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Waterfalls of Grace: A Call to Daughters Rising

This prophetic word echoes the story of F. F. Bosworth, a well-known evangelist and faith-healing preacher who was born near Utica, Nebraska, in 1877.

Though he was not a daughter in the natural sense, his life mirrors the same pattern of crushing, restoration, and authority that this word speaks over God’s daughters.

Bosworth grew up in a Methodist home and encountered Jesus as a teenager, but soon faced severe lung problems that threatened his life.

In the natural, his story looked like one of diminishment—sickness, limitation, and the possibility of an early death. Yet, just as the prophetic word declares that where the enemy came to steal, kill, and destroy, God would bring increase, Bosworth experienced a dramatic healing after a “Bible woman” prayed for him and proclaimed God’s readiness to make him well. From that point, the very area of his weakness—physical health—became the central theme of his calling as a herald of Christ the Healer.

He later became a pioneering evangelist and early radio preacher, helping bridge the earlier healing movements into the mid-20th-century healing revivals.

His ministry embodied the message that the name of Jesus still delivers, heals, and sets captives free. He saw multitudes respond to that name, illustrating the prophetic emphasis on the power of confession—agreeing with what God says rather than with circumstances.

Bosworth’s life shows how God can take a person from the edge of death and use them to release waterfalls of healing and faith to others. In the same way, this prophetic word announces that many who feel broken, sidelined, or disqualified—especially daughters and mothers—are being raised up to carry authority in the very arenas where they once felt most defeated, just as God did with His servant from Nebraska.

Chapter 1 – Daughters Rising from the Dust

I am walking among My daughters in this hour—those who have felt like beggars at the back door of My Kingdom, scraping for crumbs of approval, identity, and worth. I have seen you where you crouched low, rehearsing your failures, listening to the lies that said, “You are too much,” “You are not enough,” “You are disqualified.” But I say to you: this season of grovelling is over. I am lifting you from the ground to stand beside Me in the authority I already gave you in My Son.

You have been in a long, hidden war. The enemy has stalked your history, seeking to steal from your childhood, crush your joy, poison your relationships, and drain your strength. He tried to bury you under exhaustion, confusion, strife, and accusation. But I am the One who steps into the very places he burned and announces, “More.” Where he came to steal, I am bringing increase. Where he came to kill, I am releasing resurrection life. Where he came to destroy, I am unveiling designs of destiny that he never saw coming.

I am calling My daughters deeper into intimacy with Me, because your authority will be born at My feet. In the night watches, as you meditate on My word, I am rewiring the way you think, speak, and see. I am teaching you the power of your confession—how to agree with what I am saying and not what your circumstances are shouting. As you speak what I speak, you will see what I see. The atmosphere around you will begin to bend to My decrees on your lips.

Many of you have stood in the gap for families, cities, and nations, interceding when no one saw, weeping when no one thanked you. You have carried burdens that were far heavier than your own story. I have watched you stand between the living and the dead when strife broke out in homes and churches; I have seen you refuse to join the backbiting and gossip when it would have been easier to fit in. Because you chose the way of love, I am now releasing a swift recompense.

Watch how I accelerate alignment. I am positioning you in places you could never have strategized for, opening doors you did not apply for, connecting you with people you never thought you’d meet. This is not random favour; this is the harvest of seeds you sowed in tears, obedience, and hidden faithfulness. You will say, “How did this happen so quickly?” and I will say, “You are stepping into the waterfall of My reward.”

I am restoring mothers—spiritual and natural—who felt their season was over. I am restoring daughters who thought their story was ruined. You will carry a voice that cuts through religious arguments, church feuds, and empty talk. Your life will announce: “Jesus is enough. His name still heals, still frees, still raises the broken.” From the dust of disappointment, I am raising an army of women who reign in life through the One who loved them.


Chapter 2 – Waterfalls, Fire, and Divine Strategy

Listen, daughters of Mine: a waterfall awaits you. You have known the slow drip of delayed answers, the thin trickle of hope that barely seemed to keep your heart alive. But I am bringing you from the dry stream into the roar of outpoured grace. You will not merely sip; you will stand under a cascade. What once came by drops will now come in torrents.

