Tag Archives: Faith

Conquering the Fear of Death: A Believer’s Guide

The Fear of Death Is a Lie

The voice of the Lord still cries out: “Father, into Your hands I entrust My spirit.” Not just the words of Christ on the cross—but the declaration of every believer who refuses to bow to the terror of death. What are they whispering about at the graveside, in hushed tones and long shadows? They speak softly not from honor—but from fear. It is not reverence for the deceased, but a dark awe toward death itself. This should not be.

The fear of death has dressed itself in religious clothing. People say, “It’s only natural to mourn.” And yes, we mourn—but not like those without hope. We don’t whisper in the presence of death—we shout with Paul, “Where, O death, is your sting?” For the child of God, death has lost its bite. The grave is not our master. The tomb is not our end.

This world says death is final, but the Word says death is a doorway. The world teaches us to dread the end, but the Spirit teaches us to look beyond. It is time to renew our minds and break free from the bondage of fear. You’re not free to live until you’re unafraid to die. Every phobia, every hesitation, every dread—it all ties back to one thing: the fear of dying. Fear of flying? Fear of falling? Fear of disease? Trace it to the root—it’s death.

But death is not the worst thing that can happen to you—unbelief is. Remaining in bondage to fear is. Believing the devil’s lie that “it’s hopeless” is. But death, for the believer, is not torment. It’s not the end—it’s a transition. It’s a homecoming. It’s going to Him.

Beloved, say it boldly: “I am redeemed! I am healed!” You don’t need to fix your own body. You don’t need to destroy the disease. Your task is simpler: believe. Believe and stand. Say it and do not change. Hold your ground and expect it. That’s faith.

The spirit of this age says, “You’re done. You’re too old. You’re too broken.” But the resurrection cries out: No! The body you have—yes, this very one—has been purchased, and it shall be raised in glory. If the body didn’t matter, why would God raise it from the grave? You are fearfully and wonderfully made, and your flesh—though decaying—will be glorified.

When you say, “That’s just for the Jews,” you rob yourself. The same Spirit that raised Christ from the dead now dwells in you. And He didn’t come to whisper beside your coffin—He came to kick it open.

Child of God, take courage. Refuse to yield to death’s shadow. Refuse to lay down. Set your face like flint and declare with all your might: “I will not fear. I will not die, but live, and declare the works of the Lord!”


The Glorified Body and the Living Word

Don’t believe the lie that your body is disposable. Don’t join the chorus that says, “Oh, this old body—thank God I’ll be rid of it one day.” No, this is the body that was fearfully formed, wondrously shaped. This is the body that will be glorified. Why else does the Lord raise the dead? Because this body matters. He gave it to you—and He will redeem it completely.

When Jesus cleansed the leper, He didn’t just say, “You’ll be fine in heaven.” He healed him here. In Leviticus, the law of cleansing for the leper included blood, water, and a living bird set free—signs of Jesus, our sacrifice, and the liberty that comes through His cleansing. Every part of that Old Covenant points forward to the glory that now rests upon us.

The lie says, “It’s too late. You’re too far gone.” But look to Brother Hagin. Born sick, destined to die before manhood—but he believed the words of Jesus: “Whosoever shall say unto this mountain…” That “whosoever” includes you. And if you’ll say it, believe it, and not doubt in your heart, you shall have whatever you say.

That’s not hype. That’s the Word. But it’s not enough to believe in His ability—you must believe in His will. The leper in Mark 1 said, “I know You can, but will You?” That’s where many falter. They believe God is able, but they’re not sure He’s willing for them. Let this be settled in your heart today: He will.

Why aren’t there more working in the fields of the Lord? Because too many are distracted, discouraged, or disqualified in their own minds. But the harvest is still great, and the laborers are still few. The cry of the Spirit is rising: “Go!” You don’t need to wait for your name in lights or a pulpit. You just need to believe and obey.

The fear of death has hindered generations. Some believers barely attend funerals or hospitals because they don’t want to face mortality. But the fear is a chain, a dark veil. And Jesus came to tear the veil. You’re not your own. Whether you live or die, you are the Lord’s. Your life is not yours to end—and your calling is not yours to hide from.

The Passover Lamb was not just a story—it was a shadow. Jesus, our Lamb, was tied to the post, scourged, bruised, and bled. Why? That we might be healed. That we might be clean. That we might live.

So rise up, prophet of the Most High. Lay aside the excuses. Lay aside the dread. Set your eyes on the risen Christ. And let the cry go out from your soul, “I am alive with His life. I walk in His strength. My body is not cursed—it is called. My days are not numbered by disease—but by destiny.”

Live holy. Live healed. Live ready. And live unafraid.

In May 2025, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) issued a stark warning: there is a 70% chance that global temperatures will exceed 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels between 2025 and 2029, with an 80% likelihood of breaking at least one annual heat record during this period. This alarming forecast underscores the urgency of addressing climate change and its far-reaching impacts. The Guardian+2The Guardian+2Climate Home News+2

This environmental crisis resonates deeply with the prophetic message emphasizing the sanctity of life and the imperative to confront the fear of death. The reverence for death, often manifesting as fear, can lead to inaction and complacency in the face of existential threats. Similarly, the looming climate crisis demands a proactive stance, challenging societies to overcome fear and engage in transformative action.

The prophetic call to live unshackled by the fear of death parallels the need to address climate change with courage and conviction. Just as believers are urged to view death not as an end but as a transition, humanity must perceive the climate crisis not as an insurmountable doom but as a pivotal opportunity for renewal and stewardship. This perspective empowers individuals and communities to confront environmental challenges boldly, fostering resilience and hope.

