Tag Archives: Faith

Can a Christian Divide their spirit from their soul.

What does the Bible say?

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Hebrews 4:12

For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, 
it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow;
it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.

Dividing Soul and Spirit – A Christian Conversation Rooted in Hebrews 4:12

For centuries, believers have drawn comfort and strength from the words of Scripture, but few verses cut as deeply—both literally and spiritually—as Hebrews 4:12. This passage reveals something radical: the Word of God does not merely inspire or inform—it penetrates. It reaches into the deepest realms of our being, making a distinction between what many assume is indistinguishable: the soul and the spirit.

The soul and spirit are not the same, though they are often spoken of interchangeably. According to the Word, they are separable. The soul—our mind, will, and emotions—experiences and responds to the world around us. The spirit, however, is the part of us that communes with God, receives His life, and holds the fullness of His completed work.

When Christians begin to speak about “dividing soul and spirit,” we are not talking about splitting ourselves apart or complicating our faith. We are returning to the sharp edge of the Word, allowing it to reveal what is from the human realm (the soul) and what is from the divine (the spirit). This division is not destructive—it is freeing. It allows us to stop living by emotional reaction, mental striving, or religious performance. Instead, we can live from our spirit, where peace, healing, abundance, and union with Christ already reside.

This book is an invitation into that conversation. It’s a call to awaken to what God has already placed within you. It’s time to allow the Word to do what only it can do: divide soul and spirit, so that you can live from the fullness of who you truly are in Christ.

Let us press in—together—guided by the living and active Word, and see what happens when the spirit rises to take its rightful place.

Introduction: The Storm at Sea – A Journey Through Acts 27

Acts 27 is a dramatic, real-life sea adventure recorded in the New Testament of the Bible. It tells the gripping story of the apostle Paul’s journey to Rome as a prisoner. Under Roman guard, Paul boards a ship with 275 other passengers, including soldiers, sailors, and fellow prisoners. The plan is to sail across the Mediterranean Sea and deliver Paul to Caesar for trial.

The journey begins with calm seas, but soon takes a turn for the worse. As the ship reaches a harbor called Fair Havens, Paul—though a prisoner—warns the crew and officers that sailing further will be disastrous. He senses grave danger ahead, not through weather patterns or maps, but by divine insight. However, his warning is ignored. The Roman centurion in charge chooses instead to follow the advice of the ship’s pilot and owner, who hope to reach a better harbor to spend the winter.

Shortly after setting sail again, a violent storm strikes—so fierce that the crew loses all control. Over the course of two terrifying weeks, they are battered by relentless winds and waves, throw cargo and equipment overboard, and nearly give up hope of survival. In the middle of this chaos, Paul stands up and delivers a bold message of encouragement. He tells them that an angel of God appeared to him in the night and promised that everyone on the ship would survive—though the ship itself would be lost.

As the storm continues, the sailors attempt to secretly abandon ship, and later the soldiers even plan to kill the prisoners to prevent any escape. But Paul’s influence grows. The centurion now trusts him and intervenes to protect Paul and ensure everyone stays together.

Eventually, the ship runs aground near an unknown island. Though the vessel is destroyed, every person makes it safely to shore, just as Paul had declared. Not a single life is lost.

Acts 27 is more than a story about surviving a storm—it’s a vivid tale of leadership, spiritual insight, human decision-making, and divine faithfulness in the face of overwhelming odds.

Chapter 1

The Shipwreck as the Journey of the Inner Man

The Soul: The Pilot and the Owner of the Ship
At the beginning of the story, the soul is represented by the pilot and the owner of the ship. The soul is the seat of our will, intellect, emotions, and desires—it weighs logic, listens to experience, and evaluates outcomes. In this case, the soul is calculating, deciding that staying in harbor isn’t practical. So it overrides spiritual warning in favor of natural reasoning.

The Spirit: Paul, the Man of God
Paul represents the spirit—our born-again, inner man connected to God, who perceives and speaks the will of heaven. He warns of disaster, not through analysis, but through spiritual perception. Our spirit always knows truth, but is often overruled by the soul, especially when the soul is aligned with worldly logic.

The Body: The Passengers and Crew
The body is the crowd—reactive, needing direction, and subject to the decisions of others. The body will follow whatever authority is steering the ship—whether soul (logic) or spirit (faith). Initially, the crowd is swayed by the centurion’s choice to follow the soul-led pilot and owner.

The Centurion: The Decision-Maker (Mind/Willing Heart)
The centurion represents our decision-making faculty, often influenced by the strongest voice at the time. At first, he sides with logic and experience (the soul), but as the storm rages, he begins to trust Paul (the spirit). When he makes this shift, the course of the entire man changes.


The Storm: A Crisis that Exposes Who’s in Charge

When disaster strikes, human logic fails. The ship is lost, the plan falls apart, and the soul has no answers. Now Paul—the spirit—rises with clarity, faith, and a word from heaven. He declares that though the ship (the vessel of plans, resources, and stability) will be lost, the lives (the essence of the person) will be saved.

An Angel Appears – just as revelation, peace, and divine insight often come in trials. Paul receives a promise from God that reshapes the situation: “You must stand before Caesar… God has given you all who sail with you.”

Soul’s Last Struggles: Sailors & Soldiers

The soul reemerges, desperate to regain control:

  • The sailors try to escape—this is the soul seeking an exit strategy, trying to preserve itself rather than trust the spirit.
  • The soldiers want to kill the prisoners—another soul reaction, based in fear and suspicion, rather than truth.

But now the centurion (decision-maker) has learned to trust the spirit (Paul). He overrules the soul, listens to the voice of God, and chooses faith. This trust spares lives, preserves order, and aligns the entire being.


Victory for the Whole Man

As Paul breaks bread (a symbol of communion, gratitude, and restoration), the body is strengthened, the soul is subdued, and the spirit is leading.

“Not a hair of your head will perish.”
Luke 21:18

This is not just preservation of life but divine protection of the body, under the lordship of a spirit-led soul.


Summary: A Picture of Alignment

  • The Spirit (Paul): Perceives the will of God, remains steady, and becomes the anchor in crisis.
  • The Soul (Pilot, Owner, Sailors, Soldiers): Wavers between logic and fear, but can be renewed and trained to trust the spirit.
  • The Body (Passengers): Responds to who is in charge—either suffers or is preserved.

When the centurion (the heart/mind) decides to listen to the spirit over the soul, then the whole man is preserved, even though the external ship is lost.


A Final Word

This story teaches us that when the spirit leads, even through storms and shipwrecks, God preserves us completelyspirit, soul, and body.

“May your whole spirit, soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
1 Thessalonians 5:23

Let the Paul within you rise up. Trust the voice of heaven in your spirit, even when the soul and body protest. In the end, all will reach the shore safely.

Chapter 2

A Prophetic Picture of Spirit, Soul, and Body in Harmony

The first chapter of Daniel is often read as a story of courage and faithfulness in exile, but it also offers a powerful metaphor for the inner workings of the human person—spirit, soul, and body. When these three are aligned under the influence of the spirit, divine results follow—even supernatural transformation.

The Characters as Symbols:

  • Daniel represents the spirit—that part of us that communes with God, discerns His will, and leads by conviction rooted in truth.
  • Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah (Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego) represent the body—the physical aspect of our being that responds to what it’s given, influenced either by the spirit or the world.
  • The chief official (Ashpenaz) represents the soul—the seat of decision-making, emotions, and intellect, caught between pressure from above (the king) and the persuasion of spirit (Daniel).

The Battle of Influence

In Babylon, Daniel and his friends were given royal food and wine—symbolic of the world’s nourishment, which often pleases the senses but may defile the spirit. The king represents the world system, attempting to reprogram mind, appetite, and identity. New names were given to these Hebrew youths to replace their God-given identities—just as the world tries to rename us by its standards.

Daniel, the spirit, resolved not to defile himself. He appealed to the chief official—the soul—not to follow the king’s command. At first, the soul (Ashpenaz) hesitated. Logic and fear ruled him: “If you look unhealthy, I could lose my head!” This is the natural reaction of the soul under pressure from worldly logic.

But Daniel gently persisted, offering a test of ten days—a short trial that invited the soul to trust the spirit. The spirit did not force or condemn; it persuaded with wisdom.

The Body Responds

The body (the three friends) submitted to the direction of the spirit (Daniel), even when the diet was simple and looked insufficient. They ate vegetables and drank water—food that wouldn’t normally build strong warriors. But because they were under spiritual influence, their bodies were supernaturally nourished. At the end of ten days, they looked better and healthier than those who ate the king’s food. The body, though seemingly weak by worldly standards, thrives under spiritual alignment.


Transformation and Wisdom

As a result of this harmony—spirit leading, soul agreeing, and body obeying—God granted them supernatural results. Not only were they healthier, but God gave them extraordinary understanding and wisdom. Daniel was even granted spiritual gifts—visions and dreams—showing how the spirit, when honored, becomes a vessel of heaven’s insight.

When the king examined them, he found them ten times better than all his magicians and enchanters. In this we see the final fruit: when the spirit leads, and the soul and body fall in line, the whole person functions with divine wisdom, health, and favor—even in the courts of a pagan king.


Conclusion: Supernatural Order

Daniel 1 teaches us that when the spirit takes its rightful place as leader, the soul can be persuaded to trust God’s way, and the body will reflect the blessing of that alignment. This is not a message about vegetables—it’s about inner order. It’s about spirit, soul, and body walking together, and experiencing the favor of God in both wisdom and strength.

As Paul later prayed in 1 Thessalonians 5:23:

“May your whole spirit, soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.”

That prayer begins to take shape here—in the quiet resolve of a young man who refused to be defiled, and by doing so, elevated not only himself, but those around him.

Chapter 3

Transformation by Exposure to the Spirit

This story is not just about animal husbandry—it’s about identity, separation, and transformation. It paints a living picture of how the human being can be physically altered when the spirit is revealed and the soul is peeled back.

Jacob had served Laban (the soul) for years. The soul had prospered—not because of its own power, but because the spirit had been working within it. Yet the soul, like Laban, is manipulative by nature. It wants to keep the spirit in bondage, using it for gain while offering only delayed promises and surface-level rewards.

But the spirit eventually asks: “When may I do something for my own household?” In other words, “When will I walk in my own inheritance?” This is a turning point—a moment when the spirit no longer lives for the soul’s agenda but begins to operate with divine strategy.


The Bark and the Branches: Soul Peeled Away

Jacob takes branches and peels away the bark, revealing the white wood beneath. This act is profoundly symbolic.

  • The bark represents the layers of the soul—emotions, reasoning, conditioning, and fears.
  • The inner white wood represents the purity and power of the spirit, hidden underneath.
  • When the bark is removed, the spirit is exposed, and the body (the animals) are placed before it.

Just as the animals came to the water (which often represents the Word or the Spirit), they looked upon the exposed branches, and their very appearance changed. They began to birth according to what they beheld.

This is the mystery: the body reproduces after what it gazes upon.

If the body constantly sees only the soul—its worries, its self-image, its conformity to the world—it cannot be transformed. But if the soul is peeled back, and the spirit becomes visible—its purity, authority, and covenant with God—the body begins to align with heaven’s design.

Can a Person’s Appearance Change?

Yes—the physical body can change. Not by striving, not by diets and toil alone, but by exposure to the spirit, unhindered by the interference of a flesh-dominated soul.

When the spirit leads—when the white wood of Jacob’s rods is exposed and placed in front of us day and night—the body begins to reflect the glory of the spirit. It becomes streaked with righteousness, speckled with heaven’s light, spotted with divine vitality.

It’s not random. It’s supernatural genetics. It’s the image of God breaking through the veil of the soul, rewriting the body with spiritual DNA.


The Separation of Strong and Weak

Jacob only placed the branches before the strong animals. He was intentional—only those with the capacity to respond to the spirit were invited into transformation.

This reminds us: Not every moment is a moment of exposure. Transformation requires both timing and strength. God often waits until we are spiritually “in heat”—desperate, ready, hungry—to show us the raw beauty of the spirit, so we can be changed by it.

The weak animals—those that couldn’t respond—remained under Laban. This shows how some parts of us, still too governed by the soul, cannot yet receive the transformation the spirit offers.


Final Revelation

This story ends with Jacob becoming exceedingly prosperous. Not just in wealth, but in separation, purity, and spiritual ownership. He no longer shares his flock—his body—with Laban. The spirit has led the body out from under the soul’s manipulation.

And you, too, can walk this path.

If your body is weary, sick, aging, or burdened—it may be because it has long looked only at the bark of your soul. But if you will let the spirit arise—if you will peel back the layers and expose the pure white core of your God-born self—your body will begin to transform. You will produce something new, something divine. You will no longer reflect the king’s table of Babylon, or the wages of Laban, but the inheritance of Jacob.

“As we behold Him with unveiled faces, we are transformed into His image from glory to glory…”
—2 Corinthians 3:18

Chapter 4

The spirit Popped, the Body Changed: A Vision of Acts 10

In the upper room of Simon the tanner’s house, Peter the spirit wrestles with a trance—a heavenly sheet descending, full of animals the soul calls “unclean.” Heaven commands, “Kill and eat.” Peter recoils. He is not just resisting food—he is resisting a people. The Gentiles, in the world he was raised in, were seen as unfit for covenant, impure, untouchable. But the voice from heaven is not asking for his agreement. It is issuing a command: “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean.”

This is not about meat. This is about identity and transformation.

Peter, representing the spirit, has long been held back by the soul’s traditions—customs inherited, assumptions embedded, superiority unconsciously absorbed. But now the Spirit of God breaks through, calling him not just to preach, but to pierce through the soul’s walls, and let the spirit take leadership.

The Body Waits on the Other Side

Meanwhile, a body waits in Caesarea.

The Gentiles—the physical body in this prophetic picture—are devout, sincere, and expectant. They are gathered, but not yet empowered. Like a body with breath but no fire, they pray, they give, they wait.

They are not transformed until the spirit comes.

And the spirit—Peter—cannot come until he pops out of the cocoon of religious pride. He must let go of what the soul says is “holy,” and embrace the radical truth: that God’s Spirit is bigger than the bounds of heritage, bloodline, or theology.

When Peter changes his attitude, everything shifts.
When the spirit breaks free, the body receives power.


“The Spirit Is Willing”—And Now Free

Jesus once said, “The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.” But here, something new happens.

The spirit not only is willing—it becomes obedient. Peter chooses surrender. He opens the door. He speaks the Word. And while he is still speaking—not laying hands, not giving an altar call, not finishing his sermon—the Holy Spirit falls.

“While Peter was still speaking these words, the Holy Spirit came on all who heard the message.”
(Acts 10:44)

The body—the Gentile crowd—begins to physically respond. Tongues break forth. Praise erupts. A supernatural change descends upon their actual bodies. This is no inner revelation alone. This is Spirit-on-flesh reality. Heaven has entered the room because one man popped his spirit open.

This wasn’t about the Gentiles qualifying.
It was about the spirit of one man breaking the hold of tradition.


The Soul Must Step Aside

Religious tradition, like Peter’s inherited view of Gentiles, is the soul’s armor—built to preserve, but often used to resist God’s expansion. That soul was powerful in Peter—it argued with heaven, clung to law, measured people by ritual.

But when the soul was silenced, the spirit could act.

This is the secret to revival.
Not in finding the perfect crowd.
Not in forcing the body to conform.
But in peeling away the soul, and letting the white-hot spirit of God move freely.


The Body Transfigured by Spirit-Led Obedience

Cornelius’ house started as a well-meaning prayer gathering.
It ended as an upper room.

It started with hunger.
It ended with fire.

Because the spirit was obedient, the body was transformed.

What’s holding back your body—your health, your community, your family, your generation—may not be resistance in the crowd, but hesitation in the spirit. Maybe your soul, like Peter’s, has defined who’s worthy, what’s possible, and where revival should happen.

But Heaven says:
“Do not call impure what I have made clean.”

And if you will peel back the bark, pop open the spirit, and go with God, the people will not stay the same. The body will speak in tongues. The atmosphere will shift. Transformation will be visible.

“The people who sat in darkness have seen a great light…”
—Matthew 4:16

Chapter 5

The Soul Awakens – Joseph’s First Encounter
Genesis 42:6–24
“And he remembered the dreams which he dreamed of them…” (Genesis 42:9)

The first meeting between Joseph and his brothers is not gentle. It is a scene of tension and concealed identity. The soul, like Joseph, remembers. It carries dreams, disappointments, and questions long buried under the sands of survival. In this first encounter, Joseph—symbolizing the soul—does not reveal himself. Instead, he tests.

The soul, when awakened by the Spirit of God, often brings us face-to-face with famine. There is a lack that drives us to Egypt, not just physically but spiritually. The heart, long estranged from its dreams, must come and plead for grain. Yet the soul, still bruised by betrayal, holds back full reunion. It speaks roughly, setting up trials—not out of vengeance, but for healing.

Joseph weeps in secret. So too does the soul weep when it remembers its identity and sees the immaturity or duplicity of the heart. Simeon is bound—representing the restraining of sin—and the others are sent back with silver returned. Why? Because grace precedes restoration. The testing isn’t to destroy but to awaken.

As the brothers return to Jacob, the inner man is stirred. There is a fear and a mystery: “Why is the silver in our sacks?” It is the question we all ask when grace shows up unexpectedly. The soul knows who it is, but it waits for the heart to change before revealing everything.

Chapter 6

The Soul Deepens – Joseph’s Second Testing
Genesis 43–44
“And Joseph’s heart yearned over his brother… and he sought where to weep.” (Genesis 43:30)

The second journey is deeper. Judah, once callous, now pleads with integrity. The brothers return not just with Benjamin, but with softened hearts. Joseph, as the soul, again conceals his full identity, yet this time he dines with them. The soul begins to nourish what once it only tested.

Benjamin, the beloved brother, is given five times more. He represents the part of the heart that has stayed innocent, untainted—perhaps the childlike trust or joy still hidden within. The soul sees this and honors it. But another test must come. Joseph’s silver cup is hidden in Benjamin’s sack. It is the spirit of discernment concealed in purity—a test not of Benjamin, but of the others. Will they abandon him as they once did Joseph?

Judah steps forward. His plea is not for himself but for his father and his brother. This is love maturing. The soul, listening, is pierced. Joseph cannot hold back much longer. The heart is proving it has changed.

In every believer’s journey, there is a second visit to Egypt. The first trip is to receive provision; the second is for transformation. This second encounter is when the soul sees that the heart is finally ready for reunion. The old wounds are still there, but something deeper is being healed—not by punishment, but by truth revealed in love.

Chapter 7

The Spirit Revealed – Joseph Makes Himself Known
Genesis 45:1–15
“I am Joseph; doth my father yet live?” (Genesis 45:3)

At last, the veil is lifted. Joseph weeps aloud, not as one in pain, but as one overwhelmed by the joy of reconciliation. This is the moment the spirit, long hidden behind the workings of the soul, reveals itself. “I am Joseph”—the one once rejected, now exalted. The same, yet glorified.

The spirit, unlike the soul, is not concerned with retribution but with resurrection. “You meant it for evil,” Joseph will later say, “but God meant it for good.” The spirit discerns the purpose behind the pain. It sees providence in the betrayal.

Reunion begins when the heart (Judah and his brothers) sees the spirit not as foreign, but as family. Tears flow. Embraces are exchanged. What was once fragmented is now whole. The revelation of the spirit brings clarity: there is no more pretending, no more accusation, only invitation—“Come near to me.”

Joseph speaks kindly, not as a ruler over them but as a brother. The brothers are silent at first, stunned into stillness. The spirit often meets us this way—too wonderful, too overwhelming for words. But it speaks peace.

Then Joseph says, “Haste ye, go up to my father.” The spirit always points us home—to the Father, to the source. It does not hoard revelation; it shares it, sends it. The famine is still in the land, but the family is now together. The inner world is reordered. The soul, spirit, and heart are no longer strangers.

In this union, we see our own journey: from famine to fullness, from fear to face-to-face revelation. The spirit speaks now, and it says, “I am Joseph.” And we answer, “My Lord and my God.”

Chapter 8

Eyes to See – Recognizing What Already Is
Genesis 42:8 – “And Joseph knew his brethren, but they knew not him.”

Joseph’s brothers stood before him—hearing his voice, touching his gifts, bowing before his throne—and yet they did not know who he was. The one they sought for survival was the very one who had the power to give them life, not just grain. But their eyes were veiled. Their souls, still haunted by guilt and regret, could not see clearly.

What if they had seen him? What if their eyes had pierced beyond his Egyptian garments and into the truth? They would have fallen—not in fear—but in joy. They would have recognized that they were already safe, already forgiven, already standing in the presence of their brother, their provision, their answer.

The soul often sees only what is natural. It interprets through the past, through wounds and logic. But the spirit perceives what already is. If we can open the eyes of our spirit—if we peel back the veils of shame, fear, and unbelief—we will see what the soul cannot.

We are not trying to become healed—we are healed (1 Peter 2:24).
We are not striving to earn blessing—we are already blessed (Ephesians 1:3).
We are not pleading for provision—we are seated with the One who holds all provision (Ephesians 2:6).

These are spiritual truths, not future promises. They are already finished in Christ, who lives in us. But unless the soul is renewed, unless the mind is awakened and the heart cleansed from old guilt, we will not recognize the Joseph standing in front of us.

This is the invitation: to stop seeing only with the eyes of the past and begin seeing with the eyes of the Spirit. To recognize that in the middle of famine, we are already full. In the presence of perceived danger, we are already protected. In the face of need, we are already rich in grace.

When the eyes of our heart are enlightened, we stop begging for rescue and start rejoicing in revelation. We move from surviving to thriving. Not because the external has changed, but because we finally see what was there all along: our Joseph, our spirit, our Lord—exalted, alive, and waiting to embrace us.

Chapter 9

When the Carts Arrive – The Spirit Revives
Genesis 45:26–27 – “Joseph is yet alive… and when he saw the wagons which Joseph had sent to carry him, the spirit of Jacob their father revived.”

The sons of Jacob returned with astonishing news—Joseph was alive. Not only alive, but lord over all Egypt. They told their father everything Joseph had said, but still, Jacob could not believe. Words alone were not enough. Years of grief had weighed him down, and the soul does not quickly surrender its sorrow.

But then the carts arrived.

Wagons loaded with provision. Wagons Joseph himself had sent. Wagons that bore the signature of truth too deep for the soul to deny. And in that moment—when he saw the wagons—Jacob’s spirit revived.

There is a moment in every believer’s journey when the soul gives way to the spirit. We have heard the promises. We know the scriptures. But something deeper happens when we finally see the evidence—when God’s Spirit reveals to our spirit that it is real, and that it is now. Not a distant hope. Not a symbolic comfort. But a living truth that shifts our reality.

For Jacob, it was not the words that revived him—it was the carts.

For us, it may be a glimpse of healing in our body, a sudden peace in our heart, a provision that arrives at just the right time. It may even be the inward witness—the Spirit’s gentle nudge saying, “This is real. You are not imagining it. The promises are true.”

And then—just like Jacob—our spirit revives.

This is the power of revelation. The difference between knowing about something and seeing it. Between carrying grief and being carried by grace. The carts did not just represent Joseph’s power—they revealed his love. They were the proof of a father’s deliverance, a son’s provision, and a family’s restoration.

So it is with us. Christ has already sent the carts. The Holy Spirit brings us the substance of what our minds have struggled to believe. Healing, righteousness, peace, and joy—they are the wagons of grace. And when we see them, our spirit awakens.

Let your eyes be open to the signs God has sent. Look again. What you thought was just a survival wagon may be the cart that carries your restoration.

Chapter 10

When the Soul Meets the Spirit
Genesis 46:29–30 – “And Joseph made ready his chariot, and went up to meet Israel his father… and he fell on his neck, and wept on his neck a good while. And Israel said unto Joseph, Now let me die, since I have seen thy face, because thou art yet alive.”

The journey from Canaan to Egypt was more than a relocation. It was the crossing of a threshold, the unfolding of a divine reunion. Jacob had lived with years of grief, rooted in a soul that could not see what the spirit already knew. But now, wagons loaded with grace had opened his eyes, and his steps were guided by renewed hope.

Joseph waited in Egypt—not just as a son, but as a ruler. Not just as a figure of family, but as a revelation of God’s favor. When Jacob finally arrived, the reunion was overwhelming. Joseph wept. Jacob held him close. And in a moment too sacred for words, the soul and the spirit embraced.

Jacob, now called Israel, uttered something eternal: “Now let me die, since I have seen thy face.” This was not a statement of despair. It was a declaration of fulfillment. The longing of the soul had found its answer in the face of the spirit.

We are made of body, soul, and spirit. And while the spirit is born again in Christ—alive, seated with Him, whole and rich and healed—the soul often wanders in Canaan, thinking Joseph is gone. It grieves. It wrestles. It survives.

But when the soul takes the journey to meet the spirit, everything changes.

This is not imagination. This is not wishful thinking. This is reality—a spirit already restored, already victorious, already complete in Christ. And when the soul recognizes this, peace floods in. Identity becomes clear. The tears flow, not from pain, but from overwhelming reunion.

It is time to let your soul make the journey.

See the face of your spirit. It bears the image of Christ. It is not waiting to be blessed—it is blessed. It is not waiting to be healed—it is healed. It is not lacking—it is filled with the fullness of God.

Let your soul embrace the truth that your spirit has long known.

And when that happens, like Jacob, you’ll be able to say: “Now I can rest. Now I can live. Now I have seen your face.”

Chapter 11

When the Soul Blesses the World
Genesis 47:7 – “And Joseph brought in Jacob his father, and set him before Pharaoh: and Jacob blessed Pharaoh.”

What a moment—an old shepherd from Canaan, worn by years of sorrow, enters the throne room of the most powerful ruler on earth. Pharaoh, seated in splendor. Jacob, leaning on his staff. And yet, it is Jacob who blesses Pharaoh.

This is not a moment of flattery or ceremony. This is the soul, once wounded, now healed. This is the soul, once grieving, now reunited with the spirit and flowing in divine authority. The one who was surviving in famine now releases favor in a palace.

How can this be?

Because when the soul finally sees what the spirit has always known, something profound happens. The soul no longer walks beneath the weight of loss. It begins to overflow. It remembers who it is—not just a vessel of experience, but a channel of blessing.

Jacob blesses Pharaoh. The lesser is not blessing the greater; rather, the soul, revived by the spirit, becomes a vessel of heaven on earth. And so it is with us.

Too long have we walked into life’s “Pharaohs” thinking we are powerless—before sickness, before need, before powerful systems. But when the soul is aligned with the spirit, it stands up straight. It speaks with grace. It carries heaven’s breath.

Your soul, when awakened by your spirit, can release peace into every room you enter. You can walk into a hospital and bring healing. You can stand before a boss and bring wisdom. You can raise your children not just in survival, but with the prophetic blessing of a soul that knows: My spirit is whole, and I am one with it.

Blessing flows not from striving, but from union.

This is the calling: that your soul, made whole by its reunion with the spirit, would become a blesser of kings, a speaker of life, a releaser of heaven.

Jacob could bless because he had seen Joseph’s face. He had made the journey. He had recognized the life that was there all along. And now, he could give.

So can you.

Chapter 12

When the Soul Speaks Destiny
Genesis 49:1 – “Then Jacob called for his sons and said: ‘Gather around so I can tell you what will happen to you in days to come.’”

It is a sacred thing when a soul, long pressed by sorrow, finally comes into union with the spirit. What once only reacted to pain now begins to speak with purpose. This is Jacob—no longer the man of grief and famine, but the patriarch, the prophet, the father releasing identity.

In Genesis 49, Jacob blesses his sons. But it is more than a blessing—it is prophecy. He speaks to their futures, their callings, their destinies. How can a man who has spent years bowed by grief suddenly see so clearly? Because his soul has touched the life of the spirit.

When the soul sees what the spirit has always seen, it begins to speak as the spirit speaks. It no longer judges by appearance or memory, but by revelation. Jacob does not merely speak what was—he speaks what will be.

This is what happens when your soul wakes up.

The same soul that once cried, “Joseph is gone!” now declares, “Judah, the scepter will not depart from you.” The same man who once thought life was over now releases royal destiny over his children.

Beloved, you were meant for this. You were not born again to merely feel better. You were born again to see, to hear, and to declare. When your soul agrees with your spirit, your words carry eternity. Your blessings shape generations.

Too often we silence ourselves, thinking, Who am I to speak into the future? But the real question is, Who are you not to? If your spirit is seated with Christ, if your spirit is alive with resurrection power, then your soul—joined with it—has every right to prophesy.

This is not about predicting events. This is about releasing identity. When you bless your children, your community, even your own path—you are speaking in harmony with the One who knit those destinies before time began.

The soul, healed by revelation, becomes the mouthpiece of the spirit.

Let your words rise. Let your voice carry heaven’s wind. Let your life become a declaration of divine order. Like Jacob, stand in the place of legacy, and say, “Come close, children, I will tell you what shall be.”

Because the soul that has seen Joseph—the soul that has reunited with the spirit—has earned the right to speak the future.

Chapter 13

A Soul at Rest
Genesis 49:33 – “When Jacob had finished giving instructions to his sons, he drew his feet up into the bed, breathed his last and was gathered to his people.”

Jacob’s journey ends not in anguish, but in peace. This is no small thing.

He who once groaned beneath the weight of loss, now rests in the calm of fulfilled purpose. His soul, long tormented by grief, has seen the son he thought was dead. His eyes have been opened. His spirit has revived. And now—having blessed his children and declared destiny—he can finally lie down, not in sorrow, but in satisfaction.

There is a mystery in these final moments. When the soul has touched the spirit—when it has truly seen—it no longer fears death. It becomes a vessel of inheritance. It no longer clings to what might have been; it rejoices in what has always been true in God.

Jacob finishes his final words, draws up his feet, and is gathered to his people. There is no drama. No chaos. No begging for time. Only rest.

This is the rest that comes when your soul stops wrestling. When it surrenders—not to despair, but to the truth that your life is hidden with Christ in God. When the soul realizes it was never meant to carry the burden alone. That the spirit—already alive in Christ—has carried healing, wealth, peace, and promise all along.

The soul does not create the blessing. It awakens to it. It agrees with it. And once that agreement is made, even death loses its sting.

This is your inheritance, beloved: not just to survive this life, but to live it prophetically. To speak over your days, your family, your future—not from fear, but from resurrection sight. Your spirit is already seated in heavenly places. Let your soul catch up.

Like Jacob, bless your children. Bless your days. Bless your destiny. And when your final breath comes, let it be with your feet drawn up in peace, knowing you have not only seen Joseph—you have embraced him. You have touched what was once hidden. You have released heaven into the earth.