I am releasing fresh fire upon your hearts—not the fire of condemnation, but the fire of loving conviction. Where there has been inner turmoil—jealousy, competition, insecurity, unforgiveness—I am putting My finger gently yet firmly. I expose because I intend to heal. I confront because I intend to free. As you yield these hidden places to Me, you will feel chains fall that you did not even know you carried. The very areas where you felt the least worthy will become fountains of ministry to others.

I am sharpening your discernment in this era. Many voices are speaking about new ages and vague spirituality, but I am giving you eyes to see the difference between a clever counterfe it and the true King. You will be a people who are not impressed by trends, but captivated by My Son. You will not be seduced by the promise of power without a cross or influence without holiness. You will recognise that the highest throne of all is secured behind one Name—a Name you are not ashamed to proclaim.

My strategy for you is not a survival plan; it is a co-labouring blueprint. I am entrusting you with heavenly intel in prayer: insight into times and seasons, dreams that decode the enemy’s tactics, scriptures that become swords in your mouths. In the secret place, I will show you how to pray ahead of the curve, how to intercede before the shaking hits, how to decree My word over cities, schools, churches, and nations. You will no longer feel like you are always catching up; you will move with My timings.

Where churches have been divided by petty feuds and wounded egos, I am raising you up as healers and bridge-builders. Your refusal to participate in faultfinding will make room for My presence. Your willingness to bless when cursed and honour when dishonoured will break long-standing stalemates. You will see meetings that used to be dry ignite with unusual hunger, as hearts soften under the weight of My kindness.

I am also releasing practical provision. Unexpected finances, strategic partnerships, and surprising favour will be assigned to the assignments I have given you. I am placing resources into your hands—not so that you will be burdened by them, but so that you can build what I have shown you. Schools, ministries, creative projects, and mercy works will rise because you dared to believe that I could fund what I birthed in your heart.

Daughters, this is not the time to shrink back. I have waited for such a generation: women who live at My feet yet walk in My authority; women who will let Me write their story again, from grovelling to reigning, from silence to decree, from scattered tears to roaring waterfalls of joy. Stand up. Lift your head. The shift you longed for is not a rumour—it has begun.

The Mississippi Connection: The Fire of Jensen Franklin

This prophetic word mirrors the life and ministry of Jentezen Franklin, a Spirit-filled pastor with deep roots in the South, who has long carried the flame of revival through his teaching on fasting, prayer, and the power of the Holy Spirit. Although his ministry extends far beyond Mississippi, his messages have repeatedly reached believers there — particularly during the seasons of spiritual drought and natural disaster that struck the Gulf region.

Mississippi, known for its storms and its revivalist history, has often mirrored the prophetic theme of endurance through hardship. When Hurricane Katrina devastated parts of the state in 2005, Franklin and others called for repentance, fasting, and faith — echoing the prophetic call to “endure hardness as good soldiers” and to find authority not in comfort, but in surrender.

Franklin’s emphasis on the secret place — on “shutting the door and seeking God in private” — directly parallels this word’s insistence that believers must prioritize intimacy with God over busyness. His life’s testimony reflects a man refined by trials yet unwavering in faith, modeling what it means to be “uncompromisingly strong and unapologetic.”

The Mississippi believers who have followed his teachings have often testified of renewed strength, divine healing, and supernatural provision. His message — like this prophetic word — calls the Church to rise as the head, not the tail, and to embrace the refiner’s fire until the roar of Heaven is released through them.

Just as Franklin’s fasts birthed global movements of prayer, this word calls for a similar awakening: to sit, to hear, and then to roar. The fire that purified him is the same fire now being offered to the saints of Mississippi — to become a people of faith, intimacy, and holy authority in this final hour.

Chapter 1 — “The Rising of the Head, the Strength of the Soldier”

Hear the word of the Lord, you who have dwelt beneath the weight of the world! You have said, “I am under everything. I am pressed down and forgotten.” But the Lord declares, “No longer shall you live beneath the burden. For I have not called you to be the tail, but the head. You are seated with Me in heavenly places, far above every power and dominion.” The days of smallness are passing away, and the season of divine placement is upon you. You shall know where you are seated — in the authority of Christ — and from that position you shall speak, heal, and move mountains.

