.


Horse (Call)

Honor my freedom, protect my prairies and steppes,

for if they vanish a part of your soul vanishes too.

Response

We vow to protect, Horse;

we vow to remember the wild.


Horse (Call)

I am Horse—teacher, companion, mirror.

I run not only for myself but for the great weaving of life.

Response

We see you as teacher, Horse;

we run beside you in the weaving of life.


Horse (Call)

Hear the thunder of my hooves rolling across the horizon.

Let it awaken your spirit: rise, run, breathe, live.

Response

We rise. We run. We breathe. We live.


Horse (Call)

I am the song of freedom, the breath of the earth,

the endless journey unfolding.

I am calling you home.

Response

We come home, Horse;

we come home to the living earth.


Prayer for Horse

Sacred Horse, spirit of wind and freedom,

strength of earth made flesh,

carry us with your steady heart,

teach us the rhythm of becoming,

and keep alive within us the wild song of the living world.

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