Embracing this prophetic vision entails recognizing the inter-connection of all life and the responsibility to protect creation. It calls for a shift from passive acceptance to active engagement, from fear to faith-driven action. By aligning with this message, societies can transcend the paralysis induced by fear, embracing a path of sustainability, justice, and reverence for life in all its forms.

Understanding Prophecy: spiritual battlefields where Soviet powers align.

The Witness of the Impossible

Behold, a voice in the wilderness—crying out to the generation that loves the shadow more than the light. The Word has been made flesh, and the testimony of prophecy stands not as myth but as math: calculated, certain, divine.

“Behold, I will send My messenger, and he shall prepare the way before Me.” (Malachi 3:1) Only One has walked this exact path. One in a thousand? Nay, rarer still. Who else had a forerunner? Who else entered not on stallion, but on donkey? Who else was betrayed for thirty coins—the weight of a slave, the price of prophecy?

O sons of men, you chase after signs and wonders, but the Sign has already come! Zechariah saw Him—just, bringing salvation, lowly on a colt. Zechariah heard the betrayal and even counted the silver. Do you not see? The randomness of prophecy is crushed under the weight of precision. You say chance; I say sovereignty.

The Spirit came as fire, not once but again and again—on Cornelius, on Pentecost, on the seeking and the humble. Yet today, some say, “The Spirit is for yesterday. We have seminaries now. We are perfected by programs.”
“Having begun in the Spirit, are you now made perfect by the flesh?” (Galatians 3:3)

When Jesus walked among them, He said, “You cannot bear it now, but the Spirit of truth will come” (John 16:13). And come He did—with tongues and dreams, visions and prophecy. Not to amuse, but to guide. Not to decorate, but to possess. Shall we silence the wind because we’ve built cathedrals?

Do you not yet understand? The world may be passing through itself—worlds layered, unseen. Physics whispers what prophets already knew. There is a realm above this realm, and Spirit calls to spirit from the depths. Two men walk in the same body—the carnal and the redeemed. Choose this day which man shall reign.

The world calls this madness. They worship beasts and idols, giving glory to devils in black-painted rooms. They do not see, for their names are not written in the Lamb’s book. Yet the church sleeps, entertained by shadows—TV, movies, pleasure. They do not tremble at the Word. They do not know the hour.

I declare to you: Wake up, O sleeper! The trumpet is not waiting for your convenience. The King is coming, not as a lamb, but as fire.


The Spirit and the Sword

Listen now, saints and seekers: the gospel is not a hobby, not a ritual, not a motivational speech. It is a fire, and it consumes the soul who touches it with faith. “To as many as received Him, He gave power to become sons of God” (John 1:12). Power, not preference. Transformation, not therapy.

Yet many build churches of comfort, not altars of sacrifice. They demand applause for their flowers, not fire from heaven. They promote carnal methods to stir carnal crowds and call it “revival.” They will stand before the judgment, and their works will be tested by the flame.

This is not new. Even in the Lord’s last moments, His disciples could not bear the fullness of His Word. “You are not ready,” He said, “but when the Spirit comes, He will lead you into all truth.” (John 16:12-13) Has the Spirit changed? Has God’s fire become a flicker?

Today there are many who say, “We felt this,” and “We experienced that,” and so they form doctrines by goosebumps and dreams. The Word is displaced by stories. But I tell you, experience is not authority. The Word is the sword, the rock, the root. It is written—not just to be read, but obeyed.

Some have asked, “Can a Christian be possessed?” I say to you: what fellowship has light with darkness? What agreement has Christ with Belial? If the Spirit of God dwells in you, there is no room for demons. But if you house compromise, beware—the door cracks open.

We are not called to live one breath short of breakthrough. Too many stop three feet from gold—three prayers shy of victory. Press on! Dig deeper! If a geologist could see a vein of gold, surely the Spirit can see your next miracle.

And what of the earth? It groans. Experts prophesy doom in scientific terms. They do not know the Creator, but they sense the trembling. Their warnings echo the Word they ignore.

Train up your children, O saints—not with distractions but discipline. Bring them up in the fear and knowledge of the Lord. Their souls are eternal. Their minds are battlegrounds. They must know the Word, not just your church’s songs.

This is the hour to speak forth the Word of God. This is the day of our glorious gospel. Not with slick branding, but with burning truth. Not with false fire, but with the flame that fell at Pentecost.

And to the faithful church—the church of Philadelphia—hear this: You have not denied My Name. I will keep you from the hour of trial. (Revelation 3:10) Stand firm. Hold fast. Speak boldly.

For behold, He comes quickly.

This generation is starved for the Spirit, yet chokes on counterfeits. Tongues offend the intellect but nourish the spirit. Visions disrupt logic but align the heart. Shall we reject the edifying fire because it burns too brightly for our minds? No! We choose the Spirit, even when it confounds us.

Peter asked, “Did you receive the Spirit by law or by faith?” The answer is clear. Not by works. Not by worthiness. By hearing and believing. The Spirit comes where faith is fertile. But with this calling comes pain. Raul bore the plague of rejection—friends gone, family estranged. But through the cross, the foolishness of God revealed its power.

And what of Moses? A single moment of misrepresentation cost him the Promised Land. God said, “You made Me look angry when I was not.” O ministers, beware. You preach not yourself but Christ crucified. Represent Him rightly, for the people see God through your voice.

The Spirit still restrains the darkness. The Antichrist cannot rise until the Church is removed. We are the dam holding back the flood of evil. But are we filled? Are we faithful? Or have we grown embarrassed of prophecy, hiding in fear because others have set foolish dates?