Yet hear this: soldiers of Christ are not crowned before they endure. The Spirit says, “Endure hardness as a good soldier.” The war is fierce, but your service is short. Your tour of duty is but a breath compared to eternity. So, set your face like flint. Stand on the front lines. Let every wound become a weapon, and every scar a sermon. When you are tempted to run home early, remember — someone must stay to win the battle.

The Lord says, “I am calling you to deeper surrender, not comfort. I am calling you to movement, not stagnation.” Many have feared change, yet this is the divine pivot — a redirection into purpose. Do not sit idly by, singing songs of faith while your table is full. Come to the table of grace and take what belongs to you. Lift your plate and say, “Pass the bread, Lord — the bread of healing, the bread of strength.” Healing is the children’s bread. Faith must eat before it sees.

Renew your mind, says the Spirit. You cannot discern the will of God with old thoughts. Some things will appear good, yet are not His will. Others will look painful, yet perfect. Discernment comes not through comfort but through stillness — through the secret place. Be still and know that I am God. For many of you are moving too fast to hear. The Lord waits in silence to give you strategy, to speak of matters greater than your needs — matters of nations, revival, and destiny.

The whirlwind has come to shake the builders, but it will not destroy them. From the quake shall emerge a company who roar with the authority of Christ. They will release healing through their words, cities will tremble at the sound of their declaration, and the fog of despair shall lift. For the time is now to see the giants bow.


Chapter 2 — “The Secret Place and the Roar of Healing”

The Spirit of the Lord says, “Prioritize the secret place, for it is the birthplace of revelation.” In stillness, I will give you the blueprints of Heaven. My power is not found in the rush, but in the waiting. The rushing world moves on, but the waiting saints move mountains.

In the secret place, I am refining My Bride with fire. My fire is not to destroy but to purify. I am exposing compromise, uprooting false strength, and forging an army who will not bow to the altars of men. I am raising those who will stand unashamed, unafraid, and uncompromising — those who have allowed Me to burn away all mixture. For I am returning for a pure and spotless Bride, one who knows My voice and walks in My truth though the world mocks her purity.

Many of you have felt the quake, the sudden whirlwinds, and the fog that blinds your sight. The Spirit says, “It was not to crush you, but to carve you.” I have shaken what could be shaken so that only what is of Me remains. The fog has lied, whispering despair, but My breath is clearing it. Soon you shall see again.

From the place of intimacy will come a roar — not the noise of man but the sound of Heaven. My healers have been attacked because the healing anointing within them is about to multiply. In their silence I have been saturating them with My living water. When they arise, they will carry fire and rivers. Their very words will be waves of healing to cities, regions, and nations.

This is the hour to discern My perfect will and walk boldly in it. For those who remain in the secret place, I will release a roar that breaks sickness, a word that melts fear, and a vision that directs destiny. The time is now to rise from the ashes, to come forth as those who know their God and do exploits. The refiner’s fire has prepared you for this — the unveiling of My uncompromising army. Arise, and release My roar.

John Piper: The Minnesota Prophetic Mirror

The Minnesota Witness – The Prophetic Mirror

This prophetic word mirrors the life of John Piper, the longtime pastor and theologian from Minnesota, known for his ministry “Desiring God.” Piper’s journey illustrates the tension between zeal, discernment, and the purity of motive that the prophetic message above so strongly emphasizes.

Piper’s early years were marked by passionate study and bold proclamation. Yet he has often confessed that intellectual pride and the desire for human approval once shadowed his ministry. Over decades, God refined him, teaching him that true prophecy, preaching, and leadership flow not from brilliance but from brokenness. His message—“God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him”—echoes the altar of pure intent described in Chapter 1. He has repeatedly warned that even ministry can become idolatry when it seeks the applause of men rather than the pleasure of God.

Furthermore, Piper’s ministry in Minneapolis during times of cultural upheaval reflected the Chapter 2 call to watch and be ready. He spoke fearlessly about justice, holiness, and the coming Kingdom, reminding believers that they are citizens of another realm. When controversies surrounded the modern church—on race, politics, and moral compromise—Piper called Christians to return to discernment, humility, and worship that transforms rather than divides.