You have lived as one whose soul is no longer blind, and whose spirit has led the way.

And now, rest.
Because when the soul agrees with the spirit, nothing is lost. Everything is fulfilled.

Chapter 14

Final Thoughts: Awakening Your Spirit with Ease

As you reach the end of this book, let your heart rest in this truth: your spirit is already whole, already seated with Christ, already filled with every spiritual blessing. You don’t need to force your spirit to awaken—you only need to allow it to rise.

“How do I do that?” you may ask.

The answer is surprisingly simple. Awakening doesn’t come through striving, but through surrender. It begins when we quiet the anxious voice of the soul and open our hearts to the truth of who we already are in Christ.

Heidi Baker, a missionary known for her deep intimacy with God and miraculous ministry in Mozambique, once said that everything changed for her when she stopped trying to earn God’s power and simply received His love like a child. Her life became a vessel of healing, provision, and joy—not because she had it all figured out, but because her spirit was awakened through yielding. She describes lying on the floor for hours in God’s presence, not doing, just being. And in that simplicity, her spirit “popped”—and it changed everything.

You can do the same. It might not look like hours on the floor. For you, it might be a moment of stillness on your porch, a few minutes worshiping without words, or simply whispering, “Jesus, I trust You” from your heart. The spirit awakens not by force, but by recognition—when you recognize that you’re already healed, already rich in grace, already loved.

Let go of the soul’s noise. Let the body relax. And allow the spirit to rise.

Your spirit is ready. Are you?

Akiane Kramarik, a young girl from a non-religious home, began having dreams and visions of heaven at the age of four. She painted Jesus, heaven, and spiritual truths with a level of insight far beyond her years. Her spirit was awake before her theology was formed. Her communion with God wasn’t earned—it was revealed. Her spirit was already seeing what her soul would grow to understand later.

Whether you are standing in front of a mob, serving in a village, or painting on a canvas, the same truth applies: you are already full of God. Your spirit is alive. The Kingdom is within you. You don’t need to force your way into miracles—you just need to recognize what’s already true.

So how do you “pop” your spirit?

Pause. Quiet the noise. Thank God for what He’s already done. Refuse to be impressed by your soul’s limitations. Let your spirit lead. You’ll be surprised at how quickly clarity, strength, and joy rise.

It’s not work. It’s wonder.

Your spirit is ready. Let it shine.

Thanks for reading.

Tony Egar.

Brisbane, Australia.

www.tonyegar.com

Can Money make a Christian Happy

What does the Bible say?

Written by Tony Egar.

Amazon
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FF34HT1M

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https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=ZppnEQAAQBAJ

For I know the plans I have for you,
declares the Lord,
“plans to prosper you”.

Jeremiah 29

Introduction: The Lie That Stole Your Joy

For years, you’ve been told,
“Money can’t make you happy.”

And perhaps you believed it.

Perhaps you tried to be content with less,
tried to worship without abundance,
tried to smile through the strain of never having enough.

But what if that statement isn’t wisdom—it’s a wound?

What if it’s not holy—but habitual?

What if the real truth is this:

Money, when rightly believed in—not loved—can absolutely contribute to your happiness.

It’s time to break the lie.

It’s time to break the shame around financial peace.
To stop apologizing for wanting enough.
To stop defending your pain as though it were piety.
To stop calling what is broken “blessed,” when it is actually just… broken.

At the wedding in Cana, Jesus did not preach about holiness through sacrifice.
He rescued a celebration by performing a quiet financial miracle.
Wine had run out—a symbol of festivity, luxury, and dignity.
And without being asked by the groom, Jesus intervened.
He made better wine than anyone had tasted before.

But here’s what the story doesn’t usually emphasize:

The groom had no idea his situation had changed for the better.
Everyone else tasted the joy before he did.
But the miracle had already happened.

This book is for those who still believe they are waiting.
Waiting for money.
Waiting for peace.
Waiting for the permission to feel good again.

But the truth is this:
Your financial miracle may have already begun.
God may be speaking to your life the way Jesus spoke to the water:
“Be filled.”

And it’s time for you to stop arguing with your breakthrough.


What This Book Is Really About

This book is not about chasing wealth for the sake of power.
It is about reclaiming joy that has been robbed by shame.
It is about recognizing the difference between the soul, which fears money,
and the spirit, which can believe in money without bowing to it.

It’s about realizing that:

  • Money can create stability.
  • Money can reduce stress.
  • Money can provide health, safety, and rest.
  • Money can buy time, freedom, and access to do good.

If that doesn’t contribute to your happiness—what will?

This book will teach you how to think differently.
It will invite you to believe again.
To imagine again.
To receive again.

You are the groom.
The miracle is already in motion.
And the best has been saved for now.

The Miracle You Didn’t See Happen

There is a quiet moment in every believer’s life when heaven has already moved—but the soul has not yet caught up.
That moment is often disguised as silence, stillness, or even lack.
It looks like nothing is happening. But beneath the surface, water is already turning to wine.

This book is written for those who feel they’ve run out—out of strength, out of money, out of clarity.
You are not empty.
You are being filled to the brim.
The miracle is not coming—it has already begun.

The story of the wedding at Cana is not just about Jesus’ first public sign.
It is a parable of perception.
In that sacred feast, everyone was involved, but only a few were aware.
The servants obeyed, the master tasted, the guests rejoiced.
But the groom, the one most blessed by the miracle, was the last to know.

This is the mystery of divine provision:
your soul may be unaware, but your spirit has already seen it.
You are not waiting for your situation to change—you are awakening to the change that has already come.

This book will take you through the stages of awareness, dividing soul and spirit through the light of God’s Word.
It will teach you how to listen like Mary, obey like the servants, and eventually recognize, like the groom, that the best has been saved for you until now.

You are not behind. You are not forgotten.
You are simply being awakened to a miracle that already happened.

Chapter 1

The Hidden Celebration

God begins miracles in places we overlook.

A wedding is a celebration of covenant, joy, and new beginnings. Yet the miracle of Cana did not begin in the temple, the synagogue, or the wilderness. It began in a place of festivity, where people were laughing, dancing, and unaware that lack was drawing near.

So it is with many of us. Outwardly, things seem fine. The party is still going. The surface of life is bright. But underneath, something is running out. Maybe it’s your finances, your faith, your hope. And no one notices—not even you—until the moment the jars are empty.

Jesus chose this moment for His first miracle to teach us something profound: transformation often begins in hidden, ordinary spaces. You do not have to be in crisis for the Lord to act. You don’t need to understand your need for Him to meet it. He begins before you notice. He moves before you ask.

Notice this: the groom didn’t invite the miracle. He wasn’t even aware he needed one. Jesus came as a guest—but carried the power of heaven within Him. The Word was present, even before the problem was revealed.

This is how miracles often arrive—in the background, unnoticed, while life feels normal. You may not feel prophetic. You may not feel holy. But the Holy One has already entered your house.

Your soul is looking at the decorations. Your spirit is listening to the shift in the air. Something is changing. Heaven has stepped in quietly, not to interrupt the celebration, but to sustain it.

Before your soul ever sensed the lack, your spirit had already received the answer. The guests didn’t know. The master of the banquet didn’t know. The groom didn’t know. But Jesus knew. And He brought the solution with Him before the problem ever appeared.

This is the first step in spiritual awareness: realizing that God does not wait for us to be desperate before He acts. He arrives before the wine runs out. He comes as a guest, but He is the host of heaven. He is not late. He is already present, already working, already providing.

Let the soul keep celebrating. Let the spirit begin watching.
You are not abandoned. You are not forgotten.
The Miracle-Maker is already in your midst.


“Before they call I will answer; while they are still speaking I will hear.” —Isaiah 65:24

“Jesus was invited to the wedding…” —John 2:2

Chapter 2

When the Wine Runs Out

Lack is not the end. It is the beginning of awareness.

There is a moment in every journey of faith when the soul feels the first tremor of insufficiency. The laughter continues. The music plays. But something is missing. The jar is lighter than it should be. The future seems uncertain.

This is the moment when the wine runs out.

In Cana, it wasn’t a famine or a war that signaled the need for Jesus’ power. It was something simple: the supply for joy had dried up. The celebration could no longer sustain itself. That is where the miracle begins—not in catastrophe, but in quiet depletion.

Many miss their miracle because they misread this moment. The soul panics. The soul accuses. The soul imagines it has been abandoned. But the spirit is listening. The spirit knows what the soul does not: emptiness is not the enemy—it is the invitation.

Notice that Jesus did not make wine appear before the shortage. He allowed it to run out first. Why? Because as long as the soul still feels full, it resists divine intervention. The soul wants to manage, perform, fix, and save face. But when the last drop is gone, the illusion is shattered. Then, and only then, can the spirit rise to the surface.

Mary said it plainly: “They have no more wine.” There was no begging, no fear, no shame. Just truth. And this is what your spirit is learning to say—even when your soul would rather pretend. “There is no more strength. There is no more strategy. There is no more supply.” And that truth is holy.

Awareness begins in honesty. God does not require you to be strong, wise, or wealthy. He simply waits for the soul to admit what the spirit already knows. You cannot supply yourself. But He can.

What you sense now—this emptiness—is not death. It is preparation. The end of your wine is not the end of the celebration. It is the start of the supernatural.

When your soul mourns what is missing, let your spirit rejoice in what is coming.
When the wine runs out, the Word gets ready to speak.


“My grace is sufficient for you, for My power is made perfect in weakness.” —2 Corinthians 12:9

“When the wine was gone, Jesus’ mother said to Him, ‘They have no more wine.’” —John 2:3

Chapter 3

The Voice of Intercession

Your spirit knows before your soul understands.

The wine is gone—but panic does not come. Instead, a voice rises. It is not the groom. It is not the guests. It is not even the master of the banquet. It is Mary.

Mary sees what others do not. She feels the shift in the atmosphere. She discerns what is missing, not with her natural eyes but with spiritual sensitivity. Mary, the mother of Jesus, moves in the role of the intercessor.

She does not make an announcement. She does not cause a scene. She turns to Jesus and simply says, “They have no more wine.”

This is how the spirit intercedes for the soul. It senses the lack before the soul does. It speaks to the Word before the situation escalates. It doesn’t need the whole room to know—only Heaven.

Your soul may still be managing appearances. Your soul may be rehearsing plans. But deep within you, your spirit is already whispering: “We’re empty. And we need Him.”

There is no shame in this voice. There is no fear. There is only truth and trust. Mary’s voice is calm, clear, and confident. She knows her Son. She knows He will act. And this is what your spirit has begun to know too.

Even when your soul hesitates—your spirit intercedes. Even when your mind wrestles with the silence—your spirit reaches for the Savior.

There are times when the miracle begins not with your prayer, but with the spirit’s cry on your behalf. Romans 8:26 says that the Spirit intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words. Your breakthrough may not begin with your understanding. It may begin with your spirit groaning to Jesus in the secret place.

Mary does not wait for permission. She does not wait for the groom to ask. She simply goes to the Source. Your spirit, aligned with Heaven, always goes first.

And now—so can you.

Let the soul observe. Let the mind wonder. But let the spirit speak.
Let your inner Mary arise.
Let the intercession begin.


“In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness… the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express.” —Romans 8:26

“Jesus’ mother said to him, ‘They have no more wine.’” —John 2:3

Chapter 4

The Hour That Hasn’t Come (Yet)

Delay is not absence. It is alignment.

Jesus hears His mother’s voice. He hears the cry of intercession, the spirit’s knowing. But His response is surprising:
“Woman, why do you involve me? My hour has not yet come.”

This is the pause between prayer and performance. The space between spiritual discernment and visible deliverance. And it is holy.

Your soul may hear these words and panic. “Not yet?” it asks. “But I’m empty. I’m desperate. I need You now.”
But your spirit hears something deeper: “I am already aware. I am already here. But the fullness of the moment is still unfolding.”

Jesus is not saying no—He is marking time. He is syncing earth to heaven. He is allowing every piece to align, so the miracle is not rushed, but revealed.

There is a difference between delay and denial. The soul cannot always tell the difference. But the spirit can.

The soul feels the ache of waiting. The spirit holds the rhythm of eternity.

When Jesus says, “My hour has not yet come,” He is speaking of divine timing—a timing not measured by human need, but by heavenly fullness. Every miracle in your life has a sacred hour attached to it. Not a random minute, not a late arrival—but an appointed hour that cannot be missed.

Delay is not a sign that nothing is happening. It is the invisible tension of everything coming together.

In this moment, your soul must not interpret silence as abandonment. It must not interpret “not yet” as “never.” It must trust the wisdom of your spirit, which has already sensed that Jesus is not turning away—He is turning everything into place.

This is the fourth stage of awareness: surrendering to timing.
Let your soul be still.
Let your spirit listen to the clock of heaven.
Your hour is closer than you think.


“For the revelation awaits an appointed time; it speaks of the end and will not prove false. Though it linger, wait for it—it will certainly come and will not delay.” —Habakkuk 2:3

“My hour has not yet come.” —John 2:4

Chapter 5

Obedience at the Brim

When understanding ends, obedience begins.

Mary turns from Jesus without protest. She does not plead, explain, or push. Instead, she turns to the servants and says something timeless:
“Do whatever He tells you.”

This is not resignation. This is spiritual precision. Mary speaks as one who knows: the hour may not have come publicly, but the power is already present privately. She releases control and calls others to obey—even before a miracle is promised.

And this is the next stage of awareness: obedience without full understanding.
The soul demands details.
The spirit moves at His Word.

The servants receive no explanation. No assurance. No prophecy of what is to come. Just an instruction:
“Fill the jars with water.”

These jars were not wine vessels. They were ceremonial washing jars—symbols of human effort, purification, and outward religion. And yet, Jesus chooses them for His first sign. He chooses what seems unrelated. He chooses the ordinary. He chooses what has always been there.

So He does with you.

What part of your life has always felt plain, unremarkable, or overlooked? That is where He speaks first. That is where the water must rise. He says, “Fill it. Completely.”

Not partially. Not timidly. To the brim.

This is obedience in its purest form: responding with fullness even when there’s no visible reward. The servants obeyed with no idea that wine was coming. They simply followed the voice.

Your soul wants proof. Your spirit says yes.

There is a moment when the water looks unchanged, and the miracle seems distant. But your spirit is rising. Your obedience is filling every jar. Your surrender is preparing the space where transformation will occur.

Do not despise the water. Do not resist the process.
The brim is the border of breakthrough.

When you obey at the brim, you are closer than you know.


“If you are willing and obedient, you shall eat the good of the land.” —Isaiah 1:19

“Jesus said to the servants, ‘Fill the jars with water’; so they filled them to the brim.” —John 2:7

Chapter 6

The Transfer of Faith

Faith flows through simple hands before it reaches astonished hearts.

The jars are full. The servants are ready. Still, nothing looks changed. No scent of wine. No shimmer of glory. Just water—cold, heavy, and unremarkable.

Then Jesus speaks again:
“Now draw some out and take it to the master of the banquet.”

This command defies reason. The soul protests: Draw what? Deliver what? This isn’t wine—this is foolishness. But the spirit understands something deeper: faith is not proved in what you see—it is proved in what you carry.

This is the sacred transfer.
From His word… to your hands.
From unseen transformation… to physical obedience.

The servants could have refused. They could have said, This isn’t ready. This isn’t real. This isn’t safe. But instead, they reached into the jars—still looking like water—and carried what Jesus had touched.

This is the moment many miss. They wait to act until they see the miracle. But the miracle waits for them to act. Faith does not follow the visible. Faith reveals it.

Sometimes your spirit will know something has changed before your soul can explain it.
The water may still look like lack.
But in your spirit, you’ve already tasted joy.

Jesus doesn’t say when the water turns to wine.
He doesn’t explain how.
He simply asks the faithful to move.

This is your instruction:
Don’t wait for proof. Don’t wait for public applause.
Reach into the ordinary. Carry it with honor.
Move as though the miracle has already occurred—because in heaven, it has.

The soul wants to see first. The spirit knows: belief is the vessel. Obedience is the pouring. And faith is the hand that bridges what is invisible into what is undeniable.

Draw it out.
Carry it forward.
He has already touched it.


“For we walk by faith, not by sight.” —2 Corinthians 5:7

“Then He told them, ‘Now draw some out and take it to the master of the banquet.’ They did so.” —John 2:8

Spirit Activation: Draw It Out

A prophetic exercise to help you move from unseen faith to visible trust.

This is not a story you are just reading. This is a miracle you are living.
The wine is already forming—but your soul might still see only water.

This activation will help you let your spirit lead.


1. Identify the Jar

Close your eyes. Take a moment and ask:

“Lord, what area of my life have You already touched—though it still looks like lack?”

Write down what comes to mind. It may be your finances, your family, your health, your dream. Whatever it is, name it:

“This is the jar: ___________________________


2. Obey Without Proof

Now ask:

“Jesus, what simple act of obedience are You asking of me—today—in this area?”

It may be a phone call, a declaration, a gift, an application, an offering, or simply believing out loud that the miracle has begun.

“This is what I will draw out: ________________________


3. Declare the Transfer

Place your hand over your heart and speak this aloud:

“Spirit of God, I believe You’ve already begun the transformation.
I no longer wait for proof—because I walk by faith.
I draw from what You’ve touched. I carry what You’ve made holy.
I pour out what You’ve filled—until the miracle is undeniable.”


4. Seal It in Worship

Take a moment now to thank God as if the wine is already flowing. Speak praise. Sing softly. Let gratitude rise before your eyes see it.

Because this is the secret:
Your spirit already knows.
Now your soul is catching up.

Chapter 7

The Master’s Surprise

When your soul is unaware, the master already tastes the blessing.

The master of the banquet takes the cup from the servants’ hands. He tastes the wine—but he does not know where it came from. His soul is unaware of the miracle behind the moment.

Yet his senses detect the undeniable truth:
“Everyone brings out the choice wine first and then the cheaper wine after the guests have had too much to drink; but you have saved the best till now.”

This moment is profound. The soul, represented by the master, cannot see the full story. It does not know the invisible workings of spirit and obedience behind the scene. But the taste, the experience, the result cannot be denied.

You may be like the master—unaware at first, tasting only the fruit of unseen labor, hidden obedience, and faith. The breakthrough has already been poured. The best has already been saved.

This is the eighth stage of awareness:
recognizing the evidence before understanding the process.

Your spirit has known for some time. Your soul may still ask questions, doubt, or try to explain the timing. But the harvest is here.

God’s blessings are often first experienced in the senses before they are fully comprehended in the mind.

The best is not always first. Sometimes, God saves His choicest blessings for the final moment, when the soul is ready to receive—not before.

This teaches us to trust the invisible first and savor the visible last.
To lean into the spirit’s knowledge and receive the soul’s confirmation later.

The master’s surprise is your soul’s awakening:
the moment when you realize, “It’s true—God was working all along.”


“Taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the one who takes refuge in him.” —Psalm 34:8

“Everyone brings out the choice wine first and then the cheaper wine after the guests have had too much to drink; but you have saved the best till now.” —John 2:10

Chapter 8

The Groom’s Awakening

The last to know is often the one most transformed.

The master of the banquet tasted the wine and was amazed. The servants saw the miracle. Mary heard the need. Jesus performed the sign. Yet the groom—the central figure of the celebration—remained unaware.

The groom did not know the situation had changed for the better until someone else told him. The joy, the relief, the blessing had already arrived—but he was the last to perceive it.

This is the final stage of awareness: when the soul finally catches up to what the spirit has already known.

Your spirit has sensed the breakthrough. It has believed in the miracle before the evidence. Your soul may still wrestle with doubt, worry, or waiting. But the truth remains:
Your finances, your life, your breakthrough—have already improved.

The groom’s late awareness reminds us that God’s miracles are not always immediately visible to our soul’s understanding. Sometimes, the change happens quietly behind the scenes, in the spirit realm, before our natural senses confirm it.

God often moves first in the spirit, then in the soul, and finally in the circumstances. Your breakthrough may already be in motion, even if your soul hasn’t fully seen it yet.

The groom’s awakening teaches patience—not the passive waiting of despair, but the active waiting of faith and trust. It encourages us to celebrate the miracle even when it feels delayed.

Be encouraged:
You are not behind.
You are not forgotten.
You are simply the last to know.

And when your soul finally receives this truth, it will be transformed—because it is the moment your entire being aligns with the miracle God has already done.


“I have told you now before it happens, so that when it does happen you will believe.” —John 14:29

“He did not realize where it had come from… then he called the bridegroom aside…” —John 2:9-10

Chapter 9

Believing Before Seeing

Faith is the bridge from spirit’s knowing to soul’s sight.

The groom was the last to know his situation had changed for the better. Yet the miracle had already been completed in the spirit realm. The water had become wine, but his eyes had not yet seen the transformation.

This is the mystery of faith:
to believe what your spirit senses before your soul perceives it.

Your soul craves evidence. It wants proof—clear signs, tangible results, visible confirmation. But your spirit moves beyond the limits of sight and logic. It whispers truths that your soul cannot yet grasp.

To walk in breakthrough is to embrace this tension—holding onto what is not yet seen with a heart anchored in what is already known spiritually.

When your soul doubts, your spirit must speak louder. When your circumstances appear unchanged, your spirit must rejoice in the unseen. When your mind wrestles with fear, your spirit must stand firm in hope.

This is the posture of believers who walk by faith, not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:7). It is a daily choice to trust the invisible hand of God shaping your reality even when your soul feels unaware.

Remember:
Your breakthrough has already happened in the spirit.
Your soul is catching up.
Your eyes will soon see.
Your heart will soon rejoice.

Until then, hold fast to the promise. Keep your hands obedient. Keep your faith active. Keep your spirit alert.

Because the miracle you long for is waiting just beyond the veil of natural perception.


“Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” —John 20:29

“We walk by faith, not by sight.” —2 Corinthians 5:7

Chapter 10

The Invitation to Awareness

Step into the fullness of what is already yours.

The story at Cana reveals a powerful truth:
Your breakthrough is often happening long before your soul can see it.

Jesus began His miracle quietly, behind the scenes—in the spirit realm—while those around Him still struggled to perceive the change. The jars filled to the brim, the servants obeyed without understanding, the master tasted without knowing the source, and the groom was the last to realize the blessing.

This mirrors the journey of awareness we all must travel.
Your spirit knows the miracle has already begun.
Your soul wrestles to believe it.
And your circumstances will soon confirm it.

This is an invitation—an invitation to awaken your awareness.
To shift from anxiety to trust.
From confusion to clarity.
From waiting in fear to walking in faith.

Your finances, your destiny, your life can change in the invisible realm today. Your obedience, your faith, your praise are the vessels that carry that change into your reality.

You are invited to move beyond what you see, beyond what you feel, into the realm where your spirit already walks—into the realm of divine transformation.

The best wine is saved for the last moment.
But that moment begins in your spirit before it appears to your soul.

Step into this awareness.
Embrace the waiting with faith.
Celebrate the miracle before your eyes behold it.

This is only the beginning.

The deeper understanding of how your soul and spirit work together will unlock even greater revelation and breakthrough in the chapters to come.


“The kingdom of God is within you.” —Luke 17:21

“Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see.” —Hebrews 11:1

Chapter 11

The Dance of Love

Soul and Spirit

Where your soul longs to be loved, your spirit finds joy in loving.

The soul is deeply connected to receiving love. It craves the affection, approval, and acceptance of others. When we are “in love,” but the person we love does not yet return that love, the soul feels the sting of rejection and disappointment. It is unhappy, restless, and incomplete because it depends on someone else’s feelings and actions to find satisfaction.

This is the soul’s natural condition: to seek love from others.
When others love us, our soul feels secure, valued, and joyful.
When others withhold their love, the soul feels empty, anxious, and powerless.

But the spirit moves differently. The spirit’s deepest joy comes from loving—not from being loved.
The spirit is happiest when it gives love freely, without expectation or condition. It is the wellspring of unconditional love, flowing outward regardless of return.

This difference matters profoundly.

When you wait for someone else’s love to feel whole, you give your power away. You place your happiness and identity in the hands of others. You become a victim of their choices, moods, and presence.

But when you decide to love—regardless of whether love is returned—you reclaim your authority.
You step into the spirit’s realm, where your joy is not dependent on circumstances or approval.
You become the source of love, not the recipient waiting passively.

This shift is transformative.

It breaks the chains of emotional dependency.
It restores your identity and power.
It frees you from the fear of rejection and the need for validation.

When you love from your spirit, you walk in true freedom.
Your spirit governs your soul instead of the soul being ruled by its desires.
You move from being controlled by how others treat you to controlling how you respond with love.

This is the path to spiritual authority.
It begins with choosing to love—whether or not the world loves you back.

So, in the waiting—for love, for breakthrough, for acceptance—choose to love first.
Choose to pour out your heart.
Choose to bless even before you are blessed.

Because your spirit’s joy is not dependent on return, but on the act of loving itself.

This is your authority.
This is your power.
This is your freedom.


“Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love.” —1 John 4:8

“Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you.” —Luke 6:27

“Above all, love each other deeply, because love covers over a multitude of sins.” —1 Peter 4:8

Chapter 12

Taking Back Your Authority

Real and Imagined Journeys

From waiting to loving, from victim to victor.

The journey to reclaim your authority begins when you stop waiting for others to love you and start choosing to love freely—even when it feels hard.

A Real Story: Maria’s Breakthrough

Maria had long struggled with feelings of rejection in her marriage. Her soul was restless, longing for her husband’s affection and approval. She found herself caught in a cycle of waiting and hoping, feeling powerless when he was distant.

One day, through prayer and reflection, Maria realized she was giving her power away by depending on her husband’s love to feel worthy. She began to ask God to help her love her husband unconditionally—not waiting for his love in return, but choosing to love first.

Slowly, Maria’s heart softened, and her spirit grew stronger. She started showing kindness, patience, and affection without expectation. This shift changed the atmosphere in their home. Her husband noticed the change, grew closer, and their relationship began to heal.

Maria’s soul found peace, not because her husband suddenly loved her more, but because her spirit was no longer captive to waiting. She reclaimed her authority by loving first—and that love transformed her world.


A Fictional Story: Daniel’s Choice

Daniel was a young artist who longed for recognition and acceptance from a close friend and mentor. His soul ached each time the friend seemed indifferent or critical. Daniel felt trapped by his desire for approval, unable to create freely or find joy.

One evening, Daniel had a vision: he saw himself holding a lantern. He realized the lantern symbolized his love and light, which he had kept hidden, waiting for others to ignite it. In that moment, Daniel chose to step into his spirit’s power. He decided to love and express himself fully—regardless of whether his friend approved.

Daniel began painting boldly, sharing his art with others, and speaking words of kindness to his mentor without expecting anything back. His soul, once burdened by waiting, began to feel lighter. His spirit was free.

Though his friend’s attitude did not change immediately, Daniel’s life transformed. He found joy in loving and creating freely. He was no longer controlled by someone else’s acceptance—he held his own light.


Both Maria and Daniel teach us that waiting for love places power outside ourselves, but choosing to love returns that power to our spirit.

You too can reclaim your authority by deciding to love first. It is not always easy, but it is the way to freedom.


“Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good.” —Romans 12:9

“Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.” —Romans 12:21

Chapter 13

Loving Authority

When your spirit leads in love, your finances follow in favor.

The journey from waiting for love to choosing to love is not just emotional or spiritual—it carries profound implications for every area of your life, including your finances.

When your soul is controlled by fear, doubt, or dependence—waiting anxiously for provision or approval—you put your circumstances and others in charge of your destiny. You become a victim of scarcity thinking, stuck in lack because your focus is on what you do not have.

But when your spirit awakens to loving authority, you step into a new realm of faith and favor.

Loving authority means:

  • Loving your work, even before it bears fruit.
  • Loving your finances, even if your accounts seem low.
  • Loving your calling, even when obstacles appear.

This love is not sentimental or naive; it is a powerful, active choice to embrace abundance and blessing in advance. It is the spirit declaring, “I am enough, I have enough, and I trust God’s provision.”

This attitude shifts your vibration and opens doors:

  • It releases creativity and solutions you couldn’t see before.
  • It attracts favor and opportunity because you carry the heart of a giver, not a taker.
  • It transforms your financial mindset from scarcity to abundance.

Just like the water jars at Cana—ordinary vessels filled beyond capacity—your finances can be filled to overflowing when your spirit leads in love and faith.

The miracle begins within, before it manifests without.

Your loving authority breaks the cycle of lack and ushers in supernatural provision.

Remember:

Your spirit’s love is the catalyst for your soul’s breakthrough and your financial increase.


“Give, and it will be given to you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over, will be poured into your lap.” —Luke 6:38

“The Lord will open the heavens, the storehouse of his bounty, to send rain on your land in season and to bless all the work of your hands.” —Deuteronomy 28:12

Chapter 14

Lessons from Mother Teresa

From quiet obedience to powerful love: a journey of awakening.

Mother Teresa’s life is a remarkable example of how awareness deepens over time—how the soul and spirit grow through trials, obedience, and love.

The Early Years — Quiet Obedience

In her early years, Mother Teresa was devoted but private. She obeyed the call to religious life and service with humility. Her awareness was rooted in obedience to God’s will, yet much of her spiritual breakthrough was hidden deep within.

Her soul found comfort in structure and devotion, but the fullness of her spiritual authority had not yet blossomed. This stage reflects many who serve faithfully but have yet to awaken fully to the power within their spirit.

The Call Within the Call — Radical Loving

In 1946, Mother Teresa experienced what she called the “call within the call.” She felt a deeper, more urgent calling to serve the poorest of the poor in Calcutta.

This was a breakthrough of awareness. Her spirit embraced radical love—not just serving, but loving unconditionally, regardless of hardship or rejection. Her soul wrestled with the immense challenges but was strengthened by the spirit’s joy and authority.

In this stage, she moved beyond waiting for the world’s approval. She chose to love first, giving herself fully to the mission, even when the results were uncertain.

The Global Witness — Living Loving Authority

In her later years, Mother Teresa became a global symbol of compassion and loving authority. She walked fully in the freedom of her spirit, no longer controlled by others’ opinions or worldly success.

Her love was active, unstoppable, and transformative. She demonstrated how loving authority not only changes individuals but can move nations and inspire millions.

Mother Teresa’s life journey reveals how awareness grows from quiet obedience to powerful love—and how reclaiming spiritual authority brings profound breakthrough.


“Not all of us can do great things. But we can do small things with great love.” —Mother Teresa

“Peace begins with a smile.” —Mother Teresa

Chapter 15

Authority Through Love

How Mother Teresa Changed the World

Without Seeking Power

Love first, authority follows.