Even now, the hand of God moves across the fields, across borders, across spiritual battlefields where Soviet powers align. The prophet Ezekiel saw it all. Magog rises.

The universe expands, and so does His mercy. As high as the heavens are from the earth, so great is His mercy toward those who fear Him. Let the Church arise—not in intellect alone, but in Spirit and in truth. For the Lord who heals, leads, and speaks is still on the throne.

Unleashing Healing Power: Laying on of Hands

The Power That Flows From the Father

O sons and daughters of light, hear now the trumpet of truth that calls you into the realm of the miraculous. The ministry of Jesus was never only word—it was Word with Power, Word made Flesh and Fire. He healed the sick, cast out demons, and raised the dead—not by His humanity, but by the Spirit who had come upon Him like a dove. This same Spirit has now been poured out upon all flesh. Why then do we hesitate to walk as He walked?

Let it be clear: miracles were not occasional interruptions of Jesus’ ministry—they were His ministry. “I have glorified You on the earth,” He said to the Father, “I have finished the work which You have given Me to do.” And what was that work? To preach, yes—but also to demonstrate the Kingdom. He passed that very work on to His disciples and, by the Great Commission, onto us. Shall we now diminish the works that Christ Himself made central?

Do not fall for the lie that healing power is earned by your striving. Some think that if they fast long enough or cry hard enough, power will fall. No! This is foolishness. Did Jesus heal before the Spirit came upon Him? No—though He was sinless and perfect in godliness. It is not by power or piety, but by the Holy Ghost. Peter said, “Why do you look at us, as though by our own power or godliness we made this man walk?” (Acts 3:12). It is God who works through faith, not effort.

The anointing flows from intimacy and obedience, not performance. Peter and John saw a man lame at the temple. They did not pause to wonder if they were holy enough that day—they acted on the authority of the name of Jesus. “Rise up and walk!” they commanded. And he did! Not because they prayed long, but because they moved in the gift of faith that fell upon them.

Let us not try to recreate what God intends to release. The gifts of healing, miracles, and deliverance are not of this earth—they are beams of divine energy, operated by heaven but applied through human hands. Like a surgeon uses a laser, so too does the Lord use you when you yield.

Some saw healing come suddenly—spines straightened, limbs grew, and even the tormented were set free with screams that split the air. I tell you, these are not fairy tales. These are the Father’s works. They are your inheritance.

Reject the lukewarm lie that says, “Maybe God only wants to partially heal, or maybe He’s teaching you something through this pain.” Jesus never said that. When people came in faith, He never turned them away. The leper came saying, “If You are willing…” and Jesus said, “I am willing. Be cleansed.”

We live in a time of much learning and little doing. This is not the way of the Kingdom. The Kingdom moves with power. Will you only observe? Or will you become a vessel? The healing anointing flows even now—through those who believe, risk, and obey.


Rise Up and Walk—The Ministry Passed On

I speak now to a sleeping church: Awaken to your calling. Jesus said, “These signs shall follow them that believe.” Not the famous. Not the ordained. Them that believe. You were never called to merely sit in pews—you were called to raise the dead.

Many cry out, “Why are we not seeing what they saw in the Book of Acts?” I ask you, when did you last act? The early believers didn’t merely pray for the sick—they commanded healing. After Pentecost, there is no record of disciples asking God to heal. They spoke healing. Why? Because the Spirit had come, and they knew the power was in them.

Do you?

We’ve been tricked into believing healing must be scheduled, hyped, or manipulated. But I tell you, real healing doesn’t need a spotlight. It needs faith. Sometimes it begins in small settings, even once-a-month gatherings. But even there, God shows up. The sick feel cared for, not showcased. The atmosphere is faith, not frenzy. And the glory goes to God, not man.

One woman came to testify of her own healing, not knowing a child was present with the same affliction. That night, both danced before the Lord, healed. Another man with a short arm—an injury from childhood—saw it grow out before all eyes. Not by hype, but by the demonstration of the Spirit and power (1 Cor. 2:4).

And what of the demons? Yes, they tremble still. Jesus cast them out with a word. His servants still do. They are not impressed with titles; they bow only to authority. The demon said, “Jesus I know, and Paul I know, but who are you?” Authority comes not from volume or ritual but from intimacy with God.

Demons flee when confronted in Jesus’ name—the highest authority in heaven or earth. Not all are possessed, but many are oppressed—bound by addiction, shame, fear, and mental torment. And these spirits know they are defeated. They tremble at the sound of holy praise. They rage at the preaching of truth. But they cannot withstand the Spirit-filled believer.

Let me tell you: the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead lives in you. You are not ordinary. You are armed. When you lay hands on the sick, you carry resurrection power. When you cast out demons, they must obey. When you speak truth, it cuts chains.

Cowboys healed. Children running. Eyes opened. Shoulders restored. These are not exaggerations—they are the evidence of God still working among us. And the most thrilling thing is this: many of those healed now go forth preaching Jesus, healing others, multiplying the harvest. The miracle is not just for you—it’s to flow through you.

The world is broken. Your hands are anointed. The time is now. Rise up and walk—in power, in faith, in the name of Jesus. For greater works than these shall you do, because He has gone to the Father, and His Spirit has come upon you.

Let the works of the Father begin anew—in you.

Healing: A Call to Divine Ownership

The Body for the Lord, the Soul for His Glory

The Lord does not heal the body as an end in itself. His healing is a calling, a summons, an invitation into divine ownership. When He touches our mortal frame and raises it from weakness, it is not merely so we can return to the routines of daily life. It is so we may become living sanctuaries of His presence. For too long, we have misunderstood healing as a gift without a giver, a miracle without a Master. But when Jesus heals, He comes to inhabit.