In him we see both the lesson and the hope of this word: that discernment must anchor zeal, that worship must purify the prophet’s lips, and that the faithful steward—however few in number—can still change a generation.

Chapter 1: The Purpose of Prophecy and the Test of Discernment

Hear, O Church of the Living God, the word of the Spirit: Discernment is the gatekeeper of prophecy. Many cry, “Thus saith the Lord,” yet their words are not weighed in the balance of truth. The prophet without discernment becomes a trumpet sounding off-key, and the hearer without discernment becomes a sheep led astray. Before Pentecost, Peter’s zeal outran his wisdom; he loved Jesus deeply, yet his understanding was dim. So it is with many today—they speak swiftly, but not by the Spirit.

Prophecy was never meant to flatter the flesh or to accuse falsely—it is meant to pierce the veil between heaven and earth. False words that misrepresent motives or twist truth are to be rejected. The Spirit of God never contradicts the facts; He aligns hearts with divine order and calls men back to holiness.

Behold the lives of those redeemed by grace: once lost in chaos, now clothed in light. Steve, drowning in delusion, filled his home with water and confusion, his mind enslaved by chemicals. Yet even there, mercy called his name. Greg, standing below the rock bluff, found that his ordinary baptism became a holy moment. The Spirit turned the waters of repentance into a platform for preaching. Through Greg, souls were awakened; through ruin, purpose was born.

God calls the broken and the bewildered to become vessels of truth. He chooses those who have seen both the pit and the palace, that they may speak to others with authority born of redemption. He gives diverse tongues and gifts—some to teach, some to exhort, some to praise beyond the reach of intellect. When words fail, the Spirit groans through us in divine utterance. These tongues of fire are not given to divide but to bless God and fill the earth with His glory.

Each must stand in their appointed place. You are not called to imitate another’s flame but to tend your own altar. The wise go where their spirit finds peace, and they labor where they are graced. Prophecy is not performance; it is partnership. The false prophet seeks attention, but the true prophet hides behind obedience. The Lord says, “I desire truth in the inward parts.” Let your discernment be sharpened; let your hearing be purified. Only then can your words carry the fragrance of heaven.


Chapter 2: The Watchman’s Call and the Coming Glory

The Spirit speaks again: Watch and be ready! The Son of Man is returning, and the earth trembles at His approach. Yet many, even among His people, are asleep. They stagger under the intoxication of the world—chasing pleasure, forgetting purpose. The story of Steve, surrounded by those darker than himself, reminds us: sin is a chain that always drags downward unless grace intervenes. Only the Spirit can lift a man from the pit and seat him among princes.

Jesus, the Master Teacher, still speaks. He reveals the Father through His Word and calls all creation to accountability. There is nothing hidden from His gaze. To think one can hide from God is delusion. The question “Where are you?” echoes still—not as accusation, but as invitation. You are either in fellowship or estranged, either walking in the light or fleeing from it.

Do not say, “We are too few.” The remnant has never been the majority, yet it has always been mighty. The disciples were fishermen and tax collectors, yet once endued with power from on high, they became witnesses who shook empires. God multiplies what He sanctifies. What He breathes upon cannot remain ordinary.

Every person becomes like their god. The idolater becomes lifeless, but the worshipper of the Living God becomes alive, radiant with His nature. Worship is transformation—it molds you into the image of what you adore. So choose your allegiance wisely, for your god determines your destiny.

When these tents of flesh return to dust, our spirits will be clothed with glory. The Lamb shall shepherd us beside fountains of living water. Tears will be wiped away; corruption will give way to incorruption. Until then, let there be order in every household, purity in every heart, and reverence in every word spoken in His name.

The watchmen cry: “Prepare the way of the Lord!” For the Rapture draws near, and the King’s feet are at the threshold. Let all who hear the Spirit say, “Come!” Blessed is the one found faithful when the Bridegroom returns.