Mother Teresa never sought authority. She did not crave recognition, titles, or influence. Her life began quietly in service, grounded in obedience and humility. Yet, by the end of her journey, she was influencing governments, the rich, and the powerful—all because she chose to love freely and act in compassion without waiting for approval or reward.

Her authority came not from ambition but from love in action.

This is a profound lesson:
True authority is a byproduct of loving first, not a goal to be pursued.

Mother Teresa’s influence was rooted in her decision to love unconditionally, especially those whom society overlooked—the poorest of the poor. She did not wait for others to love her or to recognize her value; she gave love tirelessly and sacrificially.

Because she loved without expectation, her spirit carried power that transcended social and political boundaries.

Governments sought her counsel. World leaders respected her voice. Her authority was undeniable—not because she demanded it, but because her love demanded acknowledgment.

She showed that:

  • When you stop waiting for others’ love or approval,
  • When you act in love despite rejection or hardship,
  • When your spirit leads, not your soul’s need for validation,

You reclaim your authority.

You break free from being a victim of circumstance or opinion.

You become a catalyst for change.

Mother Teresa’s life exemplifies this spiritual principle:
Love is the root of true authority.

When you choose to love first, you align with the source of all power and breakthrough.

Your influence will grow—not because you seek it, but because love cannot be ignored.


“I alone cannot change the world, but I can cast a stone across the waters to create many ripples.” —Mother Teresa

“Let us always meet each other with smile, for the smile is the beginning of love.” —Mother Teresa

Chapter 16

To Love Is to Believe

Faith Expressing Itself Through Love

“The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.” —Galatians 5:6

There is a hidden truth running through the entire Bible, often overlooked but deeply powerful:
To truly love someone is to believe in them.

When Paul wrote to the Galatians, he didn’t say that faith works through effort or feelings or perfect performance. He said faith expresses itself through love. And love, in its truest form, is an act of belief.

  • When Jesus loved Peter, He believed in him—despite Peter’s denial.
  • When the father welcomed the prodigal son home, he believed in his return before he saw it.
  • When God so loved the world, He believed in its redemption and acted upon it by sending His Son.

Love and Belief Are Interchangeable

Love is often thought of as an emotion. But biblical love is more than a feeling—it is a decision to believe in someone’s God-given potential, even when the evidence is lacking.

There are times when it feels almost impossible to “love” someone, especially if they’ve hurt us or disappointed us. But it may be easier to take the first step by simply choosing to believe in them. To believe that they can change. To believe that they still carry a purpose. That belief is a form of love.

This applies to more than people.

  • You may not love your job—but you can believe in your job, believe it has purpose, and that it’s a place where God’s favor can grow.
  • You may not be allowed to love money—Jesus warned us clearly about that—but you can believe in money as a tool that, when submitted to God, can bless, build, and restore.

Mother Teresa: Believing Without Loving the System

Mother Teresa didn’t love money. She never sought wealth for herself or worshipped material things. But she believed in the power of money when placed in the hands of love.

She believed that money could feed a starving child, build a shelter, provide medicine. Her faith wasn’t in the money—it was in God—but she understood the role of financial provision and believed that heaven could channel resources through willing hands.

Because she believed, money came. Not because she loved it, but because she had faith expressing itself through love.


Your Takeaway: Start Believing

  • Believe in the people who seem unlovable.
  • Believe in the work God has put in your hands.
  • Believe in the provision that supports the mission.

That belief is love in action. That love is faith expressed. And that is the only thing that counts.


“Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.” —1 Corinthians 13:7

“And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.” —1 Corinthians 13:13

Chapter 17

Breaking the Fear of Loving Money

Believing Without Bowing

“For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil.” —1 Timothy 6:10

We live in a strange cultural contradiction.

In the Western world, nearly everyone chases money—jobs are chosen for it, time is traded for it, security is defined by it. And yet, at the same time, many—especially Christians—deny that they care about money at all.

Why? Because we have been taught that to love money is dangerous. And it is. Scripture is clear: the love of money can corrupt the heart, twist motives, and destroy lives. But this fear has created confusion.

Instead of developing a healthy, spiritual relationship with money, many believers feel shame around it. They suppress ambition, fear wealth, and feel guilty when money flows their way. They pray for provision but secretly believe they shouldn’t enjoy it.

This double-mindedness creates a blockage.

The Fear of Loving Money Has Been Impregnated Into the Culture

It’s been embedded through centuries of religious teaching and social suspicion. Phrases like “money is the root of all evil” (misquoted) are thrown around without context. Monastic poverty was once seen as the highest spiritual ideal. The result? Many Christians subconsciously believe that wealth and holiness cannot coexist.

But here’s the truth:

Jesus never said money was evil. He said the love of money was dangerous.

And yet, Jesus believed in money.

  • He asked Peter to find a coin in a fish’s mouth.
  • He honored the widow who gave two small coins.
  • He received financial support from wealthy women.
  • He taught parables about investing, trading, and stewardship.
  • He let Judas keep the money bag—even knowing his weakness.

Jesus understood that money is not a god, but it is a tool. And like any tool, it depends on whose hand it’s in.

How Do We Get Around the Fear?

We overcome this blockage not by denying money, but by transforming our relationship with it:

  • We do not need to love money.
  • But we must believe in it.

Believe that money can obey your voice when your spirit is aligned with heaven.
Believe that money can serve the kingdom of God.
Believe that you can have authority over finances without being ruled by them.

This is not greed—it’s governance. It’s spiritual maturity.

When we stop fearing money and start believing in its purpose, we unlock a flow of provision that’s been waiting for our permission.


“You cannot serve both God and money.” —Matthew 6:24

You cannot serve money, but money can serve you—if your spirit leads.

Chapter 18

The Lie That Money
Does not Make You Happy

“The blessing of the Lord makes one rich, and He adds no sorrow with it.” —Proverbs 10:22 (NKJV)

One of the most common lies we’ve been told—especially in Christian and Western circles—is this:
“Money doesn’t make you happy.”

We’ve heard it from celebrities, billionaires, successful entrepreneurs:

“I bought the jet. I bought the mansion. I still wasn’t happy.”

The problem isn’t what they’re saying—it’s what they mean when they say it.

When wealthy people talk about not being happy, they are usually speaking about a narrow definition of happiness. They are talking about thrill, excitement, and adrenaline—not the deeper forms of well-being that money can absolutely help support.

Let’s define “happy” more honestly.

True Happiness Is Bigger Than a Rush

Happiness doesn’t have to be loud. It doesn’t have to be dramatic.
It can look like:

  • Security — knowing your bills are paid, your family is covered, and your future is stable.
  • Stability — not panicking when an emergency hits.
  • Freedom — being able to say “yes” to a calling, or “no” to toxic jobs.
  • Privacy — the ability to rest in peace, away from noise and pressure.
  • Power — not to dominate others, but to influence change and bless the world.

Would these things make a normal person happy? Of course they would.

Even Scripture acknowledges the joy of provision:

“You will be blessed in the city and blessed in the country… The Lord will grant you abundant prosperity…” (Deuteronomy 28:3, 11)

Yes, money cannot fix a broken heart. It cannot buy eternal life. It cannot create true identity.
But it can contribute to a life that supports joy, peace, purpose, and health—when managed by a spirit-led person.

The real issue isn’t money.
It’s the misuse of money.
It’s the confusion around what happiness really is.

We’ve been made to feel guilty for wanting what God wants to give: peace, provision, and purpose.

Jesus Wasn’t Opposed to Happiness

Jesus turned water into wine—not out of necessity, but out of joy.
He spoke of abundant life, of houses built on rock, of talents doubled, of blessings multiplied.

He didn’t condemn wealth. He warned against wealth owning the heart. There’s a difference.


You Can Be Both Righteous and Happy

Let go of the false humility that says, “I don’t need anything.”
Embrace the truth: God delights in your well-being. And if money can support a happier, healthier, freer life—then you are allowed to believe in it.

You don’t worship it. You don’t chase it.
But you stop rejecting the joy it can bring.


“I came that they may have life and have it abundantly.” —John 10:10 (ESV)

“Wealth and riches are in their houses, and their righteousness endures forever.” —Psalm 112:3

Chapter 19

The Soul’s Struggle

Deciding to Believe in Money

“To the pure, all things are pure…” —Titus 1:15

Money has always been neutral. It doesn’t hate you. It doesn’t love you. It doesn’t corrupt by itself—it responds to the one who holds it.

And that’s where the battle begins.

The soul struggles with money. It is easily swayed by fear, greed, shame, pride, and cultural confusion. The soul remembers every time you felt insecure, every time you were shamed for wanting more, every time you were told that wealth was unspiritual. So it hesitates. It avoids. It distrusts.

But your spirit is not confused.

Your spirit is born of God, and therefore, it is pure. It does not lust after money, nor does it fear it.
It simply believes in purpose—and money has a purpose.

The Purpose of Money

Money was created to serve. It’s meant to:

  • Create security (so you can rest).
  • Relieve stress (so you can think clearly).
  • Preserve health (so your body isn’t broken by pressure).
  • Build homes (so you can dwell in peace).
  • Support vision (so your calling can expand).
  • Protect time (so you’re not enslaved by scarcity).
  • Fund compassion (so you can give freely).

These are holy, pure, God-honoring goals.

Your soul may still feel conflicted. But your spirit knows. Money was never meant to control you. It was meant to obey you.

Make the Decision: Believe in Money

You don’t need to love money.
You don’t need to crave it.
You don’t even need to chase it.

But you must believe in it.

Believe that money has a job to do.
Believe that provision is not selfish—it’s sacred.
Believe that financial peace is not a luxury—it’s a calling.

Jesus didn’t avoid money. He used it to teach, to bless, to reveal God’s priorities. He didn’t love it, but He expected it to serve the Kingdom.

So should you.


Cultural Lies vs. Kingdom Truth

The Culture Says:

  • “Money makes people greedy.”
  • “You shouldn’t think about money.”
  • “Happy people don’t need much.”

The Spirit Says:

  • “Money reveals the heart—it doesn’t create it.”
  • “Wisdom builds wealth and stewardship multiplies it.”
  • “The joy of the Lord includes provision, peace, and purpose.”

“Decide today: I will believe in money. I will not fear it. I will not worship it. I will command it. I will use it to serve joy, peace, and righteousness.”

Chapter 20

Money Was Made to Work
Just Like Adam

“The Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to work it and take care of it.” —Genesis 2:15

Before there was a church, a city, or a nation, God created a garden.
And before Adam had a wife, a family, or even a problem to solve—God gave him a job.

Work was not a punishment. It was part of the original blessing.

God believed in Adam.
God trusted Adam to manage the garden.
God expected Adam to work with joy, purpose, and dignity.

In the same way, money has a job to do.

Money is not your master. It is not your enemy.
It is your servant, designed by God to respond to authority, order, and purpose.

We Are Designed to Put Things to Work

You were created in God’s image—and that means you were designed to govern, not be governed.
Just as Adam was given charge of the garden, you are given charge over the things in your life—including your finances.

Your food, your clothing, your shelter, your family’s needs—
Money is meant to do this work.

When you refuse to put money to work, it either lies dormant or becomes disobedient.
But when you assign it purpose and believe in its assignment, it begins to move in line with God’s design.

Believe in Money Like You Believe in a Car

You don’t have to love your car to believe in it. You simply expect it to get you from one place to another.

You trust it to:

  • Start when you turn the key
  • Move when you press the pedal
  • Stop when you apply the brakes

You’re not afraid of falling in love with it, even though some people do. That’s not your focus.
Your focus is function.

So why not treat money the same way?

Believe that money is designed to:

  • Feed you
  • Clothe you
  • House you
  • Fund your family’s well-being
  • Support your calling

This is not idolatry. This is design. God made provision part of the garden plan.

God Believes in You to Manage Money

If God believed in Adam to tend the garden, He believes in you to tend your finances.

This is not a game of worthiness. You were born to steward things.
And money, like every other resource, is waiting for your clarity, your instruction, and your faith.


“Money, I assign you to work. You will obey the Spirit of God in me. You will serve the purpose of peace, provision, and righteousness in my life.”

Let this be your new financial mindset:
You don’t serve money. Money serves you, because you serve God.

Chapter 21

Even the Wine Had a Job

“Everyone brings out the choice wine first… but you have saved the best till now.” —John 2:10

Let us return to the wedding at Cana.

No one at the celebration was worried about loving the wine. That wasn’t the point.
The wine had a job to do.

Its job was to celebrate, to uplift, to gladden hearts, to mark the joy of a sacred union.
And in that moment, the wine had run out before its job was finished.

So Jesus stepped in—not to endorse drunkenness, not to create dependency—but to honor purpose.

Purpose, Not Pleasure, Was the Focus

The wine’s role was about more than taste.
It was about timing, honor, joy, and fulfillment.

Mary saw the gap. Jesus saw the moment. The guests may not have even noticed yet—but the wine still had an assignment.
And Jesus, the Son of God, was not too holy to intervene.

He didn’t say, “Wine doesn’t matter.”
He didn’t say, “It’s not spiritual to enjoy a celebration.”
He said—by His actions—“Let the wine finish its job.”

Even the master of the banquet acknowledged this purpose:

“This wine is so good, it’s going to do its job better than expected.”

The goal wasn’t intoxication—it was celebration. And in that context, even wine could bring happiness.

What If We Treated Money Like the Wine?

Now imagine if everyone told you, “Wine can’t make you happy.”
We would rightly ask, “Then what do you mean by happy?”

Wine doesn’t give eternal joy, but it can help create a moment of delight.
Likewise, money can’t save your soul—but it can save your home, your time, your strength.

We must stop punishing money for not being God.

God never asked money to be your Savior. He asked it to do its job.

And just as Jesus made sure the wine fulfilled its assignment, He will help your money fulfill its purpose—if you give it the right context.

It’s All About Context

Wine is dangerous without boundaries.
Money is dangerous without purpose.
But in the right setting, both become tools of celebration, peace, and honor.

Jesus turned water into wine because the wine had work left to do.
What if your finances have work left to do too?

Jesus is still turning water into wine—still bringing provision to moments of emptiness—still honoring purpose where others see lack.

Chapter 22

The Miracle Already Happened

But the Groom Did not Know

“But the servants who had drawn the water knew…” —John 2:9

One of the most astonishing details of the wedding at Cana is this:
The groom was the last to know a miracle had taken place.

The wine had run out. The solution had come.
The water had already been turned into wine.
The banquet was saved. The celebration continued.
And the master of the banquet was already impressed.

But the groom?
He was still unaware that anything had gone wrong—or that anything had gone right.

He had already been delivered from public shame.
He had already been rescued from disappointment.
He had already been upgraded from average to excellence.

And he didn’t even know it.

This Is How Many of Us Live

The miracle has already happened in the spirit.
The provision has already been released.
The breakthrough has already begun.

But because our soul—our thoughts, emotions, and senses—can’t see it yet, we walk around as if we are still in lack.

We are like the groom, still hosting the party, still unaware that Jesus has already intervened.
We are living in the aftermath of a miracle but have not yet realized it.

The Servants Knew Before the Groom Did

The Bible says that the servants knew.
They saw the transformation.
They witnessed the command, the filling, the drawing, the tasting.

They knew something had shifted.

This is what happens when we begin to live from our spirit instead of our soul.
Our spirit knows that the transformation has already occurred.
Our spirit senses the shift, long before the outer world shows any evidence.

Your spirit is the servant who already saw the miracle.

Your soul is still catching up.

Faith Lives in the Tension Between the Two

To walk by faith is to trust the report of your spirit, even when your soul feels stuck.
It’s to declare, “My situation has already changed,”
Even when your emotions or bank account haven’t caught up yet.

It’s to say, “Jesus is already at the wedding,”
Even when the wine has run out.

You’re Not Waiting on the Miracle — The Miracle Is Waiting on You

The groom didn’t pray.
The groom didn’t ask.
The groom didn’t even know to expect anything.

But Jesus moved because of someone else’s intercession—Mary’s.
Jesus moved quietly, but powerfully.

The miracle was already done. The only thing left was for the groom to wake up to it.


Let This Be Your Revelation

You are not waiting on your financial miracle.
You are not waiting on joy, peace, provision, or purpose.
They have already been turned from water into wine.

Your spirit has seen it. Now it’s time for your soul to catch up.

Chapter 23

Be Filled
God Finishes What He Starts

“Jesus said to the servants, ‘Fill the jars with water’; so they filled them to the brim.” —John 2:7

God is a God of completion. He does not begin something only to abandon it halfway.
If there is a purpose—Heaven intends to see it fulfilled.

At the wedding in Cana, the wine ran out before the celebration was finished. The purpose of the wine—to bless, to uplift, to honor the joy of union—was not yet complete.

So Jesus intervened.
But He didn’t speak to the groom.
He didn’t lecture the guests.
He didn’t call a meeting with the wedding planners.

He spoke to the water.

And in doing so, He spoke to the problem in a language it could obey.

Heaven Intervenes to Complete Purpose

When money runs out, when provision dries up, when things stall—many people assume they’ve failed, or that God has turned away.
But what if it’s simply a moment for divine reactivation?

What if your financial resources are waiting to be spoken to?
Not cursed. Not mourned. But filled?

“Be filled,” says the Lord.
Be filled with strength.
Be filled with provision.
Be filled with purpose again.

Jesus didn’t scold the lack—He transformed it.

He knew the wine hadn’t failed. It had just reached the limit of its assignment.
Now a new provision was needed for the next part of the purpose.

God Honors Purpose More Than Scarcity

Too often, we worship our limitations.
We say, “The wine has run out,” and we assume the party is over.

But God says, “If the wine has run out, and the purpose is still alive, I will fill it again.

He honors purpose more than scarcity.
He supplies not just according to our need, but according to His purpose.

Your bank account may not have enough.
But Heaven does.

Speak to the Water Jars in Your Life

Jesus didn’t say “Go find better wine.”
He said, “Fill the jars.”
Use what’s available. Use what’s ordinary. Use what’s overlooked.

And then—speak purpose over it.

You may think your financial life is too broken, too empty, too delayed.
But Jesus isn’t waiting for your wealth to fix itself.

He is speaking to your lack and saying: “Be filled.”

“Be filled again with meaning.”
“Be filled again with energy.”
“Be filled again with joy and strength.”
“Be filled until purpose is completed.”


Declare This Today

“I believe in divine completion. If the purpose of my life is still unfolding, then Heaven still has provision. My soul may see the lack, but my spirit hears Jesus say, ‘Be filled.’ I speak to my money situation: Be filled with purpose again.”

Chapter 24

The Images in Your Mind

Fill the Jars of Imagination

“Nearby stood six stone water jars… Jesus said, ‘Fill the jars with water.’” —John 2:6–7

Words are powerful.
But images—they linger.
They bypass the noise of doubt and go straight into the spirit.

A story is more than words strung together.
A story is a vehicle of vision.
And vision is the language of your spirit.

When Jesus told the servants to fill the jars, they didn’t argue or overthink.
They moved.
They imagined what full jars would look like—and they filled them to the brim.

They had no guarantee the water would turn into wine.
But they acted as if something greater was already coming.

This is the same power you have when you activate your imagination by faith.


Imagination Is One Step Higher Than Words

It’s good to say, “My life is changing.”
But what do you see when you say it?

Can you picture the jars full?
Can you see the water turning deep purple?
Can you imagine the celebration, the joy, the laughter, the surprise?

Words are seeds, but imagination is rain.

You may speak the promise—but your imagination waters it into growth.


What Movie Is Playing in Your Mind?

Your inner world is like a projector.
All day long, it plays stories—some filled with lack, others with overflow.

Are your inner images showing drought or flood?
Empty jars or overflowing vessels?

Many believers speak words of faith but hold pictures of failure.
They pray for rain while mentally rehearsing famine.

But today you can flip the script.

You can take your imagination and fill it with purpose, just like the servants filled those jars.

Picture yourself already walking in breakthrough.
See your family already provided for.
Imagine your bank account full, your body healed, your home peaceful.

Your imagination is not a toy—it is a spiritual tool.


Activate the Spirit Through Imagination

Faith is the substance of things hoped for.
Hope is made of images.
And the spirit thrives on hope-filled vision.

To walk in the spirit is not just to believe with words,
but to see with your heart what your eyes have not yet seen.

The soul analyzes.
The spirit imagines.

So don’t just speak to your situation.
See your jars filled.
Visualize abundance.
Picture divine overflow.

That’s what the servants did before the miracle ever arrived.

Chapter 25

Something Is About to Be Revealed

“You have saved the best till now.” —John 2:10

Close your eyes for a moment.
Imagine it’s your wedding. The most joyful day of your life.
The guests are laughing, the music is playing, and then—
someone whispers to you, “The wine has run out.”

That sinking feeling.
Embarrassment.
Panic.
Shame.

You don’t know how to fix it. You weren’t watching the supply.
This is a social disaster unfolding in real time.

But then—a miracle happens without your knowledge.
Someone finds more wine. But not just more—the best in the world.

Suddenly, guests are crowding around you.
“Where did you get this?”
“This is the most incredible wine we’ve ever tasted!”
“Your wedding is legendary!”

And you stand there smiling, still not sure what just happened.
Because the miracle didn’t come through your strategy.
It came through grace.


Surprise: Your Finances May Already Be Changing

The groom had no idea his reputation had just been redeemed.
He didn’t even ask for help.

But Jesus saw the need.
He heard the whisper.
He moved in secret.

This is what may be happening in your finances right now.
You’re still worried about the shortage, but Heaven has already activated provision behind the scenes.

There are miracles that begin before your soul becomes aware.
There are solutions forming even as your spirit stays still in trust.

Just like the groom, you may be the last person to know your situation has changed.


Imagination Makes Room for Revelation

Can you imagine your life 2,000 years from now being talked about?
Can you imagine a testimony so sweet, so surprising, so undeserved, that generations mention your name with wonder?

Maybe people will say:

  • “That breakthrough came out of nowhere.”
  • “They didn’t even see it coming.”
  • “And just like that, everything turned around.”

This is what happens when Jesus fills the jars—quietly, creatively, completely.


The Purpose Will Be Finished

Wine has a job at weddings.
Money has a job in your life.
And God is invested in finishing what He started.

That’s why the wine at Cana was not just replaced, but exceeded.
The wedding’s reputation was elevated.

Your reputation may be next.
Your story may be the one people share in awe,
not because you figured it all out—
but because Heaven stepped in.


A Declaration of Expectation

“I believe something is being revealed. What looks empty in the natural is being filled in the spirit. My miracle may already be in motion. I open my heart to receive the surprise of Heaven—better than expected, more than deserved, in perfect time. Amen.”

Final Chapter:

Start Believing
Money Can Make You Happy

“You have saved the best till now.” —John 2:10

For too long, we’ve been told a lie.
A lie so deeply embedded in our culture, in our churches, in our souls,
that we’ve stopped even questioning it:

“Money can’t make you happy.”

We hear it from wealthy people after they’ve spent it.
We hear it from the pulpit in a voice of caution.
We hear it in our own thoughts whenever we begin to dream of abundance.

But what if that phrase isn’t truth—it’s trauma?

What if it’s not holy—it’s fear dressed up as humility?


Wine at a Wedding, Money in Your Life

Imagine someone at the wedding in Cana standing up and saying,
“This wine can’t make you happy!”

They would’ve missed the point entirely.

The wine wasn’t there to solve eternal problems.
It was there to serve a holy moment.
To bless a human joy.
To glorify the kindness of God.

The wine had a purpose:
To lift the hearts of the guests,
To honor the couple,
To keep the celebration alive.

So does money.

Money has a purpose:
To protect your health.
To lighten your stress.
To secure your family.
To expand your influence.
To fulfill your calling.

These things may not make your adrenaline spike,
but they do make life happier in the full and proper sense of the word.


Start Believing the Truth

Start believing that money has a divine assignment in your life.
Start believing that money, like wine, can be used well.
Start believing that you were not created to chase lack,
but to steward abundance.

God never condemned money.
He condemned the love of money
which is rooted in fear of losing it or making it your god.

But believing in money is different.
It’s acknowledging that this resource was created to serve, not enslave.

Start believing in money the way you believe in:

  • Your home to protect you
  • Your car to carry you
  • Your job to support you

You don’t have to love these things.
But you believe in them.
You expect them to work.


Let Go of the Shame

It’s not greedy to want to be free from stress.
It’s not sinful to desire a life of stability and strength.
It’s not wrong to say:

“Money would help me.
Money would serve me.
Money would make me happy.”

Start saying it.
Say it with boldness.
Say it with peace.

“Money will help me do what God has called me to do.”
“Money will allow me to bless others.”
“Money will increase my joy, my time, my focus.”
“I believe money can and will make my life better.”

This is not rebellion.
This is redemption.


You Are the Groom

You may have been the last to believe it.
You may have spent years thinking you had to suffer lack to be spiritual.

But now it’s time.

The miracle has already begun.
The jars are full.
The water is changing.
The wine is on its way to your table.

You are the groom.
And you are about to find out
that the best has been saved for you—right now.


Final Declaration

“Father, I repent for believing the lie that money cannot bring joy.
I believe that money has a good and holy purpose in my life.
I no longer fear abundance.
I welcome it.
I prepare for it.
I expect it.
I trust You to use it for my good and Your glory.
I declare: money will make me happy,
because it will fulfill the purpose You designed it for. Amen.”

Thank You for Reading

From my heart to yours—thank you for taking the time.
I hope these words have stirred your imagination.
And helped you sense the miracle that is yours.

May you discover the full jars of wine.

With love and gratitude.

Tony Egar
Brisbane, Australia

www.tonyegar.com

Can a Christian Change their Appearance ?

What does the Bible say?

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Introduction: Beauty That Comes from Glory

“Arise, shine, for your light has come,
and the glory of the Lord rises upon you.”

—Isaiah 60:1

We live in a world obsessed with appearance. From wrinkle creams to youth serums, surgeries to filters, humanity longs to hold on to beauty and reverse the clock. But what if the deepest answer to this longing isn’t found in a bottle or a procedure—but in the spirit?

What if aging, decay, and physical decline were not merely inevitable facts of life, but areas where God’s power desires to move?

This book explores a truth hidden in plain sight across the pages of Scripture:
God’s glory doesn’t just dwell within your spirit—it can transform your body.


Not Vanity—Victory

Let’s be clear: This isn’t a shallow message about external beauty. It’s not about chasing perfection. It’s about redemption—the total work of Christ in spirit, soul, and body (1 Thessalonians 5:23). Your body isn’t a mistake. It’s not a temporary nuisance. It’s the temple of the Holy Spirit. And from Genesis to Revelation, God is in the business of restoring it.

In this book, you’ll read how:

  • Moses’ eyes never dimmed and his strength never failed—at 120 years old.
  • Caleb claimed mountain-climbing strength at 85.
  • Sarah’s body was renewed to conceive in old age—and her beauty caught the attention of kings.
  • Naaman’s diseased skin became like that of a young boy.
  • Lazarus’ decayed flesh was regenerated by resurrection power.
  • Jesus, on the Mount of Transfiguration, literally shone with the glory of God.

These are not metaphors. They are models.


A New Perspective on the Mirror

You are made of three parts: spirit, soul, and body. And what your body reflects depends on which part leads. If the soul dominates—through worry, stress, trauma, or self-effort—your body shows it. But if your reborn spirit leads—full of peace, joy, and divine power—your body responds.

We’ll unpack how to let your spirit “pop up” above the soul, how attitude unlocks transformation, and why your appearance can actually begin to reflect heaven’s reality instead of earth’s weariness.


Beauty Comes from Glory

In today’s church, we often focus on spiritual gifts, mental peace, or emotional healing—but we forget: Jesus healed bodies. He resurrected flesh. He turned water to wine. His power didn’t stop at the heart—it reached the hands, the eyes, the skin, the face.

And now, His Spirit lives in you.

You’ve probably been taught that your spirit is saved, your soul is being renewed, and your body will be redeemed one day. But what if that redemption has already begun? What if heaven’s power can touch your countenance today?


This book is a call to believe again—not in cosmetics, but in glory. Not in superficial youth, but in deep, Spirit-born radiance.

It’s time to arise.
It’s time to shine.
Your Light has come.

Chapter 1

2 Corinthians 3:18, though worded differently across translations, communicates a deeply encouraging spiritual truth: believers are in an ongoing process of transformation to become more like Christ. The core meaning across all versions is this: once the veil (symbolizing spiritual blindness or separation from God) is removed, we are able to see—clearly and personally—the glory of the Lord. As we behold that glory, we are gradually changed into His likeness by the Spirit.

1. “Unveiled face”
This phrase appears in nearly every version and symbolizes open, intimate access to God. In the Old Testament, Moses wore a veil after being in God’s presence. But for believers in Christ, that veil is removed. We can now look directly at God’s glory—not physically, but spiritually, through the Word, prayer, and the inner witness of the Holy Spirit.

2. “Beholding/Reflecting as in a mirror”
Some translations emphasize beholding (gazing upon), while others focus on reflecting (like a mirror). Both are true: we look upon God’s glory in Christ (through Scripture, worship, and the Spirit’s presence), and in doing so, we begin to reflect that glory ourselves. For example, when someone spends time in the sun, their skin shows it. Similarly, when someone spends time with God, their character, words, and actions begin to reflect His nature.

3. “Transformed into the same image”
The Greek word here is metamorphoō, the same word used for Jesus’ transfiguration. This transformation isn’t external behavior modification but inward change—a spiritual metamorphosis into Christ’s character, love, holiness, and grace. One practical example: a person once impatient and selfish begins to show kindness and patience, not by willpower alone, but because Christ is being formed in them.

4. “From glory to glory”
This means the process is gradual and progressive. We’re not made perfect in a moment but grow over time into greater degrees of Christlikeness. A new believer may struggle with anger, fear, or doubt, but over time, through surrender to the Spirit, they experience victory and maturity. They move from one “degree” of God’s glory to another.

5. “By the Spirit of the Lord”
This transformation doesn’t come from trying harder—it comes from the Spirit working in us. Our part is to behold, abide, and yield; the Spirit does the work of changing us. Think of a seed that becomes a tree—it doesn’t strive, it simply abides in soil, water, and sunlight. Likewise, as we remain in Christ, the Spirit transforms us.

In summary, this verse encourages believers to live with unveiled hearts, to behold Christ daily, and to trust that the Spirit is shaping them to reflect God’s glory more and more. It’s a picture of hope, growth, and grace—not perfection in an instant, but transformation through relationship.

Chapter 2

2 Corinthians 3:18 has sometimes been interpreted to suggest that a Christian’s physical appearance—especially the face—may change as a result of spiritual transformation. While the primary meaning of the verse is about inner transformation into Christ’s image, some believers and preachers throughout history have also emphasized visible, external signs of God’s glory in a person’s countenance.