Yes, there is a healing that comes by means of natural law, by the wisdom of physicians and the mercy of created remedies. But that is not the healing of the upper room. That is not the healing that made Bartimaeus leap, nor the healing that raised the paralytic from his mat. The healing of Jesus is divine. It flows from the throne of God, through the hands of the anointed, by the power of the Holy Ghost.

I tell you now, the method of Jesus is not a method at all—it is a Person. It is Jesus Himself stepping into our affliction, not with a prescription, but with resurrection. He takes possession of the sick body, not just to relieve it, but to re-purpose it—to make it His.

When a soul is healed this way, joy erupts like new wine in old wineskins. There is dancing, and shouting, and trembling. The one who receives it cannot stay silent. He glorifies God, not just with his lips, but with his life. Every breath becomes praise, every step a testimony.

Consider Fred Bosworth—dying by man’s measure, but traveling to Fitzgerald, Georgia, upheld by God’s purpose. He didn’t just arrive; he witnessed. His healing was not just survival; it was surrender to a calling.

Many have read the Word and found healing while no hands were laid, no voices raised in prayer—just truth seeding faith. “The Word is the seed,” Jesus said. And the harvest comes when faith is mixed with hearing. Faith is not manufactured by emotion. It is ignited by revelation.

So I ask: how big is God in your body? In your pain? In your diagnosis? Is He there only to comfort, or is He present to conquer?

This is the Gospel we must preach—Jesus the Healer, Jesus the Possessor, Jesus the Temple-Dweller. It is not enough to be healed. We must be taken over. For when the body is given over to Christ, the soul follows. And in that surrender, the full blessing of the Gospel is made known.

Psalm 29:11 declares, “The LORD will give strength to His people; the LORD will bless His people with peace.” Not just peace from sickness—but the peace that comes when the Healer becomes your Lord.


The Fullness of Life and the Secret of Victory

It is not enough to say, “Zap me, Lord.” Healing is not magic. Healing is holy. And it requires attention—a listening ear, a yielded heart, a readiness to be transformed. The sickness that brings us low can be the invitation to walk higher. For God is not simply interested in mending what is broken; He is forming vessels of glory.

This is why some do not receive. Not because God is unwilling, but because the seed has not taken root. No farmer expects a harvest without planting. And no believer can expect healing without the Word. “Faith comes by hearing,” says Romans 10:17, “and hearing by the Word of God.” You must know that healing is God’s will. You must see it in the Word, hear it in your spirit, and believe it in your bones.

The life that Christ brings is exuberant. It is the calf leaping from the stall, kicking and jumping with strength it didn’t know it had. It is a spiritual bucking of every former boundary. It is the joy of release, the wild freedom of grace.

But with freedom comes fruitfulness. Jesus said, “You did not choose Me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit—fruit that remains.” (John 15:16). Not just healing, but wholeness. Not just relief, but purpose.

Healing that comes from Jesus is tied to repentance. Sin is not just a problem to manage—it is rebellion to renounce. And many do not get well because they want to stay in charge. But the moment we yield, the moment we say, “Lord, have all of me,” the Holy Spirit begins His work—not just in the blood or bones, but in the depths of the soul.

Bosworth knew this. He saw thousands healed. But he declared, “Even if I never see another man healed, I will preach the whole Gospel.” Why? Because healing is not the cornerstone. Christ is. Experience may vary. But the Word never fails.

Some will say, “But Paul was sick.” Yet even through what others saw as weakness, handkerchiefs from his body healed the sick. The anointing does not always look like strength. Sometimes it looks like surrender.

Jesus bore not just our sin, but our sickness. He carried our pain. That’s not allegory—it’s truth. It’s blood-soaked redemption. It is real and raw and raging with love.

You say you want victory? Then abide. Stay in Him. Let the Vine flow through the branch. “All the paths of the LORD are mercy and truth to such as keep His covenant” (Psalm 25:10).

Healing is not just recovery. It is resurrection life breaking through time and touching mortal man. And this Gospel—the full Gospel—must be preached. For Jesus has not changed. He is still the Healer. And He is still calling you to rise.

No longer live to please people, for their applause is hollow.

The Divine Design of Fulfillment

Hear the Word of the Lord, O seeker of truth! You were not born for self-exaltation, nor were you crafted by the hand of the Almighty to wander aimlessly in pursuit of fleeting pleasures. The secret of your strength lies not in human acclaim or worldly success, but in your submission to God’s divine purpose. For He has created you for His pleasure, and until your life aligns with His will, your soul will remain unsatisfied—grasping for water, but never quenching your thirst.

This is the hidden agony of many: ever striving, but never arriving. They sow to the flesh and pray the harvest dies in the ground. But the Spirit declares, “God is not mocked; whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap” (Galatians 6:7). The Kingdom is not a theater of performance, but a temple of obedience. Let not your prayer be a monologue of demands, but a communion—a holy dialogue. Sit still, child of God, and let the Word speak back to you.

It was Jesus, the express image of God, who showed us the way to live. He sought not the praise of men but the pleasure of the Father. As Hebrews proclaims, “He is the brightness of His glory and the express image of His person” (Hebrews 1:3). If the Son of God made Himself of no reputation and took the form of a servant, how much more should we relinquish our pride and offer our lives as incense upon His altar?