The Prophetic Word and the Michigan Witness

The prophetic word—centered on the dangers of performing for human sight (the “to be seen of man” motive), the necessity of examining one’s works and motives for the coming judgment, and the warning against cultic submission—strikingly relates to the late Christian apologist and speaker, Ravi Zacharias, who was based in the state of Michigan during a critical part of his ministry. The Failure of Motive and the Hidden Life Ravi Zacharias was a highly visible, globally respected Christian leader whose ministry, Ravi Zacharias International Ministries (RZIM), had a major presence in Alpharetta, Georgia, but he lived in Atlanta, and a key figure in his early ministry, and his first US board meeting, was held at Pine Rest Christian Hospital in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in the 1980s. The prophetic warning about motive—that the desire to be seen can corrupt giving, praying, and spiritual activities, and that all works will be tested by fire—is precisely the tragedy that unfolded posthumously. After his death, multiple independent investigations revealed widespread sexual misconduct, including abuse and sexual assault, against numerous women, often masked by his ministry travel and the authority of his office. His public ministry was a monument of intellectual defense of the faith, appearing on the surface as the pure “righteous acts” described in Matthew 6. However, the revelation of a pervasive, secret life directly contradicted the image he projected “to be seen of man.” The prophetic word warns that the motives behind the works will be tested. In Zacharias’s case, his impressive public works—his global speaking and apologetics—were fundamentally tainted by a hidden life of sin and abuse of power, demonstrating that the very thing Jesus warned about (a secret life of darkness under a veneer of public righteousness) was in operation. The eventual judgment of his ministry by the broader Christian community became the fiery test that revealed the true, corrupt “sort” of his inner life and motives, shattering the edifice built on fame and performance.

Chapter 1: The Altar of Intent

Hear now, O generation of the swift and the seen! The Spirit of the Lord speaks gently yet firmly: Guard the gates of your heart. You live in an age where applause echoes louder than obedience, where devotion is measured by the roar of the crowd instead of the whisper of conscience. But the Holy One calls you higher. He calls you to the secret place—the altar unseen by men—where intention becomes incense before His throne.

Let your heart remember the words of Jesus: “Do not perform your righteous acts before men, to be seen by them” (Matthew 6). The hunger for human approval is a subtle poison, dressed in robes of generosity, fervent prayers, and strict fasting. Yet the Lord, who sees in secret, weighs every motive. He looks not at the show of sacrifice, but at the spirit of surrender behind it.

A day is coming when every deed will pass through fire—not to condemn, but to reveal. What was done for the praise of men will crumble like straw. But what was done from love and truth will shine like refined gold. So judge yourself now, beloved! Let the Spirit search your motives and cleanse the altar of your intent. For if we purify our hearts now, we will stand unashamed before the Judge of all.

The Stewardship of the Present

And to you who lead—whether a home, a business, a city, or a nation—the Lord reminds you: You are stewards of what is sacred. Your small sphere of influence is holy ground, entrusted to you by the King of Glory. Each act of diligence, each quiet decision for righteousness, becomes eternal currency.

Jesus, the Faithful Steward (Luke 12:42), watches how you manage what you’ve been given. The crown of authority in His coming Kingdom will be awarded not by title or talent, but by faithfulness. Every humble task done without fanfare, every hidden labor done as unto the Lord, is preparing you for the age to come.

So do not despise the small place! Every moment of obedience is a stone in the foundation of your eternal reign. You are being trained for the throne. The present is the preparation for the King’s return.


Chapter 2: The Quickening and the Kingdom’s Cost

The earth groans, waiting for the manifestation of the sons and daughters of God! O children of promise, remember—what you see fading around you is not the end, but the trembling before a divine unveiling. The world’s systems, its economies, its glittering distractions—all are passing shadows. Lift up your eyes! The Bridegroom comes quickly.

You say, “Two thousand years have passed—where is His coming?” Yet to the Eternal One, it has been but two days (2 Peter 3:8). He is not slow, beloved—He is merciful, giving time for His people to awaken. Every shaking in the earth, every headline, every stirring of revival or rebellion is setting the stage for His return.

The Power and the Price

Look to the first believers—burning, broken, and bold. When conviction fell in Acts 2:37, the path to power was repentance, not pride. The Holy Spirit is not a concept but the very breath of God, transforming sinners into saints.