Scriptural Basis for a Radiant Face

This idea is often linked to Moses’ radiant face in Exodus 34:29-35, where, after speaking with God, “his face shone”—literally radiated light— so strongly that he had to wear a veil. Paul even refers to this story earlier in 2 Corinthians 3, drawing a contrast between the fading glory of Moses and the increasing glory that Christians now reflect because the Spirit of the Lord dwells within them.

Historical and Preaching References

  1. Charles Finney, the 19th-century revivalist preacher, wrote in his memoirs that during intense periods of prayer and revival, people around him said his face would “shine like an angel.” He even recounted being unable to hide the presence of God on his face when he walked into secular spaces.
  2. Smith Wigglesworth, a Pentecostal pioneer, was also described as having a visible glow about him when he ministered, and others reported being overwhelmed just by his presence due to the spiritual power evident in his appearance.
  3. In some Catholic mysticism, saints like St. Seraphim of Sarov were said to emit light from their faces during times of great spiritual ecstasy. A famous account by his disciple Motovilov describes Seraphim’s face becoming “brighter than the sun” while talking about the Holy Spirit.

In Film and Popular Depiction

  • In movies like “The Ten Commandments” (1956), Charlton Heston as Moses visibly shines when coming down from Mount Sinai, referencing the biblical glow from being in God’s presence.

Contemporary Preaching

In some charismatic and revivalist circles today, preachers do speak of a “Holy Ghost glow” or “Shekinah shine”—a visible brightness or peace on a Christian’s face that testifies to God’s presence. It may not mean glowing like a lightbulb, but rather a peaceful, radiant countenance: eyes clearer, expressions softer, a joy that’s evident.

Conclusion

While Paul’s main focus is spiritual transformation—being changed from the inside out into Christ’s image—many have believed and testified that the change becomes visible, especially in the face. Whether it’s through an actual glow, a radiant peace, or transformed expressions, the idea is that the glory of God doesn’t stay hidden. It can shine out—especially through the face—as a witness to the world.

Chapter 3

Both Abraham and Sarah required a physical miracle for the birth of Isaac, according to the biblical account—and this is a crucial point in understanding the nature of God’s promise and power.

Sarah’s Condition

Sarah was clearly barren and well past childbearing age:

  • Genesis 18:11 (KJV): “Now Abraham and Sarah were old and well stricken in age; and it ceased to be with Sarah after the manner of women.”
  • This means Sarah was postmenopausal, physically unable to conceive by natural means.
  • Hebrews 11:11 confirms this as a miraculous event:
    “Through faith also Sara herself received strength to conceive seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past age…”

Abraham’s Condition

While less often emphasized, Abraham also needed a miracle:

  • Romans 4:19 (KJV):
    “And being not weak in faith, he considered not his own body now dead, when he was about an hundred years old…”
  • Paul uses “dead” metaphorically, implying Abraham’s reproductive capability had diminished significantly.
  • Hebrews 11:12:
    “Therefore sprang there even of one, and him as good as dead, so many as the stars…” — again affirming that Abraham’s body was no longer naturally able to father a child.

So What Was the Miracle?

The miracle involved God rejuvenating both bodies—not just spiritually but physically:

  • Sarah’s womb was restored, likely including hormonal function and ovulation.
  • Abraham’s reproductive capacity was revived—his body was “quickened,” enabling conception.
  • This was not just symbolic—it had to be a literal physical healing for a literal child to be born.

Prophetic Implication

This event is often viewed as a foreshadowing of resurrection power—bringing life from death. Isaac’s birth from two “dead” bodies prefigures both:

  • The resurrection of Christ (life from the grave), and
  • The new birth of believers, who are spiritually dead until God revives them.


Chapter 4:

The God Who Renews Flesh and Face

There is a quiet miracle threaded throughout Scripture that many overlook—a pattern not only of healing, but of divine rejuvenation. It is the supernatural renewal of the human body, visible in skin, strength, and physical vitality. The God who formed man from dust is not only concerned with our inner healing—He is able and willing to renew our outer man, even in the face of aging, barrenness, and incurable disease.

In this chapter, we explore four biblical stories that unveil this powerful truth: God can change the way a person looks and feels—even make them visibly younger—when His power touches their body. What seems impossible to the natural mind becomes reality under the influence of the Spirit of Life.

1. Abraham and Sarah: Reversing Reproductive Death

The first couple to experience divine youth was Abraham and Sarah. Romans 4:19 says:

“He considered not his own body now dead, when he was about an hundred years old, neither yet the deadness of Sarah’s womb.”

God’s promise of a son came after their bodies had passed the age of reproduction. Their bodies were not merely older—they were classified as “dead” in regard to natural function. But when God breathed His covenant word into them, something changed in their bodies. They didn’t just conceive Isaac; they received new strength.

Sarah, once barren and wrinkled with age, became desirable again—so much so that a pagan king sought her for a wife (Genesis 20:2). This wasn’t ordinary aging—it was reversed. Her flesh was renewed. Abraham, too, had the vigor and virility of a much younger man. God’s covenant had not only resurrected a promise—it had revived their physical forms.

2. Moses: Eyesight and Strength at 120

The story of Moses ends with a verse few preach about:

“Moses was a hundred and twenty years old when he died: his eye was not dim, nor his natural force abated.” (Deuteronomy 34:7)

At 120 years old, Moses retained perfect vision and unweakened physical energy. The Hebrew word translated as “natural force” refers to moistness, vigor, or sexual vitality. Moses didn’t just live long—he lived strong.

This tells us something critical: The presence of God in Moses’ life affected his body, not just his spirit. Prolonged exposure to God’s glory had a preserving, energizing effect. The man who spent time on the mountain glowed with God’s light—and even his flesh did not wear out.

3. Caleb: As Strong at 85 as at 40

Caleb’s declaration in Joshua 14:10–11 is bold:

“I am this day eighty-five years old. As yet I am as strong this day as I was in the day that Moses sent me: as my strength was then, even so is my strength now.”

What kind of man says this? A man walking under the empowering Spirit of God. Caleb was not just holding on to life; he was battle-ready. He wasn’t frail, leaning on a cane—he was claiming mountains and driving out giants. This is more than good health; it is divine rejuvenation.

When we live by God’s promises and follow Him fully—as Caleb did—our bodies can bear witness to His sustaining power. We don’t have to expect decline. We can expect strength to rise with each year.

4. Naaman: Skin Like a Little Child

Naaman, the Syrian commander, was not a believer when he came to Elisha. He came sick—leprous and unclean. But when he obeyed the prophet’s word and dipped seven times in the Jordan, the miracle was more than a cure.

“His flesh came again like unto the flesh of a little child, and he was clean.” (2 Kings 5:14)

He wasn’t merely healed—his skin was transformed. Disease was replaced by the softness of youth. This was visible, undeniable regeneration—a body changed by God’s touch. If that happened under the Old Covenant, how much more now that we live under a better one?

The Prophetic Pattern: God Renews the Outer Man

Each of these accounts reveals a profound spiritual truth: God can touch the human body in ways that reverse what nature says is final. His glory renews us inside and out.

“Though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day.” (2 Corinthians 4:16)
“Who satisfies your mouth with good things, so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s.” (Psalm 103:5)

Youth renewed. Vision unclouded. Strength undiminished. These are not poetic dreams. They are prophetic realities, glimpsed in Scripture and promised to the faithful.

What This Means for You

As a believer in Christ, the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you (Romans 8:11). He is not limited to your inner healing. He quickens—gives life to—your mortal body.

Don’t settle for gradual decay. Expect divine intervention in your aging process. Speak over your body with faith. Worship in the glory of God, where your face—like Moses’—can reflect His light. Stand like Caleb, declaring, “Give me my mountain!”

Chapter 5:

Lazarus—Resurrected and Re-Fleshed

“He cried with a loud voice, ‘Lazarus, come forth!’ And he that was dead came forth…”
—John 11:43–44 (KJV)

The God Who Calls the Rotting Back to Life

When Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, it was not a simple moment of divine CPR. Lazarus wasn’t freshly dead. He wasn’t just unconscious. He had been dead four days, and his body had begun to decay.

Martha warned Jesus:

“By this time he stinketh: for he hath been dead four days.” (John 11:39)

This was not just resurrection. This was restoration at the molecular level. Cells had collapsed. Skin had darkened. Tissues had liquefied. But Jesus didn’t just bring his spirit back. He reversed decomposition. He restored what science says cannot be reversed.

In doing so, He gave us a prophetic picture of what the Spirit of God can still do in our physical bodies today.


The Science of a Four-Day Corpse

When someone dies, the body begins to break down immediately. Here’s what happens:

  • Minutes after death, oxygen stops flowing. Cells begin to die.
  • Hours later, enzymes start breaking down tissues—a process called autolysis.
  • After a day, bacteria multiply, gases build up, and the body bloats.
  • By day four, the skin discolors, the flesh softens, and internal organs begin to liquefy.

Lazarus wasn’t just lifeless—he was rotting. His mitochondria were dead, his skin structure collapsing, and his neural connections irretrievably broken. No earthly doctor, defibrillator, or transplant team could help. There was no cell left alive.

Yet Jesus said, “Lazarus, come forth.” And he did.


Two Miracles in One

This moment contained two layered miracles:

1. Resurrection of the Soul and Spirit

Lazarus’ spirit had departed. Jesus, who holds the keys of life and death, called his spirit back. This alone was staggering power.

“I am the resurrection, and the life…” (John 11:25)

But it didn’t stop there.

2. Rebuilding of the Physical Body

Lazarus couldn’t walk out of the tomb unless his decomposed body was restored. Jesus didn’t just raise him—He regrew decayed tissues, restored blood vessels, reversed brain death, and reanimated every cell.

This was divine recreation. A biological resurrection down to the microscopic level. In a moment, rotting cells reversed into living tissue, something no medical intervention has ever achieved.


What Would Happen in His Cells?

Science tells us aging and death are linked to:

  • Telomere shortening – caps on DNA that get smaller with age.
  • Mitochondrial breakdown – the cell’s energy centers die out.
  • Cellular senescence – cells stop dividing and begin emitting harmful signals.
  • Protein misfolding and oxidative stress – body structures collapse from within.

To restore Lazarus, Jesus would have:

  • Restarted mitochondrial engines.
  • Re-lengthened damaged telomeres.
  • Cleansed the body of necrotic bacteria and toxins.
  • Reordered DNA and protein structures to pre-death health.

In essence, Jesus reversed the entropy of death, something no force in nature has ever done. This miracle wasn’t symbolic—it was visceral, molecular, total.


Are Scientists Close?

Science dreams of what Jesus did in Bethany. Anti-aging labs try to:

  • Use stem cells to rebuild tissues.
  • Apply telomerase enzymes to slow aging.
  • Investigate NAD+ boosters to revive mitochondria.
  • Study cryopreservation in hope of future resurrection.

Yet even the best treatments only slow decline. They don’t reverse death. They can’t regrow four-day-old decomposed flesh. They can’t call a spirit back.

Only Jesus has done that. And He did it as a foreshadowing of what He will do for all who believe.


What This Means for You

“And if the Spirit of him who raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ shall also quicken your mortal bodies…” (Romans 8:11)

Lazarus was the preview. You are the recipient. The same Spirit lives in you. What Jesus did for Lazarus, He can begin in you—even now.

He is not just the God of someday resurrection. He is the God who can restore decayed hope, rebuild broken cells, and reverse visible damage.

Some reading this feel like Lazarus: too far gone, beyond repair. But Jesus calls your name. He speaks to dead skin, tired cells, decaying energy—and says, “Come forth.”


Reflection Questions

  1. Have I viewed resurrection only as a spiritual idea, or as a real power that affects the physical body?
  2. Am I willing to believe that God can restore things in my body I thought were beyond healing?
  3. Do I carry the same Spirit that raised Jesus—and Lazarus—from the dead? How should that affect my thinking?
  4. Where have I allowed decay—spiritually or physically—to settle in?
  5. How can I begin to align my faith with divine restoration—not just maintenance?

Chapter 6:

The Glorified Body—the First fruits of Transformed Flesh

“He showed them His hands and His feet… they gave Him a piece of broiled fish, and of a honeycomb. And He took it, and did eat before them.”
—Luke 24:40–43 (KJV)


Introduction: Not Just Spirit, But Flesh Transformed

Jesus did not rise from the dead as a ghost. He rose in a body—one that bore the scars of crucifixion, could eat food, and yet could walk through locked doors. He was recognizably Jesus, and yet… not limited like before.

This was not a return to life as usual.

This was the first appearance of glorified flesh.

“But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of them that slept.”
—1 Corinthians 15:20

Jesus is the prototype—the divine pattern for our future bodies, and the foreshadowing of what the Spirit can begin doing in us now.


What Changed in Jesus’ Body?

After the resurrection, Jesus’ body exhibited supernatural traits that amazed and terrified even His closest friends:

  • He still bore the wounds—but they did not bleed. They were visible yet healed.
  • He ate natural food—broiled fish and honey—proving His body was tangible.
  • He passed through walls—appearing inside locked rooms.
  • He was often unrecognizable at first, as on the road to Emmaus, yet became known in revelation moments.

This was not merely physical restoration. This was glorification. His mortal body had put on immortality, and the laws of biology had bowed to a higher chemistry: resurrection power.


The Science of Glorification (As Much As We Can Understand)

While scientists can’t yet describe glorification, we can draw faith-fueled parallels to what might have changed:

  • Quantum coherence – His body moved through matter and space in ways suggesting He was no longer fully limited by time or space.
  • Perfect cellular function – No disease, no decay, no aging, no pain.
  • Trans-dimensional presence – He could appear and vanish; time and matter no longer confined Him.

We cannot measure these changes with earthly instruments. But Scripture tells us we shall be like Him:

“It does not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him.”
—1 John 3:2

Jesus’ glorified body is not science fiction—it is the believer’s future inheritance, and a prophetic invitation to believe for transformation even now.


A Body That Can’t Age

“The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.”
—1 Corinthians 15:26

Jesus’ glorified body was incorruptible. It could no longer decay. This means no aging, no breakdown, no degeneration. His skin would never wrinkle. His strength would never fade. His face would never grow hollow with time.

This is not only a promise for eternity—it’s a present pattern.

“If the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He shall quicken (give life to) your mortal bodies…” (Romans 8:11)

That word “quicken” means to energize, animate, restore, and bring vitality—not just to the soul, but to the mortal body. Resurrection power isn’t waiting for heaven—it’s already working inside you.


Jesus as the Mirror of Your Future Flesh

Everything Jesus became after the resurrection reveals what you are becoming:

Jesus After Resurrection        What It Means for You

He rose from death.                 You are rising above decay.

He could not be corrupted.  Your body is destined for glory.

He bore scars but no pain.      Your hurt will be gone.

He ate and walked.         Heaven has glorified bodies.

He could not be held by space.    You have no limits.

Your flesh is not your enemy. It is the future vessel of God’s glory.

Can This Begin Now?

While the full glorification of the body comes at Christ’s return, the first fruits of that power are already here. Miracles of healing, renewal, and restoration are glimpses of that coming day.

When God reverses aging, clears a disease, or fills a tired face with light again, it is a seed of glorified reality.

“Who shall change our vile body, that it may be fashioned like unto His glorious body…”
—Philippians 3:21

He is already changing you—from the inside out. The light of resurrection life is pushing back the shadows of aging.

This is not vanity. This is victory over death, beginning in your very cells.


Reflection Questions

  1. Do I believe Jesus rose with a real, transformed body—or just a spirit?
  2. What does it mean that I am being changed “from glory to glory” even now?
  3. Where in my body do I need to receive resurrection life today?
  4. Am I preparing to walk in my eternal identity by stewarding my physical body with faith?

Chapter 7:

Faces Like Angels—Physical Power in the Early Church

The resurrection of Jesus was not just the foundation of the Church’s theology—it was the engine of their physical reality. Early believers walked in a power that touched not only their spirits but their bodies. The same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead began to dwell in men and women, radiating through them in visible, tangible ways.

Stephen: A Face That Shined Like an Angel

In Acts 6:15, when Stephen stood trial before the religious council, something supernatural happened: “And all that sat in the council, looking steadfastly on him, saw his face as it had been the face of an angel.” This wasn’t poetic language. It was the visible glory of God resting on his physical face. Stephen wasn’t transfigured in heaven—he was glowing on earth.

This moment mirrored Moses’ experience in Exodus 34:29, when his face shone after speaking with God. But now, in the New Covenant, the glory didn’t fade. Paul later said, “We all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image” (2 Cor. 3:18). Stephen’s radiance was a sign of what is possible when the Spirit overflows in a yielded believer—even unto the skin.

Paul: A Body Preserved by Power

The apostle Paul’s body became a testimony of indestructible endurance. He was stoned and left for dead in Acts 14:19—but got up and walked back into the city. Later, he was shipwrecked, bitten by a venomous snake in Malta, and shook it off without harm (Acts 28:5). The people expected him to swell and die, but nothing happened.

Paul described himself as “always carrying around in our body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be revealed in our body” (2 Cor. 4:10). He didn’t just preach resurrection—he embodied it.

Early Church Witnesses: Tangible Glory

Early Church history holds other fascinating clues. Reports from the first few centuries speak of martyrs whose faces glowed as they were led to execution. Others seemed to defy physical aging despite suffering, imprisonment, or famine. The power of the Holy Spirit worked not only through their hands, but through their whole being.

This wasn’t metaphorical. The physical manifestations of God’s power were confirmation of a deeper truth: the same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead had taken up residence in mortal bodies—and those bodies could now host signs of immortality.

The Same Spirit in Us

Romans 8:11 declares:

“But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you.”

This is not just a promise for the afterlife. It is a present-tense reality for believers who live by faith. The early Church did not only hope for resurrection—they carried it. Their faces, their survival, their strength under pressure all bore witness to the indwelling Life that cannot die.

Chapter 8:

The Spirit That Renews—Signs of Resurrection in Our Bodies Today

The early Church carried resurrection power not just as a message, but as a manifesting presence. That power has not faded. The same Spirit that hovered over Stephen’s glowing face and raised Paul from apparent death now dwells in us. The transformation of the physical body is not just a future hope; it is a present sign. God’s glory has always affected the physical realm—and He has not changed.

Healing That Restores Beyond Repair

Modern testimonies from around the world continue to confirm what Scripture first revealed: resurrection power brings healing that surpasses natural limitations. Countless believers report healing from terminal illnesses, regeneration of tissues, reversal of deformities, and restoration from trauma. Medical science may call it spontaneous remission, but heaven calls it the life of Jesus made manifest in mortal flesh (2 Cor. 4:11).

One doctor testified of a patient whose leg, once mangled in an accident, regenerated muscle and skin so rapidly that surgeons were baffled. Prayer and laying on of hands had been involved—and though science could not explain it, the Spirit had left His signature.

Youth Renewed Like the Eagle’s

Psalm 103:5 says, “He satisfies your mouth with good things, so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s.” This is more than a poetic metaphor. It is a covenant benefit.

The Hebrew word for “renewed” implies a restoration of vitality, not merely a prolonging of age. Just as Caleb, at 85, claimed he was as strong as in his youth (Joshua 14:11), many believers today testify of their bodies being rejuvenated through prayer, obedience, fasting, and worship.

A 70-year-old woman once shared that after years of chronic illness, she experienced such a divine touch that her gray hair darkened, her skin cleared, and her bones strengthened. She went back to working full-time and serving in missions. Her doctor told her, “Whatever you’re doing, keep doing it—your labs look 30 years younger.”

Is this mere coincidence? Or is the Spirit beginning to unveil a deeper inheritance?

Carriers of Visible Glory

There are increasing reports of believers in prayer meetings, revivals, and worship gatherings whose faces radiate light—literally. Some glow with oil. Others find their skin shining. And some smell like perfume without wearing any—just like Mary’s alabaster jar (John 12:3). God is revealing that His presence still transforms physical matter.

These are signs—not to be worshipped, but to be noticed. Signs point to a reality beyond themselves: the physical body is not a barrier to God’s glory, it is a vessel for it.

The Spirit Quickens the Mortal Body

Romans 8:11 was not written for heaven alone. The “mortal body” is this body. And “life” from the Spirit is God-life—not just breath, but vitality, beauty, wholeness.

This truth doesn’t deny aging or death—it transcends it. It declares that believers may increasingly walk in a realm where age does not dictate strength, and sickness does not write the final chapter. It is the early taste of a glorified body, a firstfruit of what is to come.

We are not only waiting for resurrection—we are walking in it. The very atoms of our body can respond to the Spirit who made them. And as we gaze at Jesus, we are “transformed into the same image from glory to glory” (2 Cor. 3:18).

Chapter 9:

The Source of Unfading Beauty—When the Spirit Radiates Through the Flesh

“Your beauty should not come from outward adornment… Rather, it should be that of your inner self, the unfading beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is of great worth in God’s sight.”
—1 Peter 3:3–4

Beauty that fades is from the world. But beauty that remains—and even grows—is from the Spirit of God within. This chapter is not about rejecting outward appearance, but about recognizing that there is a deeper source of radiance, one that cannot be aged, dulled, or stolen. The apostle Peter revealed a secret known to holy women of the past: true beauty is spiritual—and it overflows into the physical.

Sarah: A Radiant Spirit in a Mortal Frame

Sarah, Abraham’s wife, is directly mentioned in the verses following this passage. She lived long and aged naturally, yet in her later years, she was still so physically beautiful that kings desired her (Genesis 12:14–15, 20:2). What sustained her beauty?

It wasn’t cosmetics, fashion, or outward effort—it was hope in God. Sarah adorned herself with faith, reverence, and submission to divine promises. Her beauty was not static; it was active, flowing from the inner person of the heart. Peter called this a “gentle and quiet spirit”—not weak or passive, but peaceful, trusting, radiant.

This spiritual beauty had physical consequences. Sarah carried resurrection power in her womb when she conceived Isaac. If the Spirit that renewed her womb also animated her face, posture, and presence, it was not merely charm—it was glory.

The Spirit That Beautifies

When a believer’s spirit is saturated with peace, faith, and love, it cannot help but radiate outward. Even modern science admits that inner states affect physical appearance—stress accelerates aging, joy restores glow, bitterness wrinkles, and love heals.

But what if the Spirit’s fruit—love, joy, peace—aren’t just emotional, but transformational? What if cultivating a gentle, trusting heart in God actually reverses physical aging, refreshes the eyes, and adds vitality to the frame?

Isaiah 61:3 says the Spirit gives us “beauty for ashes.” This isn’t just symbolic; the gospel exchanges internal brokenness for glory—and often, the face shows it first.

Unfading Beauty Is Resurrection Beauty

The word “unfading” used by Peter echoes resurrection language. Just as Jesus rose in a glorified body that could not decay, believers carry a seed of that glory within. While full resurrection awaits the final trumpet, we are invited now to reflect His life in our mortal frames.

It is not sinful to care for the body or appearance. But when our confidence and identity rest in the external, we forfeit the greater power. When our inner life is yielded to the Holy Spirit, beauty flows outward without striving.

There are stories of missionaries in harsh conditions who aged slowly, of saints whose faces softened with light as they worshipped, and of elderly believers whose countenance turned youthful in times of prayer. These are not fantasies—they are foretastes of a deeper truth.

God’s glory beautifies. His presence renews. And the spirit within, when cultivated in gentleness and trust, becomes the fountainhead of unfading beauty.

Chapter 10:

Spirit, Soul, and Body—Changing the Channel

“May your whole spirit, soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
—1 Thessalonians 5:23

Every Christian is a three-part being: spirit, soul, and body. This is not just theology—it’s a key to transformation. Understanding how these three parts work together is vital to unlocking the mystery of visible change, even to the point of physical renewal.

At salvation, a miracle happens: the human spirit is reborn. The moment we receive Christ, our spirit—the deepest part of us—is made alive, holy, and united with God’s Spirit (1 Corinthians 6:17). But the soul—the mind, emotions, and will—still carries memories, habits, and wounds. And the body? It often shows the signs of what the soul has endured.

The Body: A Mirror or a Screen

Think of your body like a television screen. It doesn’t generate its own images—it simply displays whatever is fed into it. If the soul is full of trauma, bitterness, anxiety, or shame, those things will often show up in the face, posture, and energy of a person. The eyes may lose their sparkle, the skin may wrinkle prematurely, and the body may even grow ill from emotional stress. The channel of the soul has been on too long—and it’s been playing hard scenes.

But something greater is now inside the believer. The born-again spirit is the heart of who you are, fully connected to God, filled with His glory, peace, joy, and resurrection life. When the spirit begins to influence more than the soul does—when we “walk in the Spirit” (Galatians 5:16)—the body starts reflecting a different kind of image.

Reversing the Flow

Too often, believers try to renew the body by working through the soul alone: self-help, therapy, or sheer willpower. These things are not wrong—but they are incomplete. God’s design is that the spirit, once alive in Christ, becomes the governing influence, flowing upward into the soul and outward into the body.

The soul can be renewed by the Word (Romans 12:2), but it is the spirit that brings life (John 6:63). As the heart is filled with the truth of who we are in Christ, the mind begins to agree, and the body begins to follow. The direction of influence changes—from spirit to body, not from soul to body. This is how we go from bearing the image of the old man to radiating the life of the new.

The Channel You Choose

Imagine this: a television screen is showing a scene of war and destruction. It’s ugly, dark, and painful to watch. But you have the remote. With one decision, you can switch to a channel showing a sunlit field, a restored home, a family reunited. The screen doesn’t resist—it simply reflects what it receives.

This is your body. It doesn’t hold the power—it reflects it. When you live under the influence of the wounded soul, the body displays the chaos. But when your life is influenced by your spirit, the same body begins to reflect the beauty, peace, and renewal, that is already in your spirit.

Your face can shine. Your posture can lift. Your frame can carry the weight of glory.

You’ve been given the remote. Which channel will you let your body display?

Chapter 11:

Raising the Sail—Letting your spirit take the lead

“The spirit of a man is the lamp of the Lord, searching all the inner depths of his heart.”
—Proverbs 20:27

We were never meant to live our Christian lives solely by the power of the mind. While the soul—the seat of thoughts, emotions, and will—is a valuable part of us, it is not meant to be the captain of our lives. It was designed to take direction from a deeper place: the spirit.

The spirit is the innermost part of the believer, the place where God’s presence dwells, His voice speaks, and His power flows. When we live from this place, everything changes, including our bodies. Strength returns. Peace settles. Beauty, joy, and light become visible. But the challenge for most of us is learning how to shift influence—from soul to spirit, from mental striving to spiritual leading.

The Yacht: An Illustration from the Sea

Imagine a beautiful ocean yacht. In the harbor, it runs on an engine. It needs control, maneuverability, and the reliable force of diesel power to navigate tight channels, docks, and shallow waters. The engine represents the soul—active, focused, strategic.

But once the yacht moves into the open ocean, something changes. The sail is raised. The wind takes over. The engine can be throttled down, or even turned off completely. Now the yacht glides smoothly, powerfully, and quietly—moved by something far greater than itself.

This is the life of the believer. In the beginning, we often operate primarily from the soul—our understanding, routines, and human effort. There’s nothing wrong with this; the soul helps us survive and learn. But the deeper Christian life calls us to the open ocean, where the sail of the spirit is meant to catch the wind of God.

The spirit doesn’t run on diesel—it runs on divine wind. The Holy Spirit Himself breathes into our spirit, and if the sail is raised, we are carried by grace instead of grit, by flow instead of force.

Raise the Sail

To “pop the sail” is to lift our spirit above our soul. It is to allow the deepest part of who we are—our reborn, God-infused spirit—to become the dominant influence in our daily lives. When that happens, the body begins to follow. The posture of tension shifts to one of rest. The face softens. The eyes brighten. The nervous system calms. The reflection of divine peace and joy becomes visible.

In moments of worship, when you feel peace rise beyond understanding—that is your spirit surfacing.

When you are suddenly overwhelmed by love for someone who doesn’t deserve it—that is your spirit overtaking the soul.

When your body feels tired, but your heart begins to praise—your spirit is rising.

It’s not that the soul is discarded. The engine is still there, ready when needed. But the primary mover has changed. The sail is up. The wind is blowing.

What Happens to the Body?

As the spirit gains influence, it begins to restore and reshape even the physical body. The Spirit gives life (Romans 8:11), and that life is not abstract—it is active, present, and powerful. Cells respond to peace. Hormones adjust to joy. Muscles relax under love. As the wind of the Spirit fills your sail, your very body becomes a vessel of divine vitality.

This is not theory—it is transformation. And it’s available now.


In the Next Chapter…

We’ll explore practical ways to “raise the sail”—how to live in a way that allows your spirit to rise above the mind and emotions, and let the wind of God’s Spirit guide your course.

Chapter 12:

When your spirit Pops Up—The Key of attitude

“Go, wash yourself seven times in the Jordan, and your flesh will be restored and you will be cleansed.”
—2 Kings 5:10

Naaman was a mighty man. A commander. A war hero. He had power, status, and victory—but he also had leprosy. No amount of political favor or military triumph could change the truth about his physical condition. His body was breaking down, and all his soul’s strategies had failed.

So he turned to the prophet Elisha for healing.

But what he received was not a dramatic display or a dignified ritual. Instead, Elisha didn’t even come to the door. He sent a messenger with a simple word: “Go wash in the Jordan seven times.”

Naaman was outraged. The Jordan? That muddy, unimpressive stream? His soul rose up—his intellect, pride, expectations, and cultural preferences all screamed for a better way. He wanted to be healed, yes, but not that way. His mind demanded logic. His emotions demanded respect. His will demanded control.

The Clash Between Soul and Spirit

Here, we see clearly the battle between the soul and the spirit. The word of the Lord had already been spoken—healing was available—but the manifestation was delayed by Naaman’s inner resistance. His soul was in charge, and as long as that was the case, his healing remained out of reach.

But then something beautiful happened.

His servants approached him—not with force, but with wisdom. “If the prophet had told you to do something great, wouldn’t you have done it?” they asked. “How much more, then, when he tells you, ‘Wash and be cleansed’?”

At that moment, something shifted. Naaman humbled himself. He surrendered his logic, his entitlement, and his own way. He dipped himself in that muddy Jordan—not once, but seven times.

And on the seventh time, when he came up, his flesh was restored. Not just healed—but made like that of a young boy.

The Spirit Rose—And So Did His Health

This story is not just about obedience—it is about alignment. The moment Naaman’s attitude changed, the moment his soul stepped down and his spirit responded in faith, the healing could flow. The prophetic word had already been spoken. God was ready. The only block was the soul’s interference.

But once that soul surrendered, the spirit “popped up,” like the sail we spoke of in the previous chapter. And the healing power of God rushed in like wind over water.