Many resist responsibility, preferring doctrines that remove consequence. But I tell you, there is no glory without the furnace. The church of Smyrna was not spared from tribulation, but they were honored in it. “Be thou faithful unto death,” says the Lord, “and I will give thee a crown of life” (Revelation 2:10). Purity comes not through comfort, but through fire. Let the persecution refine you, not define you.

You say, “But I am weak, disqualified, a sinner.” So was Paul. Yet he declared, “By the grace of God I am what I am” (1 Corinthians 15:10). You are not called because you are perfect, but because Christ is. He makes you blameless—not by merit, but by mercy. This is the mystery of grace, the power of the Spirit, the logic of heaven.

Let your motivations shift. No longer live to please man, for their applause is hollow. Live before the eyes of the Holy One. Exhort your soul to look up. Do not fixate on discomfort or delay. See the orchestration of heaven! God is aligning the dominoes of history, and soon, He will tip the first one. The end of the age is not chaos—it is choreography.

The secret is out, beloved: you were made to bring God pleasure. In that submission is your strength. In that surrender is your joy. In that purpose is your eternal fulfillment.


The Purifying Fire and the Coming King

O generation of wavering hearts, hear what the Spirit says to the churches! There is a monarchy coming, not of human making, but from the throne of heaven. A trumpet shall sound—not from the mouth of an angel, but from the lips of God Himself (1 Thessalonians 4:16). And the King shall descend. This is not myth or fable—it is prophecy in motion, the divine sequence set in place.

Even now, as you go about your days, heaven prepares its saints. The forgotten, the lowly, the broken—these are the ones God raises up. The cast-offs of society become the jewels in His crown. Consider the one who slept in the gutter until touched by mercy through a couple named Shirley and Henry. That man’s transformation began with hospitality, but it was Christ who lit the fire.

Church history bears this out. In Joppa, Dorcas—whose hands clothed the poor—died, and the saints cried out. Peter responded not with words of sorrow, but with faith. And by the power of the Spirit, Dorcas rose again. So too will this generation rise—not by cleverness, but by calling. You were born for such a time as this.

And yet, beware the counterfeit. The prince who shall come—the false messiah—will forge a covenant, only to break it and defile the holy place (Daniel 9:27). Do not be dazzled by signs and power void of holiness. The Antichrist mimics Christ but does not carry His heart. The tribulation shall reveal, separate, and purify.

God’s laws are not arbitrary. They are blueprints for joy. He has declared, “This is the way to peace, love, and a rich life.” To violate them is to derail your own soul. You cannot enthrone your desires and still call Him Lord. To command God and demote Him to your servant is not only pride—it is madness. As Romans says, “They glorified Him not as God” (Romans 1:21). Repent, for the Kingdom demands reverence.

Even now, I see the Spirit stirring hidden warriors. Not the famous, not the polished, but those with a burning heart. The devil will imprison some. Others will be martyred. But the crown is real, and the reward is eternal. Be faithful. Be found in Christ, blameless. The Lamb leads you, the Word feeds you, and the Spirit equips you.

Let prayer rise from your lips—not to manipulate God, but to be transformed by Him. Listen. The Word will speak back. Intercession is not reserved for the elite; it is the inheritance of the least.

Lift your eyes. The King is near. The angels prepare. The saints awaken. The trumpet is not far off.

Worship. Wait. Watch.

The time is short.

Be ready.

The Revival Blueprint and the Coming Glory

The Weight of Glory and the Wounding of Words

The Lord is coming to His Church—not first with thunder, but with trembling. I saw the fear of God descending like a divine mist, resting upon the saints and seeping into their bones. It is not the fear that drives away, but the fear that draws near. This fear will compel a mass repentance, not of the world, but of the Church. Tongues once loosened in gossip will now groan in travail. “Backbiting words” and “careless words,” long tolerated, will be burned in the holy fire of conviction. The Lord is gathering His people into the School of the Mouth, where we shall learn again that death and life are in the power of the tongue (Proverbs 18:21).

There is coming a revival, not merely of signs, but of honour. We will see love restored where division reigned. Unexpected places—wastelands of betrayal and bitterness—will bloom under the hand of the Lord. The prophet’s cry is rising: “Tighten the girdle! Lay hold afresh on the work of God’s today!” For we are those left standing after long warfare, many having survived cycles of trauma that battered both body and spirit. The enemy assaulted vision and hearing, not just circumstances.

But the Lord says, “I will increase their hearing of what My Spirit is saying.” To the remnant, this is the hour of divine recalibration. The knees that buckle will soon bend in reverence, not just fatigue. Some have said, “Peace and safety,” but the Spirit warns: a holy shaking precedes the harvest (1 Thessalonians 5:3). A new breed of pastors and prophets are rising—not praised by men but held fast by God. Their mountain-top experiences may not be desired by others, but they have met with the Lord and returned changed.

We must no longer walk blindly through divine territory. When the angels pass over cities, let them find us weeping in repentance, not boasting in numbers. The work ahead requires endurance. “It’s a good thing to get a man on his knees,” said the prophet, “but do not force him down until he is ready.” Let the kneeling be voluntary and reverent.

A great deliverance is coming, but it is not only outward—it is internal, beginning with the healing of speech, the restoration of reverence, and the cleansing of hidden motives. The breath of God is blowing restoration into weary vessels. Let every soul take hold of Psalm 119 and rediscover the delight of His statutes. For we are not merely to speak of Him—we are to bless in His name.

Let the Church awaken. Revival is not noise—it is a divine hush falling before the throne, where every idle word is weighed. Let us bear fruit that endures, and may the after-meetings of our lives bear witness to a holy transformation. The trumpet has sounded. Who will heed?