Yet the Spirit warns: Do not seek miracles for your own fame. Power without purity is perilous. The anointing that heals the sick can also destroy the proud. God is not withholding His power; He is searching for vessels strong enough to carry it without breaking. Die to self, that resurrection life might flow through you without mixture.

The Frog, the Prince, and the Shepherd’s Trap

The Kingdom of God is the story of divine transformation. Like the cursed frog kissed by pure love, so were we—creatures of dust, transformed by the kiss of Christ into royalty. But beware of the counterfeit enchantments! False shepherds will promise power but lead into bondage. They will demand submission to men instead of surrender to God.

True authority liberates. False authority controls. The real Shepherd leads His flock to still waters and freedom. So keep your eyes on Jesus, the returning King, and let no man enslave what Christ has set free.

Jonathan Edwards: Massachusetts saw fire

This prophetic word finds a deep reflection in the life of Jonathan Edwards, the Massachusetts pastor and revivalist whose ministry in Northampton ignited one of the greatest spiritual awakenings in American history. Edwards lived in a time when faith had grown cold, when the congregations of New England were “stopping and starting,” much like the people described in the prophecy. Yet the Spirit of God moved suddenly, and what began as quiet conviction became a fire that spread through the colonies.

The prophecy speaks of compassion as the secret of true power — and though Edwards is remembered for his fiery sermons, his real strength was a heart tender toward God. Behind the thunder of “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” was a man broken with love for souls, moved by the vision of Christ’s majesty. He often wept in prayer for his people, longing for them to know the beauty of holiness. His tenderness reflected the divine compassion that this prophetic word calls “royal.”

Edwards’ life also mirrors the prophetic theme of divine recompense and transformation. He endured misunderstanding, exile from his own congregation, and the loss of position. Yet out of the wilderness of Stockbridge, where he ministered to Native Americans, his greatest writings were born — revelations of God’s sovereignty, love, and glory that would shape theology for centuries. Like the prophecy’s image of the cactus blooming in the desert, his isolation became the soil of eternal fruitfulness.

In Edwards, Massachusetts saw both the fire and the tenderness of God united — judgment that led to mercy, truth that revealed beauty. His ministry anticipated this present “Esther season,” when divine fire refines rather than destroys, and compassion becomes the crown of those who overcome by faith and radiant love.

Chapter 1: The Royal Compassion of the Overcomers

The Lord says, “I am revealing again the secret of power that moves nations—not by intellect, not by eloquence, but by compassion.”
It was tenderness, not talent, that drew multitudes to the men of fire in past generations. The same Spirit that caused the multitudes to gather in Spurgeon’s Tabernacle, that filled the auditoriums of Boston and Chicago, is stirring again—this time in the daughters and sons who have learned mercy in hidden places.

This is an Esther season—a time when the battles of many years are suddenly overturned by one act of divine favor. I saw many feeling as if they were in a “stopping and starting place,” unsure of whether to advance or retreat. Yet the Spirit whispers, “You are coming out stronger than ever in Me.” For I, the Lord, am crowning My daughters with the sun, placing under their feet the moon, and in their hands a decree that shakes nations.

This compassion will not be weak, for love will be the instrument of divine correction. It will call the broken to rise again, the weary to sing, and the backslider to remember their royal name. Many will discover that their wounds were the very wells through which the oil of the Spirit now flows.

Just as Abram was told to look to the stars, so I say to you—lift up your eyes. Every tear you have shed has numbered a promise. I am multiplying your faith like the constellations above Judea, and your voice will echo like thunder across valleys once silent.

You are being sent off the beaten track, like Elisha hearing the secrets of kings in their chambers. You will move in quiet strength, crowned not by applause but by divine appointment. This is the rise of those who know Me as “Everlasting Father” and “Mighty God,” whose compassion becomes strategy and whose prayer becomes decree.

So do not fear the floods of darkness, for I am lifting a standard. The love that once wept in hidden rooms will now roar like a lion through the earth. And the nations will say, “Surely, these are those who have been with the Lord.”