This principle still applies today. Sometimes we’re waiting for God to act, when heaven is simply waiting for our soul to step aside so our spirit can rise. The spirit is where faith lives, where obedience flows, where miracles manifest.

And often, the turning point is simple: a shift in attitude.

What Happens When You Shift?

When your spirit rises and your soul surrenders, your body becomes the receiver of what your spirit is already aligned with. Naaman’s healing didn’t depend on a complicated ritual—it came through a yielded heart.

In the same way, many believers today are one humble decision away from experiencing renewal, even in their physical bodies. A surrendered attitude. A simple act of obedience. A softening of the will. These are the hidden hinges that swing open the door to transformation.


Coming Next…

Now that we’ve seen how a change in attitude can release spiritual power, the next chapter will walk through how you can intentionally live from your spirit day by day—how to raise your sail, silence your soul, and let God’s wind guide your body, mind, and life.

Chapter 13:

From Water to Wine—Now Is the Time

“You were taught… to put off your old self… to be made new in the attitude of your minds; and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.”
—Ephesians 4:22–24

Every believer lives in the tension between the old self and the new self. The “old self,” as Paul wrote, is governed by the soul—by emotions, memories, traumas, and natural reasoning. The “new self” is your spirit—recreated at salvation, made alive in Christ, and already bearing the image of God.

But to walk in the power of this new self, something must shift: our attitude. The Apostle Paul didn’t say to just believe in the new self—he said to put it on, like a garment. This requires a turning of the mind, a daily decision to yield the soul and elevate the spirit. And often, it starts with a single step of obedience that doesn’t make much sense.

The Wedding at Cana: When Attitude Unlocks Glory

In John 2, Jesus attends a wedding with His mother. The celebration is joyful—until the wine runs out. Mary turns to Jesus and says, “They have no more wine.” But His response is surprising: “Woman, why do you involve me? My hour has not yet come.”

At first, it seems like Jesus is saying “no.” The timing, according to His soul and reasoning, wasn’t right. But Mary doesn’t argue—she simply tells the servants, “Do whatever He tells you.” She knew who He was. And something shifted. Jesus’ attitude changed.

That’s when the miracle began.

Jesus told the servants to fill the stone jars with water. Not wine. Water. Ordinary, humanly drawn water. Water represents the soul—natural, visible, understandable. Then He told them to take a small portion of that water and offer it to the master of the banquet.

Think about that moment. The servants had no proof a miracle had happened. No sign that the water had changed. All they had was a quiet word and a cup in their hand. Would you have walked that cup to the master? Or would your soul have found a reason not to?

That’s where we are today.

Living with a New Spirit, but Thinking Like the Old Self

Many Christians today are walking around with a fully reborn spirit—filled with the life of Christ, seated with Him in heavenly places. But their soul—their understanding, their old reasoning—keeps telling them, “That’s just water. It can’t become wine.”

When it comes to physical transformation, rejuvenation, or even beauty, the soul whispers, “That’s not possible. God doesn’t work like that.” But your spirit already knows: with God, all things are possible.

The miracle of Cana wasn’t just about turning water into wine. It was about shifting from soul-powered action to spirit-released glory. The wine didn’t come from effort—it came from Jesus. But someone still had to carry that cup.

Today, the Spirit of God is asking you to change your attitude. Not just about how you behave—but about what you believe. What if your appearance can change? What if your body can reflect your reborn spirit? What if God is ready—but waiting for you to believe it enough to act?

The Hour Has Come

Jesus said His hour had not yet come. But He changed His mind. And the miracle began. In the same way, maybe you have believed the hour for transformation hasn’t come. That the time to look younger, stronger, and healthier in the Lord is for heaven—but not earth.

But listen: Now is the time.

All it takes is a change of attitude. The willingness to take the next simple step. To present your body, like that small cup of water, in faith. Because when the soul surrenders and the spirit rises, the miracle of wine flows.

And what the master of the banquet said then, God is saying now:
“You have saved the best till now.”

Chapter 14:

Living from the Wind—Letting the Spirit Lead Daily

“Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step with the Spirit.”
—Galatians 5:25

In previous chapters, we explored the spiritual reality that your spirit is already renewed, vibrant, and filled with resurrection power. But how do we bring that inner life forward—so it influences our soul, transforms our body, and even rejuvenates our appearance?

The answer lies in learning how to consistently live from your spirit.

This is not a mystical or unreachable state. It is very practical, very possible, and even very natural—for the new creation you’ve become.

The Wind and the Engine: Returning to the Analogy

Recall the image of the yacht: a powerful vessel equipped with both an engine and a sail. The engine, representing your soul (your mind, will, emotions), is necessary for navigating tight spaces like harbors. It’s loud, gritty, and fueled by effort—like our daily thoughts, reasoning, and striving.

But once the yacht reaches the open ocean, the sail is lifted. The wind takes over. The engine quiets. The journey becomes smoother, quieter, more powerful and graceful. That sail is your spirit—and the wind is the Holy Spirit.

The key is to raise the sail and catch the wind.

Step 1: Daily Acknowledgment of Your Reborn Spirit

Start each day by affirming the truth of your spirit:

“Father, I thank You that my spirit is alive with Your life. I am not led by my emotions or my flesh. I am led by Your Spirit within me.”

Scripture meditation:
Romans 8:14“For those who are led by the Spirit of God are the children of God.”

Step 2: Quiet the Soul, Lift the Sail

To live from the spirit, you must quiet the noise of the soul. This means:

  • Taking time for silence. Even 5 minutes of silence before God can let your spirit surface.
  • Praying in the Spirit. Tongues are like wind to your sail. They bypass the mind and strengthen the spirit.
  • Letting go of mental over-effort. The spirit leads through peace, not pressure.

Scripture meditation:
Isaiah 30:15“In quietness and trust is your strength.”

Step 3: Align the Soul with the Spirit

Your mind doesn’t have to be the enemy. It can become the spirit’s ally. But this requires renewing it—training it to think the thoughts of your spirit.

  • Speak the Word aloud. Scripture out loud feeds your spirit and retrains your soul.
  • Journal what the Spirit shows you. Let God’s whispers anchor into written truth.
  • Reject thoughts that conflict with your new nature. If a thought says, “You’re just getting older,” respond with truth: “I’m being renewed day by day” (2 Corinthians 4:16).

Step 4: Release Glory Into Your Body

Yes, your body listens to your spirit. It’s waiting to receive from it.

  • Lay hands on your own body and declare health, youth, and strength.
  • Bless your appearance as a reflection of God’s glory, not of natural aging.
  • Fast from negativity—including media or conversations that glorify decay.

Scripture meditation:
Romans 8:11“The Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you… He will also give life to your mortal bodies.”

Step 5: Catch the Wind in Real Time

Throughout the day, practice turning to the Spirit:

  • When you’re stressed—pause and ask, “Spirit of God, lead me now.”
  • When you’re in the mirror—speak from your spirit: “You are radiant with the life of Christ.”
  • When you’re tired—whisper, “Wind of heaven, fill me again.”

This is the rhythm of living by the wind. Not striving—but sailing.


The Miracle in Motion

You are not waiting for the wind. The wind is already blowing. The Spirit of God lives inside of you and is longing to influence not just your choices, but your form—your skin, eyes, posture, glow.

This is not vanity. This is glory. When your face reflects peace, joy, and vitality, the world sees Him.

You have a beautiful sail. You are equipped to rise.
All that remains is to lift it—and let God’s wind take over.

Chapter 15:

The Mountain of Radiance — Transfigured Like Jesus

“His face shone like the sun, and His clothes became as white as the light.”
—Matthew 17:2 (NIV)

Jesus took Peter, James, and John up a high mountain—and there, something astonishing happened. Before their eyes, Jesus was transfigured. His appearance changed. His face radiated light, shining like the sun. His clothing became dazzling white, brighter than any launderer could bleach them. This was no symbolic vision—it was a literal transformation, and it came straight from heaven.

The Mount of Transfiguration gives us a glimpse of what happens when the spirit fully overcomes the natural realm. Jesus, though already perfect, allowed His glorified nature to shine visibly. This was a foretaste of the resurrection. But even more, it was a revelation of what becomes possible when heaven touches earth—when the invisible glory of the spirit becomes visible in the body.

Paul speaks of this in 2 Corinthians 3:18:

“And we all, who with unveiled faces contemplate the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into His image with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”

This isn’t just poetry. It’s a promise. The word “transformed” in Greek is metamorphoō—the same word used in Matthew 17:2 for transfigured. It’s not just our hearts or minds changing—it’s our whole being, including our appearance. The glory that changed Jesus’ face is the same glory now working in us.

Peter, later writing of the event, said:
“We were eyewitnesses of His majesty…we ourselves heard this voice that came from heaven when we were with Him on the sacred mountain.” (2 Peter 1:16-18)

He didn’t call it a vision. He called it majesty.

Just as Moses’ face once shone after being in God’s presence, Jesus’ radiance on the mountain shows us what happens when our spirit is fully aligned with heaven. And now, because of the indwelling Holy Spirit, we are invited into this same transformation.

Let’s be clear: the Mount of Transfiguration is both literal and prophetic. It points to a future where our bodies will be glorified, but it also invites us to believe that even now, the Spirit can renew our strength, brighten our countenance, and bring restoration to the visible parts of our lives. This isn’t about vanity—it’s about radiance. The kind that draws others to Jesus, the kind that reflects hope and resurrection life.

So how do we respond?

We ascend the mountain. Not physically, but spiritually. We withdraw from the noise, we gaze upon Jesus, and we allow the Holy Spirit to pull us upward. As we meditate on His glory, as we worship, as we surrender daily—our faces begin to reflect what our spirits already carry.

Chapter 16:

Climbing the Mountain — Living from Glory to Glory

“Come up here, and I will show you what must take place after this.”
—Revelation 4:1

The Mount of Transfiguration wasn’t just a moment in Jesus’ life—it’s a prophetic invitation. We are being changed “from glory to glory” (2 Corinthians 3:18), but how does that transformation actually happen? It begins with a choice—a daily decision to climb.

Like the disciples, we’re called to step away from the valley of distraction and ascend into the atmosphere of God’s presence. This doesn’t require a passport or hiking boots. It requires intentional spiritual focus, a quieted soul, and an awakened spirit. Here are three essential steps to help you ascend the mountain and walk in the glory that transforms body, soul, and spirit:


1. Withdraw to the High Place

“Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed.” (Luke 5:16)

The journey always begins with withdrawal—from noise, fear, screens, pressure. The “high mountain” is symbolic of intimacy with God. Find a space where your soul quiets down and your spirit begins to rise.

Daily practice: Begin each day—even 10 minutes—in stillness. Say aloud: “Lord, I am climbing the mountain to be with You.” Invite the Holy Spirit to lift your awareness above earthly things.


2. Fix Your Gaze on Jesus

“And we all…beholding the glory of the Lord, are being transformed.” (2 Corinthians 3:18)

The transformation doesn’t come by trying harder—it comes by beholding. When you gaze upon Jesus, His glory begins to imprint upon you. It’s like looking into the sun; your eyes may squint, but your body responds to the light.

Scripture meditation: Choose one Gospel story each day and imagine Jesus in it—His compassion, power, and glory. As you behold Him, speak aloud: “As He is, so am I in this world” (1 John 4:17).


3. Let the Spirit Lead the Body

“Walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh.” (Galatians 5:16)

Your soul wants logic and control; your spirit longs to soar. Every day you face a decision: to power forward with your own engine (your mind and emotions), or to raise your sail and let the Wind of the Spirit guide you. The more time you spend with Him, the easier it becomes to let your spirit lead.

Prayer focus: Ask the Holy Spirit, “What does my spirit know that my mind is resisting?” Then obey. Even a small act of surrender will let the wind fill your sail.


Final Thought: Transformation Is a Climb

Just like any mountain, this journey requires commitment. But the result is breathtaking: your inner glory begins to shine outward. Not always in dazzling light (though that’s possible), but in restored strength, lifted countenance, and youthful radiance that comes not from makeup or muscle—but from God’s indwelling glory.

You are not being conformed to the world. You are being transformed by heaven.

And as you climb, day by day, you will find that the very atmosphere around you begins to shift. Peace replaces worry. Joy breaks heaviness. And your very body begins to reflect the Spirit you carry.

Chapter 17:

The Apostle of Glory — John Renewed by Revelation

“This is the disciple who testifies to these things and who wrote them down. We know that his testimony is true.”
—John 21:24

He was the youngest of the twelve—but he lived the longest. While others were martyred early, John remained. Exiled. Isolated. Forgotten by the world. Yet, not decaying, not weakening. Why?

Because John wasn’t just growing old—he was growing in glory.

On the Isle of Patmos, with no earthly comforts, John received what no other man had: the Revelation of Jesus Christ. Heaven opened to a man in his nineties—not a declining sage, but a fiery prophet filled with visions, authority, and clarity. His mind was sharp. His spirit was alive. His pen still anointed. The final book of the Bible came not from youthful vigor but from spiritual ascendancy.


1. John’s Youth Was in His Spirit

The culture of his day, like ours, saw aging as decline. But John had tapped into another system—he lived from the resurrected spirit within him. He didn’t draw vitality from Roman comforts or youthful energy. His strength came from within.

“Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day.” (2 Corinthians 4:16)

John proved that the spirit, not the body, defines our vitality. His aged body stood as a vessel of glowing revelation, not crusted resignation.


2. He Beheld the Glorified Christ

On that island, he turned—and saw Jesus. Not the Jesus of Galilee. Not the Jesus of the Cross. But the One whose face was like the sun and whose eyes were like fire (Revelation 1:14–16). The vision overwhelmed him, yet it didn’t crush him. Why? Because his own spirit had grown strong enough to receive glory without collapse.

What you behold, you become. John looked at glory—and it transformed him.


3. John Was Preserved by Purpose

He had not yet fulfilled his calling. Jesus had hinted in John 21 that he might “remain until I return.” Many misunderstood this. But its essence was clear: purpose preserves. As long as John had revelation to release, heaven sustained him.

This is key for us: the Spirit doesn’t just preserve us for comfort—it preserves us for assignment. John lived not just long, but anointed and lucid because his spirit was on assignment.


4. We Are All Invited into the Same Revelation

John was not superhuman. He was a believer filled with the same Spirit that now dwells in every child of God. The difference? He lived from his spirit. He wrote Revelation, but more than that—he embodied it.

He shows us what’s possible when the spirit leads: prophetic insight, spiritual stamina, and a life that burns long and bright.


Final Thought: You’re Not Just Aging—You’re Advancing

Like John, you are not called to merely grow old. You are called to grow deep. Each year can bring more radiance, not less. Each decade can draw you closer to the unveiled Christ. In that beholding, the physical begins to reflect the spiritual. Not through cosmetics or surgery—but through communion with glory.

Your assignment preserves you. Your spirit sustains you. Your body responds.

Keep climbing. Keep beholding. The revelation has only begun.

Chapter 18:

The Table of Renewal — Communion and Physical Restoration

“I am the living bread that came down from heaven. Whoever eats this bread will live forever.”
—John 6:51

At the heart of Christian worship lies a simple, sacred meal: bread and wine. To many, it’s symbolic. To some, it’s ritual. But for those with eyes to see and faith to receive—it is life, healing, and even youth renewed.

When Jesus lifted the bread and the cup at the Last Supper, He wasn’t just instituting remembrance. He was offering a mystery. A key to divine exchange: His body for yours.
And when received in faith, this exchange doesn’t merely affect the soul. It can transform the body.


1. The Body and Blood Are for the Body

The apostle Paul warned the Corinthians that many were “weak and sick, and a number have died” because they failed to discern the Lord’s body (1 Corinthians 11:29–30). This wasn’t a metaphor. He was saying: when you don’t understand the power of this meal, your physical health suffers.

But the inverse is also true: those who rightly discern the Lord’s body receive strength, healing, and life.

This is not about superstition—it’s about the divine principle of transfer. Jesus gave His body to bear our weakness. He shed His blood to renew our life. When we take the bread and cup in faith, we are receiving the very elements of heaven’s vitality.


2. Daily Bread for Daily Life

Jesus taught us to pray, “Give us this day our daily bread.” While this includes physical provision, it also points to a deeper truth: we were never meant to live even a single day without spiritual nourishment. Just as manna fell daily in the wilderness, so too is the life of Christ offered to us daily in communion.

Some early Christians took communion every day—not as law, but as life. They understood that Christ’s body was not just spiritual sustenance, but a power source for their physical well-being.


3. Blood that Speaks a Better Word

The blood of Jesus is not passive—it speaks (Hebrews 12:24). It testifies of mercy. It defends against condemnation. And it carries the coding of eternal life.

Science tells us the life of a creature is in its blood (Leviticus 17:11). But this is no ordinary blood. This is blood that defeated death, carried no sin, and now flows in a glorified, resurrected body. When we drink the cup, we are receiving the power of that indestructible life.


4. Your Physical Body Responds to Spiritual Input

The Lord’s Table is not about feeling worthy—it’s about faith in His worth. It’s not about age—it’s about alignment. When your body partakes of heavenly substance, your cells respond. Your organs listen. Your skin feels it. Why? Because your body, too, was redeemed. It’s not a disposable shell. It’s a temple.

You don’t take communion to be religious. You take it to remember what was purchased—and to receive what is now yours.


Final Thought: The Table Is Set—Will You Sit?

Jesus has prepared a table in the presence of your aging, your weakness, your decay. He invites you to sit, to eat, to receive. Not out of tradition—but out of transformation.

Bread that came from heaven. Wine that speaks of eternal covenant. This is not snack time. This is miracle time.

And every time you take it, heaven touches your body.

Final Chapter:

A Glorious Reflection — From Glory to Glory

“And we all, who with unveiled faces contemplate the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his image with ever-increasing glory…”
—2 Corinthians 3:18

Throughout this book, we have walked together through a revelation that challenges what we’ve accepted about age, appearance, and the body. Not in vanity—but in victory. We have dared to believe that the same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead is at work in our mortal bodies (Romans 8:11). And what does that Spirit do? He quickens. He renews. He transforms.

This is not wishful thinking. It is biblical truth.


The Body Was Never Meant to Be Left Behind

From Genesis to Revelation, the body matters. We saw this in the miracle birth of Isaac—requiring physical rejuvenation in both Abraham and Sarah. We saw it in Moses, who climbed a mountain at 120 with full strength and eyesight. In Caleb, who declared at 85, “I am as strong today as I was then.” In Naaman, whose leprous skin became like that of a young boy. And in Lazarus, whose rotting body was fully restored.

These were not vague spiritual impressions. These were real flesh-and-blood transformations. Proof that God does not bypass the body—He redeems it.


The Spirit Within Is Meant to Shine Without

You are a spirit, you have a soul, and you live in a body (1 Thessalonians 5:23). Your spirit was recreated the moment you believed. It is holy, powerful, full of divine glory. But the question remains: What is your body reflecting?

We compared the body to a television screen—it displays whatever signal it receives. If your soul dominates, the wear and tear of life shows. But when your spirit takes the lead, the glory of God can literally be seen on your countenance, like Stephen’s radiant face or Jesus on the Mount of Transfiguration.

Your appearance is not your identity. But it is your testimony.


Humility Unlocks the Shift

We saw how Naaman’s healing only came when he lowered his soul and raised his spirit. We explored how the soul (mind and emotions) often resists the move of the Spirit, but how a simple change in attitude can release heaven’s power.

The soul is like an engine—it tries to control through effort. But the spirit is a sail—it moves by the wind of God. The Christian life is learning to turn off the engine and raise the sail.


Communion, Oil, and the Spirit’s Power

We discovered that communion is not just remembrance—it’s renewal. That oil is not just symbolic—it represents heaven’s moisture, radiance, and fragrance. And that believers throughout history have tasted of this power and reflected it in their physical bodies.

This is not a one-time event. It’s a daily decision: Will I live from the inside out, or the outside in?


You Are Already Glorious—Now Let It Show

If you’ve received Christ, your spirit is already full of resurrection power. The change you long for is not locked in the future—it is already inside you. The goal is not to get glory, but to release it.

You are not waiting for transformation. You are transformation in motion. From glory to glory.

One Final Image
As you close this book, picture your body as a window.
When the shades are drawn, it looks ordinary.
But when the curtains are pulled back and the sunlight pours through—suddenly, it shines.

Your spirit is the sun. Your soul is the curtain. Your body is the window.

Let the Light shine through.

Now is the time.

Thanks for reading.

Tony Egar.

If you have a testimony or story, please go to our website and post it in the comments.

Our readers would really enjoy hearing about your story.
Has God been speaking to you about wearing His Glory?
Have you experienced HIS GLORY.

Thank you once again.
God Bless from Brisbane, Australia.

www.tonyegar.com

Can a Christian Manifest money?

What Does the Bible say?

Written by Tony Egar.

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https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FCD37LF6

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https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=ngpkEQAAQBAJ

Hebrews 11:3 (NKJV):

“The things which are seen,
 were not made of things,
 which are visible.”

Introduction:

At the start of the year, a curious thought came to me—one that seemed almost too simple to take seriously. Why not call this year “The Year of the Ladder”? At first, it was just a playful idea, something about promotion and progress, a hope more than a plan. I shared it with family and friends, but mostly it was met with mild amusement or polite smiles.

Then, on a friend’s birthday, I placed a small toy ladder on her cake. A strange gesture, perhaps, but one filled with quiet intention: “May this be a year of promotion.” She didn’t laugh. Neither did I, but the ladder came home with us and took its place on our kitchen bench, perched above the fruit bowl where we passed it every day.

What happened next caught me off guard. Events unfolded around that ladder—unexpected visitors, repairs long overdue, and ladders appearing where none had been for years. And when a fierce storm came through, it brought with it even more ladders and changes that seemed too coincidental to ignore.

Curious, we added something else—something tangible and mysterious—to that toy ladder. And slowly, questions began to form: Could this be more than just a coincidence? Was there something unseen at work, quietly answering a silent call? Was there a connection between a simple toy and the real world that we hadn’t understood before?

There’s a story from ancient times that came to mind—about a man who trusted in things unseen yet worked with what was before him, and in doing so, saw blessings multiply beyond expectation.

What follows in this book is a journey into those mysteries—the small signs that hint at greater truths, the unseen forces that may be working in our lives, and the possibility that something miraculous is waiting just beyond what we can see.

I invite you to step quietly into this story, open your eyes to what might be, and wonder—what if this year is not just about ladders, but about something far greater?

The answers may surprise you.

Chapter 1

At the beginning of the year, I had an unusual thought.
Why not call this year, “The Year of the Ladder.”

When I had this thought, I was thinking about people being promoted.
At their job or in other areas of their life.
My family have heard me trying to forecast the future many times.
My success rate is not very high.
It was a mildly amusing idea and we did not take it seriously.

When my friend had a birthday, I put a toy ladder on her cake.
Then I wrote in her birthday card, “May this year be a year of promotion”.

She did not think it was funny.
My wife and I went home with that toy ladder and put it on our fruit bowl.

We walked past that toy ladder every day because the fruit bowl was on our kitchen bench.

About 3 weeks later a friend of ours was visiting.

He looked up at the ceiling in our dining room and noticed an old water stain.
I told him that I had put some buckets in the roof to catch the water.
And even though water did still leak through the roof tiles, the buckets did their job and the ceiling was now safe.
He is a tradesman who knows how to fix everything.
He came round the next week and got up on the roof and fixed the leak by sealing up the roof tiles.
While he was up there he saw that I had not cleaned the roof gutters for some years.
They were full of leaves and dirt.
Next week he was back with his huge leaf blower.
He got up on the roof once again and cleaned our gutters.

After he left for the second time, I said to my wife.

“Lorna, no one has been on our roof for the last 7 years.
That means that no ladder has been seen around our house for 7 years.

In the last 2 weeks a ladder has been used twice.
Do you think our toy ladder is manifesting?”

Lorna did not think it was connected to our toy ladder.

This was happening in February 2025.

We had a cyclone in March.

  • Cyclone Alfred is the first tropical cyclone since 1974 to hit Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
  • During its slow approach to Southeast Queensland, Alfred brought widespread heavy rainfall and caused major flooding.
  • By March 12, the Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) reported more than 34,000 claims for water damage.

What a surprise.

Guess what?

Our garage ceiling collapsed because of the cyclone.

The insurance company paid for the repairs.

It took 7 days for the tradesmen to put in a new ceiling.

For 7 days we had men on ladders in our garage.
Electricians on ladders.
Men were up on our roof with their ladders.

Ladders were everywhere.

After it was all over, I said to Lorna.

“Do you think our toy ladder is manifesting?”

This time she stopped and thought about all the ladders that had appeared since the beginning of the year.

Now she was thinking like I was.
Maybe something unusual is happening.

What started out as a little bit of fun was now getting our attention.

We had hoped that the year was going to be a year of promotion.

But it was becoming the “Year of the Ladder.”

Then I had a new idea.
If a toy ladder can bring in real ladders.
Why not tape a $50 note to the top of the ladder.

Yes, we put a $50 note on the top of our toy ladder.

Once again, we were thinking it was a little bit of fun.

But inwardly we did begin to wonder what was going on.

If we really did do something that caused ladders to appear in our lives.
How did it happen?

Here are some possible explanations.

  1. We were conscious of the toy ladder and our thoughts made ladders appear.
  2. We looked at the ladder every day in the kitchen and what we looked at manifested.
  3. We talked about ladders and our speech caused something to happen.
  4. Or it was a total coincidence.
  5. Or a mixture of the above explanations.
     

Then I remembered the story of Jacob in Genesis chapter 30.
Jacob was a man who worked diligently, yet he understood that the blessing of the Lord was the true source of his wealth.
He devised a plan involving peeled branches, and through God’s favor and his own wisdom, he prospered.
He didn’t rely solely on human effort; he acted in faith and let God’s blessing multiply what he had.

So, can a Christian manifest money?
Jacob’s story—and our own toy ladder experience—suggest that God’s blessing, coupled with intentional faith and wise action, can indeed cause unexpected provision.
It may start with something small—a toy ladder, a symbolic act—but it grows when we believe in the God who multiplies.

Chapter 2

Jacob’s Prosperity—God’s Way to Wealth

The story of Jacob and Laban in Genesis 30:25-43 is more than a tale of livestock and family intrigue; it is a vivid picture of how a believer, operating under God’s favor, can manifest provision and abundance in a world that often seeks to limit or oppress them.

After Rachel gave birth to Joseph, Jacob knew it was time to return to his homeland. He approached Laban and said, “Send me on my way, so I can go back to my own homeland with my wives and children, whom I have earned through years of service.” Jacob’s bold request was rooted in his awareness that he had served faithfully. He had fulfilled his obligations and now sought to embrace his own future.

But Laban, ever aware of the blessing that Jacob’s presence brought him, pleaded with Jacob to stay. He confessed, “I have learned by divination that the Lord has blessed me because of you.” Even an unfaithful man like Laban recognized that when God’s hand is on someone’s life, prosperity follows. Jacob’s labor had multiplied Laban’s flocks and brought him great wealth. In the same way, the world cannot help but notice when the favor of God rests upon a believer.

Jacob, however, was determined to establish something for his own household. So he proposed an arrangement: he would continue to care for Laban’s flocks, but as payment, he would keep only the speckled, spotted, or dark-colored animals. Laban agreed to these terms, thinking he was outsmarting Jacob. He immediately removed all such animals and gave them to his sons, putting a three-day journey between them and Jacob, hoping to thwart Jacob’s plan.

Yet Jacob was not discouraged. He acted in faith and wisdom, using a strategy that involved peeled branches from poplar, almond, and plane trees. He placed them in the watering troughs, and when the flocks mated near these branches, they produced speckled, spotted, and dark-colored offspring—precisely the kind of animals that were to be Jacob’s wages. Jacob even ensured that only the strongest animals mated in front of the branches, while the weaker ones were left for Laban.

Over time, Jacob became exceedingly wealthy, acquiring large flocks, female and male servants, camels, and donkeys. His prosperity was not the result of mere chance; it was the outcome of faith in God’s promise, diligent stewardship, and a willingness to act wisely in a world that tries to take advantage of the righteous.

This story is a powerful lesson for believers today. Can a Christian manifest money? Yes, when we operate under God’s favor, guided by His wisdom and willing to take action—just as Jacob did. Jacob’s prosperity came because he recognized his work was blessed by the Lord, and he was willing to step into the future God had for him.

In your own life, don’t be discouraged by the schemes of others or by circumstances that seem to limit you. Like Jacob, put your faith in God, be diligent, and trust that He will multiply the work of your hands. The world may try to outwit you, but God’s wisdom will always prevail, and His blessing will bring you into a place of abundance.

Chapter 3

The Power of a Faithful Mindset

Jacob’s story in Genesis 30 begins with a question of fairness and provision. He had served Laban faithfully, and now he wanted to provide for his own family. His first step was to speak up and declare his desire: “Send me on my way so I can go back to my homeland.” Jacob was no longer content to live only for another man’s increase; he knew it was time for his own household to prosper.

As Christians, we can learn from Jacob’s faithful mindset. He recognized that the Lord had blessed Laban because of him (Genesis 30:27). In the same way, we can acknowledge that wherever we go, God’s favor follows us. We must believe that God desires to bless us and that our work can carry His increase.

Manifesting money—or any provision—starts with a faith-filled mindset. Like Jacob, we must believe that God’s blessing is at work in us, and that He wants us to ask for what we need. When Jacob asked for his share, he did it with confidence, not entitlement. He saw himself as a steward of God’s increase, not just a servant of Laban’s household.

Key Reflection:
Ask yourself—do I truly believe that God’s favor surrounds me? Am I confident that my work can be blessed and multiplied? Like Jacob, let your first step in manifesting provision be rooted in faith.

Chapter 4

Seeing the Future and Speaking It Out

After Jacob declared his desire to return home, he did something else that was powerful:
he proposed a specific plan to Laban.
Jacob said, “Let the speckled, spotted, and dark-colored animals, be my wages”
(Genesis 30).
He didn’t just hope vaguely—he spoke out a plan for his future.

This is an essential step in manifestation: seeing what you want and speaking it into existence. Jacob visualized his future flocks. He pictured the increase and described it in detail. His words set the course for what would come.

As Christians, we are reminded that our words carry life and power. Proverbs 18:21 says, “The tongue has the power of life and death.” When we talk about our finances, our dreams, and our future, are we speaking words of faith and expectation? Or are we speaking doubt and defeat?

Jacob’s story challenges us to declare God’s promises and our own goals. Speak them out, even when it seems unlikely. Jacob’s request was not based on what Laban would easily give—Laban tried to trick him! But Jacob’s words were like seeds sown in faith, and God brought the harvest.