The Lord is not finished with His Church—He is only beginning again. In the vision, I saw blueprints descending from heaven, rolled and sealed in the Spirit, waiting for mouths trained in righteousness to open them. These are not natural strategies. These are solutions for kings and nations, whispered into the hearts of those who have endured the fire.

The spiritual realm is more alive than we know. Each confrontation in Jesus’ name shudders across the unseen world. The demons tremble not just at our volume, but at our authority. This hour calls for those who know His name—not by intellect but by intimacy. The ministry of the Spirit was never to exalt man, but to exalt the Lamb. Revival is not a personality—it is the presence of Jesus magnified in weakness.

Scotland was once ablaze. The angels, it was said, “paused for refreshment” over Dundee. Shall we not believe He can do it again? The spiritual revival even within denominational halls is unprecedented. Let us not mock what we do not understand. “Do not take everything at face value,” says the Lord. Look deeper. Discern the gold in unlikely places.

He is present with us. His hands still bleed for the nations. “Call upon Me and I will answer you,” He cries, “and show you great and mighty things.” He is demonstrating His care, not just for our needs, but for our desires, as we make Him our utmost delight. Many of you will be visited in prophetic dreams, receiving downloads of divine instruction.

The Lord is restoring not just vision, but identity. You are kings and priests (Revelation 1:6), not survivors. There is a divine comeback underway—He has decreed it, and it shall not be delayed. The bitter seasons will turn sweet, as Ezekiel said, “It shall be in thy mouth sweet as honey” (Revelation 10:9-10). This is the Word being made flesh in you again.

There is also a divine urgency. Let no one on the rooftop come down (Matthew 24). Run to Him—now. Prepare, not for a conference, but for a confrontation with glory. The earth groans, the rivers turn to blood (Revelation 16:4), but the people of God sing—for the Lamb has overcome.

The blood of Jesus speaks better things. It cries mercy, it declares victory. Therefore let us offer the fruit of our lips—praise that costs something. Preach, yes—but live louder than your sermon. Hold fast to His Word. Let it be a fire in your bones. Let Sankey’s solo, once mocked, become a prophetic act—praise that silences the mocker.

He has purchased us. He has prepared us. He will use us. Rejoice! Nothing overcomes the blood of the Lamb! Let the blueprint descend. Let the Church arise—not with clever words, but with hearts burning. The next battle is near—but so is the King.

Record Flood Levels. Rescues from Rooftops

The Step of Obedience and the Healing Cry

The Spirit of the Lord asks today, “Is there any sick among you?” (James 5:14). And the answer is yes. But the instruction remains unchanged: Call the elders. Anoint with oil. Pray the prayer of faith. And I declare this: the prayer of faith still saves the sick. The Lord still raises them up. And sins? Even sins are forgiven in the same breath that healing is spoken. This is not two covenants—it is one covenant of mercy, saturated in the blood of Christ, overflowing with resurrection power.

A woman healed by a single word—“Heal her now,” and the Lord heard.
She was not left to rot in diagnosis or buried under the weight of terminal conclusions. No, she stood—healed and restored to her family.
Our God is merciful! And in this hour, He calls His daughters, His sons, to obedience. Not partial obedience. Not theoretical obedience. But radical, immediate, multi-layered obedience.

The Lord thundered in my spirit and said, “ tell them: the next step is not shallow. It is layered. Obeying Me now will open layers of movement, momentum, and mysteries unrevealed. This is a divine unlocking of realms.” James 1 reminds us to ask in faith, not wavering. Proverbs 8 says, “Blessed is the one who listens to Me, watching daily at My gates.”

Yet many wait by the gate, like the lame man outside the temple. Daily he was laid there. Perhaps Peter and John passed him many times. Even Jesus might have passed him. But suddenly, at the appointed hour, power surged through him and his feet found strength. Let no one say God forgot you. Let no one claim this is “not for everyone.” That’s a watered-down gospel made palatable for powerless religion.

I say to you now: if you tarry, tarry with fire. If you wrestle in the night, let it be with the Lord. There are some who have exchanged the secret place for doctrines of delay. But the Lord is wooing His people back into the fire of intimacy. The secret place is no longer optional—it is critical. The rhythm is changing. The fire is falling wherever people walk hand-in-hand with Jesus.

Let the weak say, “I am strong!” (Joel 3:10) Why say it?
Because while you speak it, it feeds your spirit.
While you declare it, you rise up in resurrection power.

I heard it in the Spirit: “Arks of My Glory are being birthed all over the world.”
These are not arks of mere survival, but arks of His Shekinah.
Houses of healing.
Centers of deliverance. Platforms of purity. And I say to you: your obedience now determines what you carry next.

This step births the unimaginable. So take it.


Glory Houses, Deliverance Fire, and the Voice That Breaks the Containment

And I saw deliverance ministries rising—some in tents, some in houses, some in media rooms and prayer closets—but all full of fire. These ministries were drenched in the wisdom of war, not running into battle ignorantly, but trained through fire. These ones knew the enemy’s schemes not by study alone, but by surviving battles that should have ended them. And I heard the Lord say, “They will house My Glory!”

I saw it clearly: the battles you’ve endured are the exact reason the enemy tried to contain you. Because the weight of the glory you will carry would crush the gates of hell. The very ones nearly broken in discouragement, nearly buried in bills, nearly smothered in confusion—THESE are the ones rising to build.

Yes, the banks will break. But first, the curse of containment must be broken. The voice of the Lord thundered: “No more small thinking. No more delay. The pleasant path opens before you.” (Psalm 16:6).
Jabez prayed, “Enlarge my territory!”
And God granted his request.
So pray it again.
Pray it with fire.

I heard the Lord say, “I am expanding the vision. I am expanding the builders.
I am expanding the ones who would not bow to fear or fatigue.”
The reason the warfare has been so fierce is because the assignment is so heavy with glory. It makes sense now why you’ve been under siege.
Because what you’re building—will hold His presence.

Creativity is exploding in the daughters of God.
New anointings, unexpected gifts, and divine expressions will pour out.
The ones who felt too weary, too lost, too out of sync—will awaken to beauty for ashes. Restoration for broken marriages. Double for what was stolen.
God is not finished—He is just beginning.

And I saw Him saying, “I am bringing many back full circle.”
Yes, those promises you’ve shelved, those words you wrote in journals long ago—the Lord is bringing you back to them, but now with increase.
Now with completion.
Numbers 23:19 declares: “God is not a man, that He should lie.”
If He spoke it, He will perform it.
FULFILLED is the word over your life.

Do not buy the lie that sickness glorifies God. His will is perfected in heaven, where no sickness dwells. So why should you entertain on earth what does not exist in heaven? His signs—His healing, His miracles—still cry out: “This is who I AM!”

Jesus is still in His glorified flesh, seated at the right hand of the Father. And we are His Body. We have inherited healing. We have inherited power. The Spirit within you cries, “Abba!” And Abba never abandons.

I say to you now: the King of Glory is entering through you. You are a glory-bearer, not a survivalist. The voice of the Lord shouts one last thing in this hour:

“THE RIVER BANKS ARE BREAKING.
THE CONTAINMENT IS SHATTERED.
MY GLORY IS COMING THROUGH YOU.”

Let the church say, Amen.

Prophetic Insights: The Unfolding of Limitless Wings

“I am removing the cloaks of limitation that have bound My people.
No longer will the things that have suffocated, hindered, and squandered you in your season hold sway.
I breathe upon you fresh wind—wings of ease, freedom, healing, and joy—so that you may rise and be whom your Beloved created you to be.”

Behold, I am raising up men and women for an end-time revival. Like the farmers who expect the rain at the appointed season, your hearts are watering in anticipation of My downpour (cf. spring rains for sowing).
As you decree My word, you will see the heavens open and provision poured out.
For it may feel like you have been exhausted, yet My provision is never exhausted.

Remember the testimony of the Second Armored Cavalry, called at the eleventh hour to deploy to distant lands—even as My call beckons you beyond every comfort zone.
I have appointed you, beloved child of God, as watchmen on the walls.
At what point do you start believing the Bible?
Will you not risk it all upon the sure promises of My Word?

Miracles will operate on the earth in abundance for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear. My healing anointing is increasing; new mantles of restoration are being released.
As you speak and My Roar resounds through your spirit, you are making way for Me. The foxes of fear may lurk at the borders of your faith just as city walls guard a besieged town, but they shall not prevail. Every valley shall be raised up; every mountain and hill made low; the rough ground shall become level, the rugged places a plain (Isaiah 40:4).

Maintain the position of surrender and allow Me to sift and shift what must be sifted and shifted to bring forth increase. For ideas born in the realm of the Spirit are so powerful they can lift you to realms far beyond your natural capacity.
Though storms may blast like terrible winds—rocks torn loose—they do not carry My presence. In the midst of civil strife or inner turmoil, I remain the Prince of Peace.

Hear the cry: the divine deployment has begun.
New war eagles will rise up, taking heights for Me and releasing a mighty cry of intercession over the nations.
I will give you a full lifespan, anointing your days with abundant fruitfulness.
The Lord is brooding over the earth, looking for those who will arise in first-love fire and obedience.

As someone who received healing letters, as someone led gently into truth, so shall many come to testify of My faithfulness.
The power of declaration is at your lips: “I am more than a conqueror; what was meant for evil, Lord, You have turned for good.”
As you decree the thing, it shall be established.

Prepare now: gird your loins with My word, lift up your eyes, and take flight in the season of My manifest glory.


Prophetic Strategies for the Harvest

Thus says the Lord of Hosts: “Now let us go back to the book of Hebrews and look at how My covenant grace impacts your life.
The apostolic mantle is being restored; I will draw Apostles and five-fold ministers together to birth corporate strategy for the harvest.
It was like a chapter out of the book of Acts, when the Early Church held fast to prayer and signs followed.”

Many ploughed on in faith despite lacking a personal experience of tongues;
the blessing was on its way because they held to My promise.
Likewise, you who feel unqualified, hear this: your faith pleases Me, and your obedience unlocks doors that no dean, no tailor, and no shortage can close.
When it seems impossible—clothes for six made in a cultural land with no ready tools—look to Me: I am the God of supply who parted seas and multiplied loaves and fishes.

I command money to flow toward My end-time army.
Let not the fear of lack choke your obedience. The border lines and tent pegs of your destiny are extending for the glory of the Lord to dwell (Isaiah 54:2).
When you decree provision, mountains of opposition will bow, and rivers of blessing will burst their banks. These locks that stop the river from running dry during drought are being undone; the river of My Spirit is rising.

In the dream of cobblestone streets, you walked through an unknown land—and I was with you there. My presence turns every alien place into sacred ground.
Even when civil war looms, My generals stand ready in the spirit to steer the chaos toward My purposes. Chaos is but the womb for My new thing; out of it will emerge a powerful testimony of transformation.

Do not accept the false cloaks of religion that strip you of identity.
You are a beloved child, baptized into My family. Your sins are forgiven;
My blood speaks a better word than that of Abel.
The power of accusation is enormous, but greater is the voice of My advocacy in heaven.