Key Reflection:
What words are you speaking over your finances and your future? Are they words of faith, like Jacob’s, or words of fear and scarcity?

Chapter 5

Taking Strategic Action

Jacob’s manifestation did not come from speaking alone—he took creative, strategic action. He used peeled branches in the water troughs, believing that what the flocks saw would influence their offspring. This action seems strange to us today, but it was rooted in Jacob’s understanding of natural principles and God’s creative power.

Jacob didn’t just wish for increase; he used what he had (branches, water troughs, knowledge of breeding) and worked diligently. In the same way, manifesting money as a Christian is not just about prayer—it’s also about wise, diligent action. James 2:17 says, “Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.”

Jacob’s branches in the water troughs can symbolize the small, consistent actions we take every day:

  • Starting a side hustle or investing wisely.
  • Developing a new skill.
  • Offering your work in a way that multiplies value for others.

God can bless these actions and bring a supernatural increase, just like He did for Jacob.

Key Reflection:
What “branches” can you use in your work or finances? Are you acting creatively and strategically, trusting God to multiply your efforts?

Chapter 6

Trusting God’s Timing and Fairness

One of the most powerful aspects of Jacob’s story is that he didn’t take what wasn’t his. He proposed an arrangement that would clearly show whether God was with him: “My honesty will testify for me in the future” (Genesis 30:33). He trusted that God would make the difference obvious.

Jacob wasn’t manipulating or stealing. His actions were transparent—he trusted God’s timing to prove that the blessing belonged to him. Over time, it became clear that God’s favor was on Jacob, not Laban. Jacob’s flocks grew strong and healthy, while Laban’s flocks weakened.

As Christians, this is crucial. Manifesting money doesn’t mean cutting corners or compromising integrity. It means trusting that God sees your faithful work and will reward it. Sometimes that reward comes slowly, but it comes.

Key Reflection:
Are you patient with God’s timing? Are you letting your honest actions and God’s blessing speak for you, rather than striving or scheming?

Chapter 7

Living in the Overflow of God’s Blessing

By the end of Genesis 30, Jacob had become “exceedingly prosperous” (Genesis 30:43). He had large flocks, many servants, camels, and donkeys. His life was overflowing because he partnered with God’s blessing, took creative action, and stayed honest in his dealings.

For us today, Jacob’s story is a powerful example:

  • God is the ultimate source of provision.
  • Our faith-filled thoughts, words, and actions create a space for His blessing to manifest.
  • The line between the natural and the supernatural is thinner than we think.

So, can a Christian manifest money? Jacob’s life shows that God’s people can indeed see provision and abundance when they walk in faith, speak life, act strategically, and honor God in all things. Like Jacob, we can declare, “The Lord has blessed me wherever I have been.”

Key Reflection:
What does your “Year of the Ladder” look like? How can you combine faith, wise action, and trust in God’s blessing to see overflow in your life?

Chapter 8

The Ladder and the Feeding Trough:

Small Acts, Big Results

After placing that $50 note on top of the toy ladder in our kitchen, I couldn’t help but think about how Jacob used his simple branches to bring in a whole new season of increase.
Isn’t it fascinating how a small object—a toy ladder—placed in a kitchen became a daily reminder and symbol?
In Jacob’s story, it was just some peeled branches placed in a feeding trough.
Jacob’s actions were done in faith, with the expectation that God would use them to bring about something bigger.

When we look at Genesis 30, Jacob carefully selected branches of poplar, almond, and plane trees.
He stripped the bark to create streaked patterns.
These branches weren’t anything special by themselves—they were ordinary, natural materials.
But they were placed in a very strategic location: the watering troughs where the animals came to eat and drink.

In our kitchen, the ladder was also placed in a spot of daily life:
right where we prepare food, where we gather with family.
Just like Jacob’s branches were in the “kitchen” for the animals, our little ladder sat in the heart of our home—where we saw it every day.
It was not about the physical ladder, it was about creating a daily, visual reminder.

This brings to mind a story from our own lives.
When our daughter was very young, she wanted a cat.
We didn’t want one at the time, but she took it upon herself to act out her faith in the most childlike and innocent way.
She made a little house out of a cardboard box and carefully wrote the name “Little Guy” on the front of the box.
She even placed a bowl of water outside the box as if the cat was already there.

We were so moved by her belief and determination that we couldn’t help but go and get her a real cat.
Her simple act of faith—just like Jacob’s branches in the trough or our toy ladder on the kitchen bench—became a catalyst for change.

Jacob’s story and our daughter’s cardboard cat house teach us the same thing: small actions, when done in faith and expectation, create an environment for God’s blessing to show up in tangible ways.

  • Jacob’s branches brought healthy, marked flocks.
  • Our toy ladder brought an abundance of ladders when we least expected it.
  • Our daughter’s cardboard cat house brought a real cat named “Little Guy” into our lives.

God seems to love partnering with the small, creative acts we do in our daily lives.
So often, it’s these simple steps—these “branches in the troughs” or cardboard houses—that set the stage for God’s increase.

Key Reflection:
What childlike, creative, or even “crazy” act of faith can you take today? How can you turn your hope into a small, visible step—trusting that God sees it and will honor it in His perfect timing?

Chapter 9

The Ladder We Didn’t See

One of the most powerful moments in Jacob’s life was not when he was actively working or making plans, but when he was sleeping in an unexpected place. He had left Beersheba and was heading toward Haran, weary from his journey. With the sun setting and nowhere else to stay, he lay down with a stone as his pillow. In that uncomfortable, in-between place, Jacob had a dream of something far bigger than himself: a ladder reaching from earth to heaven.

In the dream, he saw angels ascending and descending on this ladder—an image of God’s continual activity and blessing. And he heard the voice of God promising protection, provision, and a future of abundance. But when Jacob woke up, he was astonished. He said, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.”

Jacob’s story reminds us of something profound: we can be completely unaware of God’s ladder in our lives. Sometimes we go about our days, worrying about our problems and feeling stuck in uncomfortable places, not realizing that God’s blessing and provision are already right there with us—reaching from earth to heaven, connecting us to His promises.

The toy ladder on the kitchen bench, with that $50 note taped to the top, was a funny little sign of faith. But behind it, there’s a deeper truth: God has always had His own ladder for you. A spiritual ladder that connects your earthly needs and hopes to His divine supply. Like Jacob’s dream, it’s a ladder of angels, activity, and promise—a ladder we might not see because we’re caught up in our worries or routines.

Our daughter’s cardboard cat house was another example. She built it with innocent faith, not realizing how God was already working behind the scenes to bring her dream to life. She didn’t know there was a “ladder” in place for her—a connection between her childlike actions and the blessing of a real cat.

Key Reflection:
Jacob didn’t build the ladder. He didn’t even pray for it. It was already there, because God loved him and had a plan. Likewise, God’s ladder of blessing is already in your life—right where you are, even if you don’t see it yet.

  • Are you in a “stone pillow” season, feeling stuck or uncomfortable?
  • Are you overlooking the ladder of promise God has for you because you’re focused on your challenges?

Take a moment to pause and listen. Like Jacob, you might wake up and realize: “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.”

Chapter 10

What Does God’s Ladder Look Like Today?

If Jacob could see God’s ladder in a dusty wilderness with only a stone for a pillow, what might God’s ladder look like in our lives today?

We often think of ladders as tools to climb higher—like that toy ladder in our kitchen, or the ladders we see when repairs are being done. But God’s ladder isn’t just a tool for climbing; it’s a connection. A bridge between His heavenly resources and our earthly needs.

Today, God’s ladder might look like:

  • An encouraging word from a friend. A text message that says, “I’m praying for you.” That word lifts your spirit—like an angel bringing hope from heaven.
  • A small opportunity that opens a bigger door. Maybe you’re given a tiny job or task that seems insignificant, but it leads to something bigger, that you never imagined.
  • A quiet moment of prayer. You might be pouring out your worries to God in the morning, and suddenly you feel peace—like the presence of angels descending to comfort you.
  • A sudden insight or idea. You’re going about your day and a fresh idea pops into your mind—one that could transform your situation or lead to a breakthrough.
  • A financial provision that arrives just in time. You didn’t see it coming, but God did. He sent it down the ladder of His promise and into your hands.
  • A child’s innocent faith. Just like our daughter’s cardboard cat house, sometimes the faith of a child can be the ladder through which God sends blessing.

Jacob’s ladder was real, and it was a sign that God’s activity is always going on—whether we see it or not. God is still active in your life, sending help, hope, and provision down His ladder.

Your Part: Stay awake to His presence.

Jacob almost missed it. He didn’t know God was there until he woke up. Let’s not miss it. Let’s be awake, ready to recognize His ladder in every situation:

  • When you’re stuck, ask God: “Where is Your ladder?”
  • When you’re hopeful, thank Him: “Thank You for the ladder that’s already connecting me to Your promises.”
  • When you’re unsure, rest in the truth: God’s ladder is never taken down. It’s permanent. It’s His promise that He’s always at work—ascending, descending, blessing.


Lord, open my eyes to see Your ladder today. Help me recognize the ways You’re reaching into my life with Your love and provision. I choose to believe that even when I feel stuck, You are still active and present, guiding me step by step. Amen.

Chapter 11

Wake Up to God’s Ladder

Jacob said, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.” He had been asleep—literally and spiritually—until he had that dream of the ladder. When he woke up, he was no longer the same. He realized that God’s blessing had been with him all along.

The same is true for us today.
We can be physically awake—going to work, running errands, even doing church activities—and still be spiritually asleep. We can be so caught up in our routines, problems, or even our own dreams that we miss the ladder of God’s provision and presence right beside us.

What puts us to sleep?

  • Routine and busyness. We’re so busy checking off to-do lists that we forget to pause and listen for God’s voice.
  • Fear and worry. Fear can weigh us down like a heavy blanket, making it hard to see the hope that God has for us.
  • Unbelief. We tell ourselves, “It’s just coincidence,” or “God doesn’t care about the small details,” and we close our eyes to the miracles He wants to show us.
  • Distractions. Social media, endless news, and the rush of life can drown out the gentle whispers of God’s Spirit.

What wakes us up?

  • Thankfulness. Gratitude opens our eyes to see the blessings we already have. It shifts our focus from what’s missing to what God has already provided.
  • Stillness. In quiet moments—whether in prayer, a walk, or simply sitting still—we can hear God’s gentle voice.
  • Childlike faith. Like our daughter with her cardboard cat house, simple acts of faith open the door for God to move.
  • Expectancy. Expecting God to show up—even in small things—puts our spiritual senses on alert. We start noticing the “angels on the ladder” in everyday life.


Lord, awaken my heart. Help me to see You at work in every situation. Open my eyes to Your ladder of blessing, and keep me from getting stuck in routine, fear, or doubt. Help me live each day with childlike faith and expectancy. Amen.

Reflection:
Ask yourself today:

  • Where have I been “asleep” to God’s presence?
  • What blessings am I missing because I’m distracted or worried?
  • How can I pause, even for a few minutes, to thank Him and expect His goodness?

Remember, Jacob didn’t build the ladder—it was already there. In the same way, God’s provision and presence are already there for you. All you need to do is wake up and say, “Surely the Lord is in this place.”

Chapter 12

Climbing God’s Ladder—Partnering with His Promises

We’ve seen that God’s ladder is always there—His way of reaching into our lives with blessing and hope. Now, the question is: how do we climb it? How do we actively partner with His promises?

Unlike a physical ladder we climb with our hands and feet, God’s ladder is spiritual. Climbing it is about aligning our hearts and actions with His ways. It’s about faith, obedience, and expectant living.

Here are some practical ways to “climb” God’s ladder:

  1. Believe He’s Present
    Jacob woke up and said, “Surely the Lord is in this place.” You start climbing God’s ladder when you believe He is near, even if you can’t see Him. Faith is the first step.
  2. Speak His Promises
    Jacob had received God’s promise of blessing. We have God’s promises in Scripture—His “ladder” of provision and care for us. Speak them out loud. Let them shape your thoughts and words. “Lord, I believe You are my Provider,” or “I know You will never leave me.”
  3. Act with Expectancy
    When Jacob worked with the flocks, he took simple actions that aligned with what God had shown him. Likewise, take small steps of faith that reflect your trust in God. If you’re believing for provision, save a little, give a little, plan a little. These small acts of obedience are like steps on the ladder.
  4. Keep Your Eyes Open
    Jacob noticed the branches, the flocks, and the water troughs. In our lives, God often uses everyday situations to reveal His provision. Pay attention to what’s in front of you—an opportunity, a nudge, or an idea. God might be using it as a step on His ladder.
  5. Stay Humble and Grateful
    Jacob knew that the increase in his flocks wasn’t just his own doing—it was God’s blessing. Stay humble, acknowledging that every good thing comes from above. Gratitude keeps your heart soft and your eyes open.
  6. Pray for Guidance
    Jacob was in constant conversation with God—he had dreams, visions, and direction. You can do the same. Invite God into every decision: “Lord, show me where Your ladder is today. Guide my steps.”

Reflection:

  • What promises has God given you that you need to climb toward?
  • Are you taking small steps of faith, even when you can’t see the whole picture?
  • Are you watching for God’s “branches” and opportunities?

God’s ladder isn’t about striving—it’s about trusting and partnering with Him. He’s already at work, and He invites you to join Him in the process.


Father, thank You for the ladder of blessing You have placed in my life. Help me to climb it by faith, one step at a time, trusting that You are always near and always good. Amen.

Chapter 13

Full Nets and Empty Boats

The Hidden Power of Imagination

In the story of Peter’s miraculous catch (Luke 5), there’s a striking image that is easy to overlook. Peter’s nets were overflowing with fish—yet at first, his boat was still empty. It wasn’t until he called for help that the fish were gathered into the boats, filling them to the point of sinking.

This image—full nets but empty boats—invites us to see a deeper spiritual truth. Could it be that sometimes we have fullness in our spirit, yet emptiness in our soul? That what is complete and abundant in the unseen realm must still be transferred into the visible realm of our lives?


Fullness in the Spirit—Emptiness in the Soul

Scripture says that as believers, we are blessed with “every spiritual blessing in Christ” (Ephesians 1:3). In the spirit, there is no lack—no shortage of wisdom, creativity, provision, or healing. Like Peter’s net, there is a fullness that exists in the unseen.

Yet our soul—our mind, will, and emotions—can feel empty. We may feel stuck, discouraged, or like there’s a gap between what God says is ours and what we experience.


The Bridge of Imagination

This is where imagination becomes our unseen partner. Our imagination—our God-given ability to see what is not yet visible—acts like Peter’s net, drawing the catch out of the water and into our daily lives.

Jacob used imagination in Genesis 30: he saw in his mind how the flocks would be influenced by the branches. He acted on that inner vision, and it shaped what appeared in the natural world.

When we use our imagination for good—to picture healing, to see our finances flourishing, to visualize God’s promises—it helps bridge the gap between fullness in the spirit and emptiness in the soul. It aligns our mind and emotions with the spiritual truth of abundance.


Is Our Imagination More Powerful Than We Realize?

Absolutely!
The Bible tells us:

“Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power that is at work within us” (Ephesians 3:20).

Our imagination isn’t just daydreaming—it’s a spiritual tool that partners with God’s power to bring the invisible into the visible. When Jesus said to Peter, “Let down your nets,” He was inviting Peter to act on what He spoke, but also to envision abundance where there had been none.


Practical Ways to Use Imagination in Faith

  • Look at symbols—like Jacob’s branches or our toy ladder. Let them spark faith.
  • Visualize God’s promises—see yourself living in healing, provision, and peace.
  • Speak words that match your vision—like Peter, declare, “Because You say so, I will…”
  • Act in alignment—even small steps can draw what is in the spirit into your everyday life.

Reflection
Are there areas in your life where your “nets” (spirit) are full, but your “boat” (soul) feels empty? What images or symbols can you place before your eyes to keep your imagination engaged with God’s promises?



Lord, thank You for the gift of imagination. Help me to use it as a tool of faith, to see and speak what You have promised. Teach me how to bridge the gap between fullness in my spirit and emptiness in my soul, so that my whole life reflects Your abundance. Amen.

Chapter 14

Abraham—Imagination as the Gateway to Faith

Abraham’s story is one of the clearest examples of how God uses our imagination to draw His promises into reality. Romans 4:17 says God spoke of Abraham as a “father of many nations” before he ever had a single child. He gave Abraham a promise that seemed impossible in the natural.

To help Abraham’s faith grow, God used a vivid image:

“Look now toward heaven, and count the stars if you are able to number them. So shall your descendants be.” (Genesis 15:5)

By looking at the stars, Abraham engaged his imagination. He didn’t just hear God’s words—he saw them in his mind’s eye. Every night when he looked at the sky, he was reminded of the promise, and his imagination stirred his faith.


Imagination and Action—Partners in Manifestation

Abraham’s imagination was not idle. It shaped his decisions:

  • He stopped identifying as “childless.”
  • He spoke and acted as though the promise was real.
  • He and Sarah conceived Isaac because they “judged Him faithful who had promised” (Hebrews 11:11).

This is the same principle we saw with Jacob’s branches and Peter’s nets. Abraham used his imagination to see the stars, and then he acted in alignment with what he saw.


How Can We Use This Today?

Just like Abraham, we can:
Use symbols—like the stars for Abraham, or ladders and branches for us—to anchor our vision.
Fill our imagination with what God says, not just what we see.
Speak God’s promises out loud—let our words match the inner vision.
Take steps of faith, even small ones, that align with what we believe.


Reflection
What promises has God made to you that feel impossible? What symbols or images can you keep before your eyes to strengthen your faith? Are there steps of faith you can take today, even if they seem small?



Father, thank You for the power of imagination. Help me to see with the eyes of faith—like Abraham saw the stars—so I can live in the fullness of Your promises. Teach me to speak, act, and believe in ways that draw heaven’s abundance into my life. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chapter 15

Imagination as a Ladder

for Healing and Opportunity

Imagination is more than just daydreaming—it’s a ladder between our spirit and soul, a bridge that can bring heaven’s power into our lives. In Genesis 28, Jacob saw a ladder reaching from earth to heaven. He said, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.” God was showing him that there’s always a connection between the seen and unseen—if we are awake to it!


Healing the Body—A Ladder of Imagination

Many times, Jesus said, “Your faith has healed you.” Faith often begins in the imagination. The woman with the issue of blood (Mark 5) imagined herself touching the hem of Jesus’ garment and being healed. Her imagination moved her to action.

In the same way, when we imagine ourselves healthy and whole, we’re aligning our soul (mind, will, emotions) with the reality of God’s promises in our spirit. Our imagination becomes a ladder that carries the healing power of God from our spirit to our body.


New Opportunities—Climbing Higher with Imagination

Opportunities can also come when we allow our imagination to dream. In Luke 5, Peter had fished all night and caught nothing. But Jesus said, “Put out into deep water.” Peter didn’t see the fish, but he listened to Jesus and imagined the possibility of abundance. His imagination became the ladder that moved him from empty nets to overflowing boats.


Practical Steps for Using Your Imagination as a Ladder

See Yourself Whole – If you’re believing for healing, don’t just speak it—picture yourself healthy and strong, enjoying life, doing what you love.

See Yourself Blessed – If you’re believing for provision or promotion, use a symbol (like our toy ladder or a verse of Scripture) and imagine yourself already there.

 Speak and Act – Let your words and actions match what you’re imagining. Like Jacob placing the branches where the animals fed, create practical reminders in your life of what you believe.

Trust God’s Presence – Like Jacob said, “Surely the Lord is in this place,” remind yourself that God is with you, even if you don’t see Him yet. His presence is the foundation of your ladder.


A Personal Reflection
I often think about how our daughter’s cardboard cat house became the bridge that brought “Little Guy” into our lives. Her imagination wasn’t just wishful thinking—it was a ladder of faith that reached into our family and brought a new companion home.



Father, thank You for the gift of imagination. Help me to use it as a ladder of faith, climbing higher into Your healing, provision, and opportunities. Teach me to see with the eyes of my spirit, to speak Your Word boldly, and to act in faith. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chapter 16

Casting the Net of Your Imagination

When Jesus stood in Peter’s boat, He gave an instruction that changed everything: “Put out into deep water, and let down your nets for a catch.” Peter’s response shows the journey of every believer: “Master, we’ve worked hard all night and caught nothing. But because you say so, I will let down the nets.”

Peter’s empty nets were like our own empty dreams—efforts that didn’t produce fruit, work that felt in vain. But Jesus invited Peter to see differently. He challenged Peter to use his net again, not just with his hands, but with faith and imagination.


Your Imagination is Your Net

Imagination is like a net you cast out into the waters of possibility. It stretches out into places you can’t physically reach. When you imagine God’s promises coming true, you’re letting down your net into the depths of His faithfulness.

Just as Peter’s net pulled in a catch beyond anything he’d seen before, your imagination can gather in blessings that were always there, waiting for you to reach out in faith.


How to Cast Your Net of Imagination

Get Jesus in Your Boat
Peter’s turning point wasn’t just the net—it was the presence of Jesus in the boat. Invite Him to sit at the center of your thoughts. Surrender your imagination to Him.

Trust Beyond Past Disappointments
Peter had fished all night and caught nothing. Maybe you’ve “fished” for years—dreamed, tried, worked hard—but seen no results. Let Jesus’ words fill you with fresh expectation. Your net of imagination works best when you cast it out again in faith.

See What Others Can’t See
The fish were there all along, but Peter couldn’t see them. Sometimes the blessings are invisible until faith and imagination work together. When you imagine God’s promises, you’re opening your eyes to what’s already possible in His Kingdom.

Expect Overflow
Peter’s net didn’t just bring in enough fish for himself—it was so full that he needed help to gather the abundance. Your imagination, too, can bring in blessings beyond your own needs, spilling over to bless others around you.


A Net of Faith and Imagination

We often think of imagination as “daydreaming,” but it’s far more than that. In Scripture, faith itself is described as the substance of things hoped for (Hebrews 11:1). That substance begins in the unseen—right where your imagination lives.

  • Imagination helps you see God’s promises as real.
  • It gathers up the invisible blessings and brings them into your reality.
  • Like a net, it draws in the harvest of faith you’ve planted.

Questions to Reflect

  • What promises of God are you seeing in your spirit today?
  • What “deep water” is Jesus asking you to cast your net into?
  • Have you given up casting because of past disappointments?


Lord, I give You my imagination—my net. Teach me to cast it out in faith, to see what You see, and to believe that You have more for me than I can even imagine. Fill my net with blessings, not just for me, but for everyone You’ve called me to bless. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chapter 17

From Invisible to Visible: The Fisherman’s Secret

Imagine a fisherman standing at the edge of a lake. The water is calm and blue. On the surface, there’s no sign of life—no fish to be seen, no ripples to hint at what lies beneath. But the fisherman knows a secret: just because you can’t see it, doesn’t mean it’s not there.

When the fisherman casts his net into the water, he’s reaching into the invisible realm. The fish are there—hidden, silent, moving in a world we cannot see. The net plunges down, disappearing for a moment as it enters this hidden world. Then, just as suddenly, the net reappears, bursting with the abundance that was always there but unseen.


The Net: A Bridge Between Realms

This is the mystery of the fisherman’s net: it is both visible and invisible. Above the water, you see the net’s edge. Below, it vanishes into the unseen depths. When it reappears, it carries the invisible into the visible world.

This is the same way your faith and your imagination work. Jesus said, “Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you” (Matthew 6:33). When He said this, He wasn’t just talking about religion or a far-off heaven—He was inviting us to reach into the invisible realm of God’s kingdom.


The Kingdom: The Invisible Realm

The kingdom of God is real, but it’s not always visible to the natural eye. It’s a realm of promise, healing, abundance, and purpose. When Jesus says to seek this kingdom, He’s saying:

  • Go deeper than the surface of life.
  • Reach with your faith and your imagination into the invisible world of the Spirit.
  • Pull into your life what was always there, waiting for you.

Just like the fisherman’s net, your imagination disappears for a moment when you use it—it leaves the visible world and enters the realm of dreams, faith, and spiritual reality. Then, just as suddenly, it reappears, bringing with it the blessings you couldn’t see before.


Faith and Imagination: Your Spiritual Net

  • Your faith is the edge of the net—it’s what you believe.
  • Your imagination is the net itself—it stretches, curves, and dives down where you cannot go.
  • When you cast it out—when you imagine God’s goodness and promises—you are fishing in the invisible realm.
  • What you bring back is the manifestation of God’s abundance in your life.

The Invitation: Dive Deeper

Jesus told Peter, “Put out into deep water, and let down your nets for a catch” (Luke 5:4). He’s still saying that to us today. Go deeper. Let your faith and imagination dive into the kingdom of God. Don’t be afraid of what you can’t see—God’s realm is teeming with abundance, waiting to be pulled into your world.


Reflection Questions

  • What blessings are you seeking to bring from the invisible into the visible?
  • How can you let your imagination and faith work together as a “net”?
  • Are there places where you’ve been content to fish only in the shallow water, when Jesus is calling you to go deeper?


Father, thank You that Your kingdom is real, even when I can’t see it. Teach me to cast out the net of my faith and imagination, to bring Your promises into my life. Help me to trust that even when I can’t see it, You are working in the invisible realm. Let my life overflow with the blessings You have prepared for me. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chapter 18

Called to be a Miracle Worker?

What if I told you that your real calling as a Christian is to move things from the invisible world and make them appear in the visible world? Would that surprise you? It surprises a lot of people. Many of us have been taught to keep our heads down, be humble, and not expect too much. But what if that very humility is actually hiding a much bigger calling?


The Surprising Calling of the Christian

Throughout the Bible, we see people who partnered with God to bring what was unseen into the realm of sight and touch. Abraham believed in a child he couldn’t see. Moses called water from a rock. Elijah called fire from heaven. Jesus took five loaves and two fish and multiplied them to feed thousands. Each of them reached into the invisible world of faith and brought back something that changed lives.


Jesus: The Ultimate Example

Jesus said, “I only do what I see my Father doing” (John 5:19). What was He seeing? He was seeing the invisible kingdom of God—already complete, already abundant. He brought it into the visible world—healing the sick, feeding the hungry, calming the storms.

And then He said to us:

“Whoever believes in Me will do the works I have been doing, and they will do even greater things than these.” (John 14:12)

He was talking about you.


A New Perspective on Humility

Many of us have thought that humility means not expecting much, not wanting too much. But real humility is agreeing with what God says about you—even if it feels bigger than you imagined! If God says you’re called to bring heaven to earth, then agreeing with Him is the humble thing to do.


Imagination and Faith: Your Spiritual Tools

If we are indeed called to be miracle workers, then our imagination and faith are the tools we use to reach into the invisible world. It’s like Jesus telling Peter to let down the nets—He was teaching Peter to see abundance where there was emptiness, to trust that God’s supply was bigger than the natural world showed.


The Invitation: Becoming a Miracle Worker

  • Are you willing to let God stretch your faith?
  • Are you willing to imagine more than you’ve dared to before?
  • Are you willing to believe that He wants to work miracles through you?

If so, you’re already stepping into your real calling.


Reflection

  • What miracle has God put on your heart, even if you’re not sure how it will happen?
  • Where have you been afraid to dream bigger, because you didn’t think it was “humble”?
  • How can you start partnering with the invisible kingdom of God today?


Lord, open my eyes to see the invisible. Help me to see what You’re doing and to agree with it. Show me how to partner with You to bring Your kingdom from the invisible into the visible world. I’m willing—teach me to be a miracle worker for Your glory. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Final Chapter

From a Ladder to Miracles — Your Call to Wake Up

It all began with a simple, even playful thought: why not call this year “The Year of the Ladder?” A small toy ladder sat on our kitchen bench, a symbol—at first just a joke—that somehow started to manifest real ladders into our lives. Little did I know that this small idea was a whisper from God, nudging us into something far greater.

Now, as we come to the end of this journey together, I want to offer you another thought. It might seem a little bold, maybe even humorous at first—what if we renamed this year “The Year of Miracles?”

Not just to hope for miracles but to realize that God may actually be calling you—yes, you reading this—to step into your true identity as a miracle worker.

You’ve heard the stories—the net is already in the boat, but you have to cast it out. You’ve dreamed of ladders, branches, and nets; now it’s time to wake up those parts of your mind and heart that have been asleep.

It’s time to move from dreaming to doing, from seeing to acting.


Wake Up, Everyone!

You are not just a spectator. You are called to be an active participant in God’s kingdom.

  • Let down your net — cast your imagination and faith into the invisible realm, and watch God bring in the catch.
  • Climb your ladder — step up in your faith and purpose, moving higher into the calling God has placed on your life.
  • Peel your branches — prepare the environment where blessings will multiply and manifest in your life.

This is your moment. The net is in your boat. The ladder is before you. The branches are waiting.

God’s invitation stands:
Wake up! You are a miracle worker.

Will you step out in faith and answer that call today?


Thank you for journeying with me. May this Year of Miracles be the year your faith transforms the invisible into the visible, and your life becomes a testimony of God’s supernatural power at work.

Let down your net. Climb your ladder. Peel your branches. Wake up—and walk in the miracles God has already prepared for you.

Bonus Chapter

The Net is Full

You may be staring at an empty boat right now. You’re not alone—many of us have been there, seeing only what’s lacking. But let me remind you: in the story of Peter, the net was full while the boat was empty. Jesus asked Peter to let down his net, not because of what was already in the boat, but because of what was waiting in the invisible realm, just beneath the surface.

What if your net is already full, even if your boat looks empty?

This is an invitation to wake up the eyes of your imagination. To look beyond the empty boat and see the net, teeming with possibilities that exist in the spiritual realm, waiting for you to draw them in.

We live in a world that believes in invisible things. Every time you use a debit card, a credit card, or your phone to make a purchase, no one sees the money—yet everyone accepts that it’s there, moving unseen through computer networks. Even paper money, the cash we hold, is really just an idea—an agreement, a symbol of value that we all believe in.

What if moving resources from the spiritual world to the material world was just as real—and just as normal—as these transactions? What if God is ready to train you in this unseen world, but you’ve been unaware of His heavenly training school?

Here’s a simple invitation: place an object somewhere in your home that will remind you of this mystery.
A toy ladder, a picture, anything that speaks to your heart.
Let it be a silent signpost, a call to your imagination and your faith.

Begin to experiment. See what happens.
Watch for the surprising ways the invisible becomes visible, for the small signs that hint at bigger truths.
And as you do, let us know what you discover.
Share the stories of your own “full net,” so that together we can learn and grow in this journey of faith and imagination.

The net is full.
The boat may look empty, but it’s time to let down your imagination—and see what rises to the surface.