I am lifting up My war eagles—those who will take the heights, declare My purposes, and enforce My statutes in the earth.
As you enter the secret place of prayer, you received a letter of provision, so shall your mailboxes overflow with unexpected breakthroughs.
You accepted Jesus as Lord and Savior; now accept your calling as end-time prophets.

Again I say: higher and higher! This is almost sacred ground. You are putting yourself in charge no longer; I am taking the reins.
Observe the seasons: as farmers expect the rain, so you must watch for My visitation. Live in anticipation, and you will not be disappointed.

Come into agreement with My word.
Declare: “I am an overcomer; the inheritance is mine!”
And watch as every valley is lifted, every mountain made low—preparing a highway for the King of Glory, ready to come in.

Thus says the Lord—prepare for unimaginable heights; the best is yet to come.

The Spirit of Healing: Unlock Your Authority

The Manifestation of the Spirit and the Voice of Healing

Have you not read? The Spirit of God has spoken—not in mystery, but in manifestation. In 1 Corinthians 12, the Lord commands us not to be ignorant of spiritual realities. Yet today, a famine of knowledge has dried the mouths of many saints. Not because God has ceased to speak, but because men have ceased to listen. “There are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit,” Paul declared. “There are differences of ministries, but the same Lord… operations, but it is the same God.” And the manifestation? It’s been given to every one of us—to profit withal!

We were not called to sit idle, waiting for a heavenly lottery. You say, “But I don’t see healing in my life.” Open your eyes! The Word says, gifts of healing, working of miracles, faith, prophecy, discerning of spirits. You weren’t called to watch the waters stir—you were called to walk on them.

Some speak as though healing is rare, as though it must be earned or timed like a celestial appointment. But listen: there was not one “unlucky” one in the Gospels. Not one was told to come back later. Not one was refused because “God was teaching them something.” You ask if He still heals today? The blind men said, “Have mercy,” and they received healing. Not sympathy. Not theory. Not delay—healing.

People determine God’s will by their failures, not His Word. They base theology on what didn’t happen. But I ask: where are their 30 verses saying it’s not His will to heal? Where are their 10? Even 5? They do not exist. But we—the “minority”—stand on a mountain of truth. We are not building castles on sand. We are standing on the Rock.

God didn’t create disease; it’s not native to heaven. So how could it be His will for His dwelling place—you—to host what does not dwell in His kingdom? If your body is a temple, and if the Spirit lives in you, should not the house be clean? Holy. Healed. Whole.

You have power. You have authority. Jesus gave it. Say it aloud: “He has given me power and authority over all demons and over all disease.” Let the weak say, “I am strong.” Why? Because faith feeds spirit, and the strong spirit of a man sustains him through pain, through trouble, through the valley.

Stop waiting on God to drag you forward. He gave you the Word, the Spirit, the Name, the Blood. You’re not waiting on Him—He’s waiting on you. You want Him to override you, but He desires to work with you. Just like finances, healing won’t fall on you like ripe fruit. You walk it out. You speak it out. You believe it in.

This is not fantasy. This is not motivational talk. This is the eternal truth of the living God. His name is still Jehovah-Gemuwal—the Lord who repays. And He is repaying His people now.


The Healer Dwells Among Us Still

Let it be shouted across pulpits and whispered in prayer closets: God has not changed. The One who healed then, heals now. And He heals all. Not a few. Not a select. All. The earnest of our resurrection is not a thought—it’s power. And healing is a taste of that coming resurrection, the down payment of glory, the prelude of transformation.

How much disease is in heaven? None. So how much belongs in the house of God? None. You are the house. Your body is the temple. The Spirit of God dwells in you. Would the Holy One share space with sickness? Would the flame of heaven burn alongside infection? I tell you, absolutely not.

Church is not cold stone and wood. It’s family—forever joined. And this family is meant to walk in love, not only toward one another, but toward the truth: that the Father’s heart is to heal, to restore, to prosper. Yet many rise in irritation at the very doctrines that could save them. Tithing? Speaking in tongues? Divine healing? Prosperity? Miracles? These are not burdens—they are blessings! And so many fight the very hand stretched out to help.

When Jesus healed the woman bound for 18 years, what did He say? “Ought not this woman, being a daughter of Abraham, be loosed?” That word “ought” shakes the heavens—it speaks of justice. Healing is not a gift of chance. It is a righteous act of covenant fulfillment.

Do not reason it away. Do not explain it into oblivion. Say what the Word says. Believe what He said. If He said, “If you ask anything in My name, I will do it,” then He will. But say it. Believe it. Act like it’s true—because it is.

We’ve grown tired of waiting for lightning. But the Word is fire. It pounds into your spirit until it breaks up unbelief. Until your eyes open. Until your body obeys the life within it. Healing doesn’t begin in the body. It begins in the heart. And the Word—His Word—feeds that heart.

The house of God must be clean. Your body must be healed. Your mind must be whole. It glorifies Him to see His people rise and live, to defy death, to overcome pain, to stand unshaken and say, “I am strong!”—even as the world says otherwise.

We are not chasing signs. We are following the Spirit, and signs are following us. Miracles in the road, like the young man brought back from the edge. Encounters with heaven. Testimonies of light and sound and healing that break the bounds of language.

This is the inheritance of the saints. It belongs to you. “I am the Lord who heals you.” Not who healed you once. Not who might someday. Who heals you now.

Let the Word break the chains, cast out the lies, and set your feet on healing ground. The King is among us, and He is still giving.

The Shipwreck of the soul. Listen to your spirit.

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

shipwreck

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.

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 ship 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

  • Our 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 your spirit 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.