Thank You for Reading

Thank you for joining us on this journey of ladders, nets, and the beautiful mysteries of faith.
We hope these words have stirred your imagination.
And helped you sense the blessings waiting to be gathered.

May you discover the full nets in your life, even when the boat seems empty.
May you climb every ladder, let down every net, and never stop dreaming with God.

With love and gratitude.

Tony Egar
Brisbane, Australia

www.tonyegar.com

Can a Christian expose the Thief: What does the Bible say?

Proverbs 6:31

Yet if he is caught, he must pay sevenfold,
though it costs him all the wealth of his house.

Amazon
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FG51SQCC

Google Play
https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=JYVpEQAAQBAJ

Introduction:
The Empty Way of Life

Modern Western Christianity is an empty way of life.
Yes, we get saved.
Yes, we believe in Jesus.
But somewhere along the way, the simple gospel was traded for a marketing campaign.

We are told—week after week—that tithes and offerings are the keys to unlocking blessings. “Give to the church, and God will bless your finances.” Yet all that usually does is make the preacher rich… and you poor.

It’s become a cycle. A system.
Every Sunday, a little speech accompanies the offering basket. Promises of divine wealth are handed out like coupons—if you just sow your seed first. If you bless the church financially, God will bless you financially. But is that what the Bible really says?

There’s a scripture—1 Peter 1:18–19—that tells a different story.
It dares to tell the truth, in plain sight:

“For you know that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you were redeemed from the empty way of life handed down to you from your ancestors, but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect.” (1 Peter 1:18–19, NIV)

The Bible does not say we are redeemed by giving.
It does not say we are redeemed by money.
It says we are redeemed by blood.

The precious blood of Jesus.

Chapter 1
Can the Blood Redeem? YES

Let’s be honest: most of the modern church uses scripture the same way a politician uses a slogan—out of context, for personal gain, and stretched to fit a desired result.

They have their three unspoken rules:

  1. Use scripture out of context.
  2. Use scripture with the wrong motive.
  3. Exaggerate the results.

So I thought—why not play by their rules for a moment?

Let’s look again at 1 Peter 1:18–19.
Let’s take it apart and apply it differently—not as doctrine for a pulpit, but as a personal prophetic encouragement for someone in real pain.

Here’s what that scripture really says:

  1. You were redeemed from the empty way of life.
  2. Handed down from your ancestors.

In its true context, this refers to salvation. The “empty way” is religion without power. The “ancestors” refer to the Law—the system of works and rituals that could never save. But what if—just what if—we applied this personally, not theologically?

Imagine:
You just left church, having given what little money you had, hoping for a miracle.
You’re driving home with less than you arrived.
The preacher is driving off in a luxury car.

But before you leave the parking lot, you run into me.
Not a pastor. Not an expert. Just a friend.

You share your struggles. Your financial fears. Your despair.
I listen—and I give you a word. Not a teaching. A word.

I say to you:

“You will not be rescued from your financial empty way of life with tithes and offerings.”
“You will be rescued by the blood of Jesus.”
“Because poverty is a curse—and the blood of Jesus broke every curse.”

Then I quote Galatians 3:

“Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us… He redeemed us in order that the blessing given to Abraham might come.” (Galatians 3:13–14)

You go home and tell your wife. She’s hopeful, but still cautious.
You both wait and watch.

So what is it?
Is the church right? Will your “seed” bring the harvest?
Or is the Bible right—that we are redeemed by the blood, not by our wallets?

Galatians 3 warns:

“All who rely on the works of the law are under a curse.”
“Cursed is everyone who does not continue to do everything written in the Book of the Law.”

And here’s the hard question:
Are tithes and offerings a form of self-effort?
When have you given enough? Did you do it with the right motive? Were you giving to get?

Galatians continues:

“Clearly no one who relies on the law is justified before God, because ‘the righteous will live by faith.’”

Now here’s a little cheeky thought:

Even the Grace Preachers—those who preach freedom from the Law—still tell you to give money.
I heard Joseph Prince say he believes Christians should tithe.
Yes, even the kings of “grace” won’t let you off the hook financially.

So now it’s your decision.

Would you like to prosper because you gave to a church?
Have you tried that for a few years?

Or…
Would you like to prosper because you trust in the blood of Jesus?

You decide.

Chapter 2
Miracles at 30,000 Feet

There are some stories so full of God’s presence, they echo long after you’ve heard them. This one took place in the sky — high above Siberia — where there were no pulpits, no offering plates, and no choir singing “Just as I Am.” Just snow below, wind around, and a man of God sitting quietly in his seat.

R.W. Schambach was known for fire, boldness, and faith. He preached like every word would bring down the heavens — and sometimes, it did. His ministry shook tents and towns, but it was never based on gimmicks or guilt-driven offerings. His message was simple: “You don’t have any trouble. All you need is faith in God.”

On this particular day, he and his daughter, Donna, were flying into Moscow for a gospel crusade. As the plane crossed the vast, frozen stretches of Siberia, the pilot interrupted the flight with troubling news. A strong headwind was draining fuel faster than expected. If it didn’t change, they’d be forced to land somewhere in Siberia — a cold, uncertain, and potentially dangerous delay.

At that moment, while concern rose among the crew and passengers, Schambach didn’t stand up and preach. He didn’t take an offering. He didn’t ask who had tithed that week or who had sown a seed for protection. He just prayed.

“Father,” he said gently, “we ask You to turn this headwind around. We declare in Jesus’ name that You’ll give us a tailwind instead. Let Your power be known, even in the skies.”

Minutes later, the pilot’s voice returned — this time with awe:
“The headwind has stopped. We now have a strong tailwind. We’ll arrive early in Moscow.”

Now here’s the question:
Was that prayer answered because R.W. Schambach had given money to someone?
Did God shift the wind because of a good deed or a donation receipt?

Or…
Was the prayer answered because Schambach prayed as a son?
Was the prayer answered because of the blood of Jesus — which opens heaven’s throne to anyone bold enough to believe?

Scripture says in Hebrews 10:19:

“Therefore, brothers and sisters, since we have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus…”

That tailwind didn’t come because of tithes or offerings.
It came because of access.

The blood of Jesus gave Schambach — and gives every believer — access to the throne of grace. Not as beggars. Not as debtors. But as sons and daughters. And when sons speak in faith, heaven listens.

Those flight attendants — who had just minutes before rejected the gospel — were now trembling. “Your preacher prayed,” one of them said, “and it actually happened.”

They wanted to know more about this Jesus.

By the time the plane touched down in Moscow, the wind had shifted more than just the aircraft. It had shifted hearts. Those attendants came to the meetings, gave their lives to Christ, and stepped into the same blood-bought access that had turned the skies.

So I ask you again:

Was it giving money that moved God?
Or was it the blood of Jesus that gave one man the confidence to ask for a miracle — and receive it?

You decide.

Chapter 3
Headwinds, Tailwinds, and One Prophetic Word

Headwinds and tailwinds don’t just happen at 30,000 feet.

Sometimes they show up in your inbox, in a courtroom, at the bank, or from someone with influence over your life. In the Bible, we see this same pattern — resistance and assistance — headwinds and tailwinds — in the Book of Ezra.

Let me take you back for a moment.

The Book of Ezra tells the story of the Jewish people returning from exile in Babylon. They had been taken from their land, their temple destroyed, and their worship silenced for seventy years. But then, out of nowhere, a miracle happened: King Cyrus, the ruler of Persia, issued a decree that the Jews could go home and rebuild the temple in Jerusalem.

Tailwind.

He even sent silver and gold, temple articles, and allowed them to take offerings from their neighbors. Why? Because God stirred his heart. That’s what the Bible says. Not a tithe. Not a bribe. Not a deal. Just the divine stirring of a king’s heart.

But then came King Artaxerxes, the next ruler. And he brought a headwind.

He read through the records, saw that the Jews had a history of rebellion, and shut the whole project down. No building. No progress. No help. Just resistance. The people were discouraged, defeated, and broke. They stayed stuck for years — not because they weren’t faithful — but because there was no assistance.

And then, almost twenty years later, a new king, Darius, rose to power. But this time, something shifted.

A prophet named Haggai spoke.

It wasn’t long. It wasn’t elaborate. It was a simple prophetic word: “Is it a time for you yourselves to be living in your paneled houses, while this house remains a ruin?” (Haggai 1:4)

That word stirred the people. They got up, picked up the tools, and started building again — even without permission.

And guess what? When King Darius heard about it, he didn’t stop them. In fact, he did the opposite.

He issued a decree to support the building of the temple.
He gave them funds from the royal treasury.
He even commanded their enemies to stay far away.

Tailwind.

All because of one prophetic word.

So here’s the question: What if the people resisting you today suddenly started helping you?
What if the headwinds in your life turned into tailwinds?
What if God stirred someone’s heart to bless you — just because He wanted to?

Let me go further: Can a normal Christian give a prophetic word?
Not a preacher. Not a prophet on TV. Just a believer.
Someone who knows Jesus.
Someone like me.
Someone like you.

Here’s my prophetic word to you, the one from Chapter 1:

“You will not be rescued from your financial empty way of life with tithes and offerings.”
“You will be rescued by the blood of Jesus.”
“Because poverty is a curse — and the blood of Jesus broke every curse.”

That’s not theology. That’s testimony.
That’s not manipulation. That’s a declaration.
That’s not a fundraiser. That’s freedom.

If one prophetic word from Haggai could shift an empire — and turn a king into an ally — why not today?
Why not your situation?
Why not your life?

Because one word from God…
Can move a king.
Can turn resistance into assistance.
Can turn poverty into provision.

Tailwinds are coming.

You decide.

Chapter 4
A New Reformation:

Built on the Blood, Not on the Sand

In 1517, a German monk named Martin Luther walked up to the Castle Church in Wittenberg and nailed a piece of paper to the door. On it were 95 Theses — statements of protest against the practices of the Catholic Church. The most explosive issue?

Indulgences.

The Church had started selling forgiveness. They told the people that if they gave money, they could buy their way out of purgatory. They could purchase pardon for themselves — or even for their dead relatives.

It was a cash-for-cleansing scam.

And it split the Church.

What started as a protest turned into a Reformation — one that would shake Europe, birth new movements, and fracture the Church for the next 500 years.

But Luther’s core message was simple:
We are saved by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone — not by works, not by payment, not by any church institution.

Fast forward five centuries.

And now, in the modern Western church, we’ve done something hauntingly similar.

We may not be selling indulgences…
But we’ve started selling blessings.

“If you give, God will bless you.”
“Sow a seed, and you’ll get a harvest.”
“Send in your tithe, and God will open the windows of heaven.”

Let me ask plainly:
Are we building the modern church on grace… or on transaction?

Is it possible the Prosperity Gospel — though wrapped in Scripture — is just a 21st-century version of indulgences?

We’ve replaced “buy your forgiveness” with “buy your breakthrough.”
We’ve exchanged “give to the church to escape purgatory” with “give to the preacher to escape poverty.”

Different language.
Same lie.

It’s time for another split.

Not a denominational one.
But a spiritual one — a prophetic break from false foundations.

Because prosperity is real.
Blessing is biblical.
Breakthrough is available.

But the foundation matters.

“For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ.”
(1 Corinthians 3:11)

Jesus is not a business partner.
He’s not an investment broker.
He is the Lamb of God, whose blood purchased every blessing — salvation, peace, healing, and yes, even provision.

Let’s ask the hard question:

Are we receiving heaven’s help because we’ve given the right amount…
Or because we’ve trusted in the blood of Jesus?

Because when the storm hits, money won’t hold your house up.

And Jesus warned us about that kind of religion:

“The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell with a great crash.”
(Matthew 7:27)

That’s what happens when we build on sand.

When we build on performance.
When we build on pressure.
When we build on percentage points instead of the Person of Jesus.
It’s time to rebuild the Church on the rock again.

Not on hype.
Not on manipulation.
Not on the bank account of the faithful.

But on the blood of Jesus, which speaks a better word than any offering plate.

Chapter 5
The Thief in the Camp

There is one thing you will almost never hear from a modern Western pastor:

“I was wrong.”

They won’t admit they misquoted the Bible.
They won’t say their promises didn’t come true.
They won’t apologize for preaching that if you give more, you’ll get more — even when you didn’t.

When the offerings don’t work, when the “hundredfold return” never comes, when your debt piles higher and your prayers go unanswered — the pulpit goes silent.

Except for the one testimony.

Always — always — there’s a random testimony.

Someone says they sowed a seed on Sunday, and by Tuesday, they got a check in the mail.
And that one story becomes the fuel to keep the engine of false hope running.

It’s not that God never blesses. He does.
It’s not that miracles never happen. They do.

But we have to ask a harder question now:
Are these blessings from heaven — or are they used as bait by men?

When Joshua led Israel into the Promised Land, they had a string of victories — until they came to a small place called Ai. A city they should have defeated easily.

Instead, they lost.

“Then the Lord said to Joshua, ‘Stand up! What are you doing down on your face? Israel has sinned; they have violated my covenant… They have taken some of the devoted things; they have stolen, they have lied.’”
(Joshua 7:10–11)

Joshua was on his face praying.
God told him to stop praying and find the thief.

Until the thief was exposed, the blessings would stop.

Could this be the moment we’re in?

Is there a thief in the camp?

Has the modern Western Church taken what belongs to God and turned it into profit?

Have the very people entrusted with spiritual leadership been using God’s name to write their own checks?

In California, a former assistant pastor named Curtis Frank Lemons was sentenced to prison for stealing $200,000 from his church — while the founding pastor lay dying.

He wrote himself a cashier’s check from the church account.
He laundered the money.
He betrayed the trust of the flock — at the moment they were most vulnerable.

Yes, he accepted responsibility.
But how many more have stolen, and never confessed?

We’re not just talking about stolen money — but stolen trust.
Stolen hope.
Stolen truth.

And Jesus doesn’t take that lightly.

“Jesus entered the temple courts and drove out all who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers… ‘My house will be called a house of prayer,’ but you are making it a den of thieves.”
(Matthew 21:12–13)

The only time Jesus got violent… was with religious people using money to corrupt worship.

Today, it’s not just tables that need flipping.
It’s platforms.
It’s TV empires built on manipulation.
It’s networks of preachers who smile while making promises they can’t deliver.

Do we need a public apology from every Western preacher who ever used Malachi 3 out of context?
Every TV evangelist who promised miracles in exchange for money?
Every “seed faith” peddler who forgot to mention that Jesus already paid the full price?

Until the thief is dealt with, we will keep losing battles we should be winning.

Because assistance from heaven does not come through religious fraud.

It comes through faith in the blood of Jesus.

If all the people who were once against you suddenly turned to help you — that would be prosperity.

But maybe what’s holding us back is not just spiritual warfare.
Maybe it’s not the devil.
Maybe it’s a thief in the temple.

And maybe, just maybe…
God is waiting for someone to stand up like Joshua, look the camp in the eye, and say:

“Something is wrong — and we will not move forward until we deal with it.”

Chapter 6
The Judas Foundation

It was Jesus who made the decision.

He knew what Judas would do.
He knew what was hidden in his heart.
Yet He still put Judas in charge of the money bag.

“He was a thief; as keeper of the money bag, he used to help himself to what was put into it.”
(John 12:6)

Jesus wasn’t ignorant.
He was testing.
Not testing Himself — but testing Judas.

And maybe, just maybe, He’s been doing the same with us.

The Judas spirit is alive and well in the Church.

Judas wasn’t greedy all at once.
It started slowly — a few coins here, a secret deal there.
But when Mary poured perfume on Jesus’ feet, Judas finally snapped.

“Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor?” (John 12:5)

He made it sound righteous.
He made it sound generous.

But it was a cover.
A cloak of false virtue hiding a self-serving agenda.

And the same cloak has been worn in pulpits across the world.

Modern preachers talk about the poor.
They talk about the mission.
They talk about “spreading the gospel.”

But like Judas, they take from the bag.

In Australia, a 42-page whistleblower report exposed how Hillsong Church charged Compassion International $1 million a year just for the right to promote child sponsorship at their events.

Not out of love.
Not out of mission.
But for profit.

A Christian charity, with a reputation for integrity, was treated like a brand sponsor.

The same Jesus who flipped tables in the temple is still watching.
Still grieving.
Still calling for repentance.

The deal was cloaked in noble language: child sponsorship, strategic alliance, global mission.

But make no mistake — Judas used the same script.

He said it was “for the poor,” while he lined his pockets.

It was never about the poor.
It was about the profit.

And what happened to Judas?

He never apologized.
He never turned around.
He destroyed himself.

“Judas threw the money into the temple and left. Then he went away and hanged himself.”
(Matthew 27:5)

That is what unrepented deception does.
It doesn’t just harm others — it becomes self-destructive.

What if the modern church is walking the same path?

Lavish honorariums.
Private jets.
Paid vacations disguised as “mission trips.”
Secret deals hidden in “ministry partnerships.”
Money laundering. Sexual cover-ups. Public lawsuits.

And still — no apology.

Still, the same system remains in place:
Use the name of Jesus…
Use the face of the poor…
Charge for access…
And call it “kingdom business.”

But Jesus is not mocked.

“You cannot serve both God and money.” (Matthew 6:24)

He put Judas in charge of the money to see what he would do.

And perhaps Jesus has allowed the modern church access to wealth, platforms, and influence — not to bless them, but to test them.

Now the test results are in.
And we are seeing the fruit.

Not every preacher is Judas.
But the system has been infiltrated by the Judas model:
One who walks with Jesus publicly, but betrays Him privately — for thirty pieces of silver.

So now we must ask:
Is our foundation built on Judas… or Jesus?

Because Judas carried the bag — but Jesus carried the cross.
Judas served himself — but Jesus served the world.
Judas traded the blood — but Jesus shed the blood.

It is the blood of Jesus, not the schemes of man, that brings salvation and blessing.

“You were not redeemed with perishable things like silver or gold…but with the precious blood of Christ.”
(1 Peter 1:18–19)

We don’t need a new campaign.
We need a new foundation.
One that doesn’t require bribes, partnerships, or polished performances.

We need to return to the blood-soaked ground of Calvary.

There is still prosperity.
There is still provision.
But only when it flows from the Lamb who was slain, not the preacher who is paid.

Let the Judas churches fall.
Let the Jesus Church rise.

Chapter 7
The Blood Over the Dragon

There was a moment before the betrayal, so small it’s easy to miss.
A whisper in the shadows.
A decision made in secret.

“Then Satan entered into Judas…”
(Luke 22:3)

He wasn’t possessed at birth.
He didn’t begin with evil.
He walked with Jesus, saw miracles, heard truth.
But still — Satan entered him.

And now we ask:
Has the devil entered the modern Church?
Not with horns and smoke.
But with ideas.

Whispers.
Principles.
Twisted truth wrapped in scripture.

The same serpent that entered the Garden entered the upper room — and now he’s walked right through the back door of our sanctuaries.

He came with a teaching.
Not “worship Satan,” but “sow and reap.”
Not “serve the world,” but “invest in your miracle.”

It sounded scriptural.
It looked biblical.
But it dethroned the blood of Jesus.

“Give, and it shall be given unto you.”
Yes, Jesus said it.

But He never said, “Give money to preachers and I will make you rich.”
That came later — from another mouth.

And we swallowed it whole.

The church has been preaching “sow and reap” as if it’s the new gospel, building altars to a principle while abandoning the Person.

But principles don’t bleed.

Principles don’t hang on a cross.

Principles don’t rise from the dead.

We’ve built a golden calf from a law meant for harvests and called it “faith.”

But now the cracks are showing.

Testimonies of sowing and reaping are getting quieter.
The tithers still can’t pay rent.
The “offering” givers are still waiting for their promised breakthrough.
The pastors keep telling them it’s coming, but they know — it’s not.

Why?
Because you cannot overcome the devil by sowing seeds.

“They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony…”
(Revelation 12:11)

This is not a war you win with money.
This is a war you win with the blood.

Satan didn’t tremble when Judas held the bag.
He trembled when Jesus poured out His life.

The blood defeats the dragon.

Not your giving.
Not your tithe record.
Not your generous sowing.

Only the testimony of blood.

We have to stop testifying that “sowing works.”
We must start testifying that the blood has already worked.

“Now have come the salvation and the power
and the kingdom of our God,
and the authority of his Messiah.
For the accuser of our brothers and sisters…
has been hurled down.” (Revelation 12:10)

The dragon is enraged.
Because he knows his time is short.

So he’s turned his attention to the Church.
To those “who keep God’s commands and hold fast their testimony about Jesus.”
Not their testimony about sowing.
Not their testimony about success.
But their testimony about Jesus.

This is the moment we must return to the foundation.

Turn away from the lie that sowing money guarantees your miracle.
Turn back to the truth that Jesus IS the miracle.

The dragon was defeated in heaven.
He’s been cast to earth.
But the blood still speaks.

And when the Church lifts its voice,
not to boast about seed,
but to testify of the Lamb—
the dragon flees.

So today, we prophesy:

“You will not be rescued from your financial empty way of life with tithes and offerings.”
“You will be rescued by the blood of Jesus.”
“Because poverty is a curse—and the blood of Jesus broke every curse.”

The Church doesn’t need another campaign.
It needs a cleansing.
The devil was invited through sowing-based salvation.
He must be cast out by blood-based truth.

Let us rise.
Let us overcome.
Let us testify of the blood
And let the dragon be defeated once more.

Chapter 8
The Thief in the Temple

How do you spot the thief?

Jesus told us plainly:

“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy…” (John 10:10)

He wasn’t just speaking of the Devil—He was warning us about imposters in the flock.
Not every shepherd is true.
Not every church is holy.
Not every voice speaking over the offering plate belongs to God.

There is a sound in many sanctuaries that ought to make us tremble.
It is not the sound of praise—it is the sound of plunder.

“It’s time for the tithes and offerings,” they say,
and the people reach for their wallets
believing they are purchasing favor from God.

But Jesus never taught the tithe to His Church.

Search the red letters.
Search Acts, the epistles, the upper room.
You will not find one command to tithe under grace.
You will find giving, yes—joyful, voluntary, Spirit-led giving.
But not one call to tithe.

And yet, in today’s church:

  • Websites flaunt the tithe like a badge of honor.
  • Preachers say it is a hedge of protection.
  • Some even say, “If you don’t tithe, you’re cursed.”
    That is not Christianity.
    That is spiritual extortion.

That is theft.

So how do you spot the thief?

  • He preaches Malachi louder than he preaches Messiah.
  • He promises blessing for payment when the blood already paid it all.
  • He leads people back to Mount Sinai when Christ brought us to Mount Zion.

And yes—he collects a salary doing it.

Even now, some will say, “That’s harsh.”
But truth is not soft when the flock is being robbed.

Let’s talk plainly.

Creflo Dollar—one of the most visible prosperity preachers in America—stood on his stage in June 2022 and said something shocking:

“The teachings I’ve shared in times past on the subject of tithing were not correct.”

He admitted it.
He confessed to preaching error for years.
He called it “The Great Misunderstanding.”
He told his congregation to “throw away every book, every tape, every video” he ever made on tithing—unless it aligned with the grace of Christ.

And yet—he refused to apologize.

“I won’t apologize,” he said,
“’cause if it wasn’t for me going down that route, I would have never ended up where I am right now.”

Where is that, exactly?

Owning two private jets.
Owning two multimillion-dollar homes.
Owning offshore companies in the Bahamas through a shell corporation called World Heir. (Yes—World Heir.)

Preaching a new message, but keeping the money from the old one.
Correcting the doctrine, but not correcting the damage.

That’s not repentance.
That’s rebranding.

True humility would have looked different.

  • It would have included financial transparency.
  • It would have included restitution.
  • It would have said: “We deceived the people. Now we will restore them.”

Instead, the man who taught millions to “sow for a harvest” is now harvesting applause for his “courage,” while still living off the seeds he falsely gathered.

Church, wake up.

What would Martin Luther say if he stood in a megachurch today?
Would he sit quietly during the tithes and offerings segment?

No. He would rise.
He would take his hammer again.
He would nail to the front doors of these religious empires:

“The blood of Jesus Christ, not money, brought your blessing!”

Tithing did not open the windows of heaven.
The torn veil did.
The sacrifice did.
The blood did.

Let’s be clear:

  • Every church that still teaches tithing as law for the New Covenant is a thief.
  • Every preacher who promises blessings to the tither is stealing glory from the cross.
  • Every website that teaches tithing without repentance needs to come under divine correction.

This is not a minor issue—it is a theological cancer.

Jesus overturned tables for less than this.

If the Church wants revival, it must begin with repentance, not just for private sins—but for public doctrines that have robbed the poor, burdened the faithful, and shamed the cross.

Let a campaign arise.

Let someone of boldness and influence say:

“This ends here.”

Let churches publish their repentance.
Let pastors confess in front of their congregations.
Let giving be untangled from manipulation.
Let faith be restored to the gospel of grace.

Because the only true blessing flows from Calvary, not your bank account.
And the Church must stop saying,

“You’re blessed if you tithe,”
and start proclaiming,
“You’re blessed because He died.”

You want to spot the thief?

Watch what they say before the offering.
Watch how they talk about the blessing.
Watch whether their gospel leads you to Jesus—or to an ATM.

Because the true Shepherd laid down His life for the sheep.

The thief built a mansion with their wool.

Chapter 9
The Day the Thief Pays Back

For four hundred and thirty years, the Hebrews were not just enslaved—they were robbed.
Their freedom was stolen.
Their honor was stolen.
Their wages were stolen.
Generation after generation, the enemy said, “Work for me,” but never said, “Here’s your reward.”

Egypt stole 430 years of life—and thought God would never notice.
But Heaven keeps record.
And the Judge never forgets.

Then, suddenly, the Lord said:

“Tell every family to take a lamb. Without blemish. Without defect.
Slaughter it. Paint the doorway in blood.”

Not silver.
Not gold.
Not grain.

Blood.

And when the destroyer passed over the land, it looked for one thing:
Not tithes, not offerings—just blood.

“When I see the blood, I will pass over you. No destructive plague will touch you…” (Exodus 12:13)

The blood protected them.
The blood exempted them.
The blood stopped judgment from entering their homes.

And once the judgment fell—once Egypt wept and Pharaoh begged—the Lord said one more thing:

“Tell the Israelites to plunder their neighbors.” (Exodus 12:35–36)

The same hands that held the whip now handed over wealth.
The same mouths that had cursed them now opened to bless.
Unpaid wages were returned.
Disgrace was repaid with honor.
Funds for the future flowed into their hands.

Not because they tithed.
But because they were covered in blood.

This is a picture of our time.

The Church has been robbed.
Not by Egypt—but by pulpits.

Pastors who preach tithing as law—they are the thief.

They took our eyes off the Lamb.
They bound our wallets with fear.
They promised us God’s favor in exchange for money—favor already bought by the cross.

Now Heaven is stirring.

The Judge is at the door.
And the question is:

“Have you put the blood on your house?”

Not religion.
Not rituals.
The blood of Jesus—the spotless Lamb.

And here comes the next part:
The thief must pay.

“If the thief is caught, he must pay back sevenfold, even if it costs him all the wealth of his house.” (Proverbs 6:31)

So long as the thief hides, nothing is returned.
But when he is caught—when the lie is exposedjustice awakens.

And now, many are catching him.

  • The man who says tithing is required? That’s the thief.
  • The church that links blessing to money? That’s the thief.
  • The doctrine that replaces the cross with coins? That’s the thief.

Expose him—but not with your fists.
Not with a protest.
Not with arguments or Facebook debates.

Expose him in your heart.

Say quietly:

“I see the lie now. I reject it. I forgive the preacher.
But I will never again give to get. I will give because I am free.”

You don’t knock on his door.
You knock on Heaven’s.

You stand before the courtroom of God and say:

“I plead the blood. I am not here to beg—I am here to receive.
Justice is due. Restitution is written. I believe the thief is caught.
And I believe in the sevenfold return.”

This is not revenge. This is restoration.

And it’s coming.

You will see the same people who made life harder begin to help you.
You will watch the system that drained you now fund you.
You will see wealth return to your hands—pressed down, shaken together, and running over.

Not by manipulation.
Not by giving to get.
But by trusting the blood.

The cross paid it all.
But Heaven still remembers what was stolen from you.
And Heaven is not silent.

So release your faith:

  • The blood of Jesus protects me from the thief.
  • The courtroom of God hears my case.
  • My stolen years, stolen peace, and stolen provision are being returned—seven times over.
  • I forgive all. I resent none. But I still expect justice to be done—and to be seen.

And then say boldly:

“Here comes my stolen money…times seven.”

The Lamb has spoken.
The blood has been applied.
The thief has been caught.

Now, watch the windows of justice open.

Chapter 10

Here Jesus is rejecting the tither.

Luke 18

To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everyone else, Jesus told this parable: 

“Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. 

The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed:

‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. 

I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.’

“But the tax collector stood at a distance.

He would not even look up to heaven,

but beat his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on me, a sinner.’

“I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God.

For all those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.”


When Justice Arrives

What does it look like when Heaven rules in your favor?

Does justice fall like lightning?
Does the enemy stumble and collapse?

Yes.
But sometimes it is quieter than we imagined.
It comes not with noise, but with a shift.

The wind that was in your face…
Now fills your sails.

The resistance that tried to stop you…
Now builds your momentum.

The very king who once opposed the work of God…
Now writes letters, funds the mission, and commands the neighbors to help.

“The king should know… we are rebuilding the temple…” (Ezra 5:8)
“Then the king issued a decree: Leave them alone. Do not interfere.” (Ezra 6:6)
“Moreover, the expenses are to be fully paid out of the royal treasury…” (Ezra 6:8)

That is justice.
That is restitution.
That is the hand of the Lord.

And when they heard the decree of the king, the people of God rejoiced with joy that could not be measured.
Ezra says:

“They celebrated the dedication of this house of God with joy.”
“And the prophets of the Lord continued to encourage them.” (Ezra 6:16, 14)

Here is what justice looks like:

  • Joy where there was once sorrow.
  • Encouragement instead of fear.
  • Provision flowing from places that once said no.

That’s what’s about to happen for you.

Where the doors were shut, they will now be opened.
Where systems were designed to exhaust you, they will now empower you.
Where kings once said stop, they will now say go—and here’s the money to go with you.

That’s the justice of God.

And now Jesus tells us a story.

Two men walked into the temple.
One was a tither.
The other was a sinner.

The tither prayed proudly:

“I fast. I tithe. I’m not like these other people.”

But Jesus said:

“Only the sinner went home justified.” (Luke 18:14)

Why?

Because the blood speaks mercy, but the tithe speaks pride.
Because the tax collector trusted in God’s compassion, but the Pharisee trusted in his giving.

And in the courts of Heaven, only humility is heard.

This is why justice has been delayed for some—because they thought giving would earn them favor.
But favor does not flow through giving.
It flows through the cross.

We are not justified by how much we give.
We are justified by whom we trust.

That’s why Jesus said:

“Those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.”

And when justice comes, it will exalt the humble.

  • Your faithfulness will be remembered.
  • Your tears will be weighed.
  • Your prayers will be heard.
  • Your lost wages will be paid—sevenfold.

Expect it.

Expect headwinds to become tailwinds.
Expect hearts to soften where they were hard.
Expect policies, systems, supervisors, bank accounts, and leadership decisions to suddenly shift in your favor.

Don’t look for drama—look for direction.
Don’t look for a fight—look for the finger of God quietly writing a new decree.

Like in Ezra’s day.

Like in Jesus’ parable.

Like today.

And when it happens—when your joy returns, when the money comes back, when the same people who cursed you now assist you—don’t forget what made it all possible:

The blood of the Lamb.
Not your giving.
Not your fasting.
Not your works.

Just the blood.

And the prophets will still be needed.

They will still be there, encouraging the people, pointing them away from law and into grace, reminding them that the justice of God flows from the cross—and not from the collection plate.

So open your hands.
Open your heart.
Let justice flow like a river.

And say it out loud if you dare:

“The tide has turned. The thief has been caught.
The blood has spoken. My justice is here.”

And the prophets say:
Amen.

Chapter 11

Summary of Chapters 1–10

This book has traced a prophetic journey, exposing one of the most persistent and overlooked deceptions in the modern Western church: the misuse of tithing. Chapter by chapter, we have peeled back the layers of religious manipulation, self-interest, and deeply ingrained tradition to reveal a truth that has long been hidden in plain sight.

In Chapter 1, we began by asking a bold question: Can a Christian expose the thief? We challenged the silence and fear that surround confronting financial manipulation in the church, declaring that God is awakening His people to injustice.

Chapter 2 laid the foundation by calling believers back to the authority of Scripture—not traditions or sermons—urging us to check every doctrine against the Word. The Bereans tested Paul, and we must test our pastors.

Chapter 3 examined the misuse of Malachi 3, exposing how preachers manipulate this Old Testament passage to extract money by fear. The curse in that chapter was not written to New Covenant believers covered by the blood of Jesus.

In Chapter 4, we uncovered how the early church operated—not by the law of tithing but by Spirit-led generosity and shared abundance. We contrasted this freedom with modern systems that replicate religious control.

Chapter 5 asked a hard question: Is the church today like the camp of Joshua with a hidden thief? The blessings don’t flow because deception remains. We highlighted a real-life example of theft by a pastor, connecting ancient Scripture with modern exposure.

In Chapter 6, we looked at Judas—put in charge of the money. Like some modern leaders, he claimed to care for the poor but helped himself instead. Judas’ secrecy and self-destruction mirror the hidden financial abuse in the modern church.

Chapter 7 showed how Satan entered Judas, and asked: Has the Devil entered the church through false teaching on sowing and reaping? Revelation 12 reminds us that we overcome not by giving money, but by the blood of the Lamb and our testimony.

Chapter 8 taught how to spot the thief. Any church promoting tithing as a biblical obligation under the New Covenant is participating in theft. We revisited the story of Creflo Dollar, who admitted error but failed to offer restitution—highlighting how exposure without repentance still leaves damage.

Chapter 9 paralleled the Exodus story. Just as Egypt was judged after 430 years of theft, and the Israelites received restitution when the blood was applied, we too are called to trust in the blood of Jesus and expect justice. When the thief is caught, Proverbs says he must repay sevenfold.

And finally, in Chapter 10, we envisioned what that justice might look like. Like in Ezra, where resistance turned into assistance, and tailwinds replaced headwinds, we are entering a season of restoration. Jesus rebuked the tithing Pharisee and exalted the humble tax collector. So must we shift from performance to grace.

Now we stand at the door of justice—not knocking on people’s homes, but heaven’s courtroom—where blood speaks louder than money and mercy overrules manipulation. The thief has been seen. The people are waking up. And justice is coming.

Chapter 12

The Thief Is Exposed

Now Comes Justice

The thief has been exposed.

No longer hidden in robes, pulpits, or polished websites. No longer protected by tradition, silence, or fear. The mask has slipped. The illusion has shattered. And what we see now is clear: wherever pastors have taught that New Covenant believers must tithe to be blessed, they have preached a lie. Wherever churches have linked financial favor with giving 10%, they have robbed God’s people of grace. But now the thief is caught. And the Word of God says that when the thief is caught, he must repay sevenfold (Proverbs 6:31).

Justice is not just possible—it is promised.

This is the hour when the captives begin to dream again. The same God who judged Egypt after 430 years of bondage is moving again. And just like then, the blood of a lamb marks the difference between judgment and deliverance. In Moses’ day, God told the Israelites to place the blood of a lamb on their doorposts so the angel of death would pass over them. That night marked the beginning of justice. The next day, the wealth of the Egyptians was handed over.

But we have something even greater. The blood of Jesus is not on our doors—it is sprinkled on our hearts. His blood has redeemed us—not with silver or gold, but “with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect” (1 Peter 1:18–19). His blood silences the accuser, cancels every curse, and opens the gates to justice.

Now is the time to refresh this truth. Put that Scripture deep in your heart and mind. Memorize it. Meditate on it. Declare it. The blood speaks better things than tithes, offerings, or formulas. It speaks mercy, redemption, and divine repayment.

God is not unjust. He has seen the years of manipulation. He has heard the cries of those who gave out of fear, guilt, or obligation. He has recorded the widow’s two coins, the mother’s quiet tears, the father’s faithful service. And now—He repays.

Expect sevenfold.

Expect doors that were closed to swing wide. Expect help from those who once resisted you. Expect strength where there was weakness, favor where there was rejection, and restoration where there was theft. This isn’t about bitterness or revenge—it’s about righteous justice from a holy God.

You do not have to go knocking on doors. You only need to knock on the door of heaven’s courtroom with faith. Stand in the finished work of Christ, stand in the power of the blood, and stand in your divine right to expect restoration.

The thief is exposed.
The blood is enough.
And the justice of heaven is on the move.

Final Chapter

A Word from the Author

Dear reader,

Thank you for walking this journey with me. From the first page to the last, your time, attention, and hunger for truth have honored the message—and I believe heaven has taken notice.

This book was not planned long in advance. Just last week, a scripture dropped into my heart like a spark:
“For you know that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you were redeemed… but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect.” —1 Peter 1:18–19

That verse lit a fire. It opened my eyes again to the surpassing value of the blood of Jesus—and to how many believers have unknowingly traded that blood for a principle. That’s when I knew: it was time to expose the thief.

When Joshua exposed the thief in his camp, the tide of battle turned. Victory returned. The people began to win again. And I believe it’s time for all Christians to start winning again—not by tithing formulas, not by manipulation, not by the law of sowing and reaping used as a spiritual bribe—but by simple, raw, living faith in the blood of the Lamb.

I look forward to hearing your testimonies—of freedom, of favor, of provision coming back into your life not because of your money, but because of His mercy. When the blood of Jesus becomes our only boast, the courtroom of heaven moves on our behalf. And justice comes.

So go forward now, not with pressure or guilt, but with boldness and joy. The thief has been exposed. The blood is enough. And the victory is yours.

With faith for your future,

Tony Egar

Brisbane, Australia

www.tonyegar.com

Financial Help for Medical Emergencies

THE AFFLICTION WILL NOT HAVE THE LAST WORD

Heaven can see the weight that presses on you like a midnight fog. You did not choose the storm, but you find yourself walking through it—with bills in your hand, fear in your belly, and tears that run like rivers through sleepless nights. You have been told that healing is a long road, but no one told you the road would be paved with invoices, co-pays, and out-of-pocket despair.

But I hear the Lord saying: “I am the Lord your Healer, not only of your body, but also of your circumstance. I see the ledger and I see your heart. I am the God who pays debts both spiritual and physical. You shall not drown in this Red Sea of medical debt—I am parting it.”

The diagnosis may feel like a prison sentence. Your child’s condition may whisper fear into your parenting. Mental battles may cry out in the night for peace. And the dentist may seem like a gatekeeper to your last drop of savings. But heaven has a storehouse, and it has your name written on its gates.

The enemy wants you to regret ever going to the doctor. He wants you to feel like you failed. But I tell you, there is no shame in needing help. There is no shame in your humanity. Jesus Himself bore our sickness and our grief. You are not alone in this valley, for He walks with you, and His rod and staff will comfort you.

Let this truth echo in your bones: “You will arise and have mercy on Zion; the time to favor her, yes, the set time, has come” (Psalm 102:13). You are not too late for a miracle. You have not missed the window of provision. The insurance may have denied it, but God has already approved it.

And I prophesy now: unexpected aid is on its way. Favor with a hospital. Compassion in the heart of a decision-maker. Provision from a source you didn’t even consider. Your name is being spoken in rooms where financial mercy flows. You will not be buried beneath this burden—you will testify!


STRENGTH FOR THE WEARY AND WISDOM FOR THE FIGHT

Precious soul, this journey has not only attacked your wallet, but your hope. You’ve asked, “Will this ever end? Is there any part of me that isn’t breaking?” You’re exhausted—not just physically, but spiritually tired from fighting a war with a fork and a toothpick.

But lift your eyes now, for the Lord your Defender is rising over your house like the morning sun. What was meant to bankrupt you—body, mind, and savings—is now becoming a platform for supernatural breakthrough. The chronic condition will not chronically drain your faith. The endless appointments will not delay your destiny.

For the Lord declares: “I am releasing the blueprints for living above the weight of crisis. I am giving you wisdom that the world cannot give—strategy from heaven, even in the smallest decisions.”

You will find rest where you least expect it. Joy in a waiting room. Laughter in the middle of a long prescription list. And community will surround you, for I am not only your Provider but your Connector. You are not an island. I am sending people who know how to lift you, bless you, and even help pay your bills.

To the one who must modify their home because of new limitations—I say this: You are not less than. You are not forgotten. I am enlarging your tent, not shrinking your worth. Every ramp, every railing, every device—these will be signs of My care for you, not your brokenness. Do not see it as defeat—see it as the doorway I have designed so you may go forward in strength.

And I declare Isaiah 58:8 over you: “Then your light shall break forth like the morning, your healing shall spring forth speedily.” Yes, even now. God is not delayed. You have not missed the miracle. It is already in motion.

So rise up, even if you must rise slowly. Lift your hands, even if they tremble. You are not surviving—you are overcoming. You are being reintroduced to victory, and you will be able to say with all confidence: “The Lord met me in the ER, in the ICU, in the financial counselor’s office—and He did not fail me.”

A Word for the Financially Stressed

The Divine Pattern of Power and Purpose

Thus says the Spirit: “You were never meant to observe My power from a distance—you were called to walk in it.” The words of Jesus echo through eternity: “Whoever believes in Me will do the works I do, and greater works than these will he do” (John 14:12). You are not powerless. You are not an exception. You are the continuation of His ministry on Earth.

Jesus came as God, but He walked as a man filled with the Spirit to show you what’s possible for one fully surrendered. His miracles weren’t to dazzle—they were to demonstrate. He laid down divine privilege so that, through the Holy Spirit, you could pick up divine authority.

You are no longer a servant of the Law, condemned by sin. You are now a child of grace, washed, clean, and filled with resurrection life. The old system covered sin; the new one removes it entirely. You don’t just get a second chance—you get a new nature. You are the righteousness of God in Christ.

You are not waiting to die to receive life—you already have it. Jesus said, “Whoever believes in Me will never die” (John 11:26). That’s not poetry—it’s a reality. The same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead now quickens your mortal body. Even your bones carry promise.

Stop using your past as a blueprint for your future. The pain you’ve endured is not your inheritance. The failures you’ve survived are not your identity. The enemy wants you to say, “This is just how life goes.” But Heaven is declaring, “This is not how your story ends.”

Rise into the greater works. Rise into the fullness of Christ. Rise into the boldness of the Spirit. The world doesn’t need more spectators—it needs a people who know who they are. And you, beloved, were born for this hour.


Jubilee Is Not a Date—It’s a Person

Jesus is your Jubilee. Not a once-in-50-years celebration, but an eternal declaration. When He stood in the synagogue and said, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me… to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor,” He was revealing Himself as the very embodiment of restoration.

In Him, debts are canceled, prisoners are released, and captives come home. You’re not waiting for a shift in economy—you’re standing in the middle of God’s promise. Restoration isn’t just something you hope for; it’s someone you walk with.

You’ve lost time? He can redeem it. You’ve lost years to fear or addiction? He can restore them. You’ve lost relationships, joy, strength? He is the God who brings back better than before. The world may give compensation, but God gives multiplication.

You’re not in bondage to the past. You’re not a victim of your failures. You’re not defined by what didn’t happen. Jesus, your Jubilee, has stepped in. And when He enters, He restores what no man could ever replace.

Let the lie be broken that says, “Maybe it’s too late for me.” No—it’s not. You’re not expired. You’re not disqualified. You’re not behind schedule. You are exactly where the Lord can lift you into something new. He wastes nothing. He uses everything.

You carry beauty for ashes. You carry praise for heaviness. You carry hope for mourning. The world may see broken pieces—but God sees a vessel ready for glory.

So lift up your eyes. Your Redeemer lives. And He’s not watching from afar—He’s walking with you. This is not the season of surviving. This is the season of returning, rebuilding, and rejoicing.


A Prophetic Word for the Financially Pressed

To those pressed by hardship, weighed down by unpaid bills, empty fridges, and endless worry—hear this: God sees. God knows. God provides.

The Lord is not distant from your struggle. He walked this earth without a home. He multiplied loaves when there was no food. He provided coin from a fish when there was no silver. He understands lack—but He also commands abundance.

You are not forgotten. You are not forsaken. You are not alone. What you’re facing is not a sign of God’s absence—it’s a setup for His provision.

This is not the end. This is the stretching of your faith and the beginning of overflow. The pressure is real, but the promise is greater. God is not asking you to manufacture a breakthrough—He is asking you to trust Him for one.

Stop repeating the language of despair. Don’t say, “I’ll never get out.” Start declaring, “I serve a God of more than enough.” Poverty is not your portion. Shame is not your destiny. You were created to carry light, not burdens.

Let go of the idea that you have to earn God’s help. He gives because He’s good, not because you’ve been perfect. You don’t have to buy His attention—you already have it. He knows every tear, every fear, every moment you almost gave up.

This is the time to speak life over your finances, over your mind, over your future. Say it now: “I am not finished—I am flourishing. I will not sink—I will rise. I will not beg—I will bless.”

God is releasing ideas, opportunities, and favor. Expect solutions from unexpected places. Expect doors to open, bills to be paid, and peace to replace panic.

You will come through this—not barely, but boldly. And when you do, you’ll testify:
“God did not just carry me through—He lifted me up and made me whole.”

Amen.

Testimony: Mortgage Paid Off Supernaturally

Story: A woman named Betty King, a pastor in London, was facing intense financial pressure.
Not knowing where her provision would come from.
Shortly after, someone who had attended her meeting felt led by God to pay off her entire mortgage, completely unexpected and without strings attached.
This miracle launched a season of expanded ministry and renewed faith.

Source / URL:
https://www.charismamag.com/story/financial-miracle-mortgage-paid-off/

Emptiness leads to spiritual awakening

The prophetic message of a divinely instilled emptiness leading to spiritual awakening finds a tangible reflection in recent developments within the United Kingdom. In the past six months, a notable resurgence in religious engagement, particularly among the youth, has been observed—a phenomenon described as the “Quiet Revival.

According to a Bible Society report, church attendance among 18- to 24-year-olds in England and Wales has seen a significant increase, rising from 4% in 2018 to 16% in 2024. This surge is especially pronounced among young men, whose attendance grew from 4% to 21% over the same period . This trend suggests a collective response to an inner void, aligning with the prophetic notion that God created humanity with an inherent emptiness to draw individuals toward Him.

Further supporting this shift, the Church of England has announced a record £1.6 billion ($2.17 billion) spending plan for 2026–2028 to enhance clergy stipends and support financially struggling parishes. This decision follows a notable increase in church attendance in the UK, particularly among young men post-COVID, reversing long-standing trends of declining Christian participation in Western nations.

This revival is not confined to the UK. In the United States, similar patterns emerge. Reports indicate that Generation Z, particularly young men, are increasingly participating in religious activities, reversing decades of declining religious affiliation . Analysts suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic, which disproportionately affected Gen Z, may have catalyzed this renewed interest in religion as young people seek community and connection.

A Divine ache. The whole world groans.

These developments underscore the prophetic insight that spiritual emptiness is not a flaw but a divine design, prompting individuals to seek fulfillment through a relationship with God. The observed resurgence in faith among the youth serves as a testament to this truth, highlighting a global awakening that aligns with the prophetic message.

The whole world groans with a thirst it cannot name. A woman rises before dawn in Tokyo, a farmer prays under his breath in Kenya, a young man stares blankly at his phone in Los Angeles—all pierced by the same invisible longing. It is not cultural. It is not psychological. It is the echo of eternity in the soul. Romans 8:20 declares, “For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of Him who hath subjected the same in hope.” God Himself baked this emptiness into our design—not as a punishment, but as a holy invitation.

You were born with a divine ache that cannot be satisfied by success, sex, sensation, or even the solace of religion. It is Christ alone who satisfies. Yet how many wander, reaching for one counterfeit after another? Like Jeff and the fly—controlling creation for a moment, tasting power that didn’t come from heaven—we’ve flirted with forces beyond our understanding, mistaking Beelzebub’s tricks for divine favor. But that season is ending.

The Lord calls forth witnesses now. Not proud voices, but humble vessels through whom torrents of living water may flow. He said in Acts 1:8, “You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you; and you shall be witnesses to Me.” Not performers. Not manipulators. Witnesses. Those who bear the image of the Invisible One through purity, prayer, and surrender.

This generation is not lacking in potential; it is starving for purpose. The Church must refuse the stage and return to the altar. We are not entertainers—we are intercessors. Prayer is our battlefield. Before we bind spirits in cities, we must bind the pride within ourselves. Before we prophesy to nations, we must kneel in the secret place.

Even children are crying for reality. In a world where demonic worship parades as art, Christianity must no longer be a whisper—it must be a consuming fire. Yet we must give without boasting, preach without pleading for money, and serve without spotlight. The Lord told one of His servants, “Don’t insult Me by complaining about the wages.” He is Jehovah Jireh. He funds His mission, not through gimmicks, but through glory.

There is a storm coming—one that will test every shallow foundation. This short season will shake even the most confident. Many who’ve never known trial will find themselves drowning. And the surprising truth? Many will choose rebellion, not righteousness. Why? Because they never knew Him. They knew church. They knew religion. But they didn’t know Him.

So rise up, dry bones. Let the Spirit breathe upon you. The thirst is not your curse—it is your compass. Follow it to the well that never runs dry.


Powerless Religion and the Cry for Real Authority

The true issue of mankind is not location, not legislation, not education—it is the unyielding rebellion of the heart. A better environment won’t save us. A cleaner planet won’t redeem us. We need transformation from the inside out, and only the Spirit of God can perform that surgery.

The heart of the matter is the matter of the heart.

Jesus said it plainly in John 3:17–18: He did not come to condemn but to save. Yet condemnation already rests upon those who refuse to believe. It is not merely the sin of immorality or idolatry that damns men—it is the rejection of Christ. The Spirit convicts of sin because they believe not on Him.

Even now, the mystery of lawlessness works. The beast system rises, clothed in commerce and cloaked in ideology. Revelation 17 speaks clearly: the whore rides the beast, drunk with the blood of saints, but her judgment is sure. God has set it in their hearts to fulfill His will—even their evil serves His purposes until the words of God are fulfilled. Babylon will fall.

Yet the Church is not called to flee in fear—we are called to rule in love. Every believer, no matter how small their platform, has been given a sphere of influence. You are a leader. You set the tone. But remember: those who rule must first be ruled. We must be under His authority to walk in true authority.

Revival is not coming through angry arguments or doctrinal debates, but through surrendered lives. Submission is not weakness. It is strength under command. Like the wife who prayed, “Even if we lose everything, we have each other—and You.” That is submission. That is power. That is beauty.

We must receive Him afresh. Not in shallow emotionalism, but in spirit and truth. John 1:12 says, “But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God.” He knocks—but we must open. We open through prayer. Not elaborate ritual—just honest, trembling prayer that says, “Lord, I need You.”

Too long have we equated spirituality with busyness. Driving and fighting road rage while trying to pray—we’ve filled our minds with noise and lost the still small voice. The Spirit will not shout over our distractions. He waits in silence. We must make room.

There’s a reason Enoch was taken. He walked with God—not behind, not ahead, but with. This is our call. Not to impress, but to walk. Not to control, but to commune.

Even now, a remnant rises—emptied of ambition, devoid of gimmicks, dead to performance. They are joyful. They are hidden. They are dangerous to the kingdom of darkness. These are the ones God uses. And you, yes you, are being summoned to join them.

Let the emptiness drive you to the only One who can fill it. Let the fire purge, the Word cleanse, and the Spirit empower.

The kingdom is coming.

Are you ready?

Ministry Burnout: Putting Family First

The themes explored resonate profoundly with recent events highlighting the peril of prioritizing ministry over family. A notable instance involves Pastor Tullian Tchividjian, who resigned after admitting to an extramarital affair. This incident underscores the dangers of neglecting personal relationships amidst ministerial responsibilities. christiantoday.com.au

Furthermore, studies indicate that pastoral burnout is a growing concern, with many clergy experiencing emotional exhaustion and strained family dynamics. The pressure to fulfill ministerial duties often leads to the inadvertent sacrifice of personal well-being and familial harmony.

These contemporary issues affirm the prophetic call to reevaluate priorities, ensuring that the pursuit of spiritual leadership does not come at the expense of one’s own household. By heeding this wisdom, modern-day shepherds can foster both robust ministries and thriving families.

The Idol of Ministry

In the sacred pursuit of divine calling, a subtle deception often ensnares the devoted: the elevation of ministry above the very relationships it seeks to nurture. A shepherd, consumed by the fervor of ecclesiastical duties, may inadvertently forsake the pastoral care owed to his own household. The church, intended as a vessel for communal salvation, can become an idol when it supplants the foundational covenant of family.

This misalignment manifests when the spiritual leader, engrossed in sermons and sacraments, overlooks the silent pleas of a spouse teetering on the brink of despair. The assumption that increased scriptural engagement can remedy emotional turmoil neglects the profound need for empathetic presence and understanding. Such negligence can lead to emotional withdrawal, mental anguish, and the erosion of marital bonds.

The divine mandate calls for a balance where ministry does not eclipse the sanctity of family. The true measure of spiritual leadership lies not in the multitude of congregants but in the health and harmony of one’s own household. A shepherd must first tend to the flock within his home, ensuring that the love preached from the pulpit is practiced in the living room.

The Refining Fire of Suffering

Suffering, though often perceived as a curse, serves as a crucible for spiritual refinement. The trials that beset the faithful are not mere punishments but instruments of divine purpose, molding character and deepening reliance on the Creator. Acknowledging that healing may not always be granted, the believer is invited to trust in the sovereignty of God’s plan, finding peace in submission rather than in deliverance.

Historical accounts, such as Elijah’s pronouncement of drought and the tribulations depicted in Revelation, illustrate that divine intervention often involves hardship designed to awaken and purify. The faithful are called to endure, to commit their souls to the Creator amidst suffering, recognizing that such endurance is a testament to unwavering faith.

In personal affliction, the believer is encouraged to seek not only relief but also revelation—understanding that through trials, one may attain a deeper communion with the Divine. This perspective transforms suffering from a source of despair into a pathway to spiritual maturity and intimacy with God.

Building on this prophetic reflection, we see a critical message for our modern culture: the temptation to find identity and significance in the outward acts of ministry can be both alluring and destructive. The story of a pastor losing sight of his family’s needs underlines a broader pattern—our tendency to measure success by external accomplishments rather than the inward fruit of relationships and character.

This prophetic word is not just for clergy—it speaks to any believer who has been swept up in the busyness of good works while neglecting the call to love those closest to them. The Scriptures remind us: “Let love be without hypocrisy” (Romans 12:9). True ministry begins with love in action, not love in speech alone.

Moreover, the emphasis on the refining fire of suffering is a call to embrace hardship not as punishment but as an opportunity to trust God’s mysterious purposes. We live in an era where comfort is king and suffering is seen as something to be escaped at all costs. Yet the prophetic witness here calls us back to a deeper faith—a faith that can say, like Job, “Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him” (Job 13:15).

The recent headlines of pastors and spiritual leaders who have fallen because of neglect in their personal lives are a sobering reminder. This prophetic word urges us to turn our eyes inward, to examine not only our work for God but our walk with Him and our families. It is a clarion call to humility and repentance—a warning against the subtle idolatry of ministry itself.

In a world obsessed with platforms and public image, let this prophetic word remind us: the greatest platform is the altar of our own hearts, and the greatest work is the quiet faithfulness of loving our families and trusting God in the midst of life’s trials.

National Day of Prayer and Repentance

This prophetic word of travail, birthing, and breakthrough directly echoes the spiritual and moral turmoil seen in recent headlines. Take, for instance, the growing momentum around spiritual awakening and justice movements in the United States and beyond. In the aftermath of the global outcry for spiritual renewal following the National Day of Prayer and Repentance held in Washington, D.C. on May 2, 2025 (reported by The Christian Post), there is a tangible stirring—a sense that the Lord is indeed calling forth pioneers and watchmen in this season.

This prophetic word affirms that what we’re witnessing is not merely political or social—it is spiritual at its core. The call to “lean in” to the travail and to embrace the stirring aligns with the testimonies of thousands gathered in worship, prayer, and repentance, who sensed the weight of God’s glory and the urgency of the hour. The Lord is indeed raising up a new breed of believers who will not shrink back from battle, despite the fierce pushback and spiritual warfare they face. This is the hour of divine deployment, where God is healing old wounds and empowering His people to stand in the authority of His Word.

The prophetic word also parallels the global conversation around time and restoration. Just as it speaks of “redeeming time” and “expanding time,” world leaders are calling for a season of reconciliation and rebuilding after years of upheaval. It is a powerful confirmation that God is moving in ways seen and unseen, and that He alone is able to turn the tide of history according to His sovereign plan.
(Source: “National Day of Prayer Draws Multitudes to the National Mall,” The Christian Post, May 3, 2025.)

The Visions of Faith and Fire

Hear the word of the Lord, O people of God! In this hour of shaking and awakening, the Lord declares, “Have I not spoken that blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed?” For even as the doubter demands the evidence of sight, I say to you: faith is the currency of heaven, and it transcends the confines of the carnal mind. Was it not spoken, “Believe Me for the works’ sake, for the Father and I are one”? Let every mind be renewed and every spirit quickened, for the mysteries of the kingdom are revealed to those who choose to see with the eyes of the Spirit.

The Lord says, “I am moving in the places of travail and birthing. This stirring within you, this deep groaning you have sensed—it is My Spirit aligning you with My purposes. The shaking you see in the natural is but a faint shadow of the shaking within My people. For I am calling forth the pioneers, the intercessors, the watchmen on the walls. You have been in the crucible of affliction, but I am releasing a divine shift, a turning of the furnace, to bring forth gold refined by My fire.”

Do not be dismayed by the enemy’s taunts or the twisting of truth, for My Word is sharper than any two-edged sword. My judgments are manifest, and I will establish My throne in righteousness. Though the enemy has come with vise-grip pliers to steal and destroy, I am the Restorer of all that was stolen. You shall see the King of Glory come, and every nation shall bow before Him. Do not fear the earthquakes or the plagues of this hour, for I have appointed a time of reward for My faithful servants.

I say to you, My daughters, My sons: I am expanding time and redeeming what the locusts have eaten. In your faithfulness, you have stood; in your surrender, I am releasing the oil of My anointing upon you. The battle has been fierce, and the attacks have been intense, but know this: you are moving into a realm of victory. The mountain-moving movements of My Spirit are bigger than you can comprehend—bigger than the limitations of your own minds.

Therefore, rise up and see with eyes of faith! Just as the fire fell when Elijah prayed, I am sending fresh fire upon the altars of your hearts. It is time to move forward, to take ground with the assurance that I, the Lord of Hosts, am with you. Even as the King is coming, even as the trumpet sounds in the heavens, so too shall My glory be revealed in you and through you. For My name is the Light of the World, the Mighty Healer, the One who holds the keys of life and death. Stand firm, My beloved. The season of reward is at hand!


The Travail and Triumph of the Pioneers

People of God, hear this prophetic decree: there is a travail in the Spirit that must be embraced in this hour. The deep groaning you feel, the stirring that shakes you from your sleep—it is not in vain. The Lord says, “I am calling you to lean in, to press into My presence. For what is being birthed in this hour requires your whole heart. Do not hold back; do not shrink away.”

The battle has been fierce, and the enemy has sought to derail your destiny. He has tried to twist the very door handles of your calling, but I declare to you: no weapon formed against you shall prosper! You have seen how the enemy has attacked the pioneers, how he has tried to contain the movements of My Spirit. But I say, My faithful ones, you are not contained—you are breaking forth. For in the place of your warfare, I have prepared a table of abundance, a realm of divine deployment.

The shifting of the furnace, the refining of your faith—it has been for such a time as this. You are being aligned with My heavenly strategies. Many have been knocked down, only to rise up again, and I am strengthening you in the stillness of My presence. There is a realm of victory and overcoming faith that I am releasing now. This is not the easy way, nor is it the tough way of human strength; it is the way of My Spirit—yielded and pure, refined by My hand.

I am healing the wounds of My faithful intercessors. The time of hiding and travailing in secret is turning to a season of public victory and demonstration of My power. For even as I have spoken, I am overturning the schemes of witchcraft and the plans of the enemy to abort what I am birthing. My word does not return void—it will accomplish what I sent it to do.

In this hour, the Light of My Son shines brighter than ever. The name of Jesus is above every other name, and in His name is your healing, your authority, your victory. My judgments are being made manifest in the earth, and the world shall see that I am the Lord, the Eternal Creator, the King of Kings. Do not fear the shadows of death or the false alliances of this world. My glory is your covering, and My Spirit is your guide.

I am sending you as voices crying out in the wilderness: “Prepare the way of the Lord!” Let your allegiance be to My kingdom alone. Let every breath, every word, every work be an offering of worship to Me. For as I have spoken, so it shall be. The King of Glory is coming, and His reward is with Him. Press in, My beloved. Stand firm in faith. The hour of fulfillment is here.