Chapter 2: The Fire and the Recompense

I heard the Spirit say, “The enemy has come in like a flood—but now, My flood of fire will rise higher.” The season of mere endurance is ending; the season of divine recompense is at hand. Many who labored without recognition will suddenly find their homes expanded, their boundaries widened, for I am releasing holistic restoration upon families, churches, and even forgotten cities.

You thought your thorns were curses, yet I say—a thorn is an undeveloped leaf. What was once pain will now blossom into praise. Like a cactus blooming in the desert, so shall you bear fruit in the driest years.

Do not despise your humble beginnings. Even as the great preachers of old began with no board or salary but trusted Me, so shall My new prophets and builders arise in dependence upon God alone. The strategies I give will defy human logic—birthings without precedent, revivals without fame, movements without walls.

There will be strategic breakthrough points—moments when My fire erupts suddenly upon individuals, families, and cities. You will see prayers answered that have waited a generation. Watch the children, says the Lord, for they are carrying the rhythm of the coming awakening. They will prophesy, sing, and build as My Spirit falls upon family altars again.

And I heard the Lord breathe upon the clock—the hands came alive. “I am redeeming lost time,” He said. “What seemed delayed is now accelerated. What seemed destroyed will become the foundation of glory.”

This is the hour of the daughters’ decree and the sons’ rising—the family of faith made whole. As you gather in My name, I will sit in your midst and speak as I did on the Mount of Transfiguration. My Word will not merely be studied—it will live.

Receive your healing now. Be threshed of chaff, refined of dross, and made radiant with divine reward. For behold, I come quickly, and My reward is with Me.

Harriet Tubman: A Prophet of Freedom from Maryland

Connection to a Christian from Maryland

This prophetic word mirrors the story of Harriet Tubman, the famed “Moses of her people,” who lived in Maryland before leading hundreds of enslaved souls to freedom through the Underground Railroad. Tubman’s life is a living echo of Chapter 1’s clock of redemption and Chapter 2’s awakening of the Bride. She was a woman who, though wounded by oppression and marked by trauma, walked in supernatural communion with God. Her visions, dreams, and prophetic insights guided her through impossible circumstances — much like those “carried away in the Spirit to a great and high mountain.”

In Maryland’s darkness, Tubman heard divine instructions as clearly as if angels spoke to her. She trusted the voice of God more than the wisdom of men, fulfilling the prophetic image of one “schooled in His presence.” The freedom she brought to others was more than political — it was a living manifestation of the Lord’s decree: “Healing, freedom, and increase are taking place.”

The word’s emphasis on redeeming lost time also finds resonance in Tubman’s later years. Though she never learned to read, she carried a deep understanding of Scripture, often quoting Revelation and Exodus as promises of deliverance. Like the Bride clothed in righteousness, she became a symbol of endurance transformed into glory. Her Maryland roots — in a land of bondage — became the very soil from which revival and freedom sprang forth, proving again that the Lord takes what the enemy meant for captivity and turns it into a testimony of divine restoration.

Chapter 1 – The Mountain of Healing and the Clock of Redemption

I was carried in the Spirit to a great and high mountain, and from that place, I saw the holy city descending — radiant, pure, alive with the light of God. The air itself sang of healing, freedom, and increase. From the throne came a decree that the time of delay was breaking, and the Lord was redeeming the lost years His people had mourned. I saw the CLOCK of heaven — the same one that many had stared at in grief, counting wasted time — and Jesus Himself touched it. When His hand met the clock’s face, time began to glow, not with loss but with restoration. Every tick became a heartbeat of mercy, every moment a seed of divine recovery.

The Spirit spoke, “Do not say, ‘I am late.’ For I, the Alpha and the Omega, redeem even the hours that sorrow devoured.” Then I saw the saints rise like trees along a living river, each bearing fruit in its season — a new fruit for every month, a symbol of ongoing transformation. These were those who had endured long nights of silence, who had been told they were disqualified or forgotten. Yet the Lord said, “You are My Philadelphia people — faithful in small strength, yet steadfast in love. I am setting before you an open door no man can shut.”

The ground trembled as voices rose in prayer, echoing those of the revivalists of old — the Sankeys, the Moodys, the Mount Hermon students — those who built their houses upon faith and labor. I heard the cry of pastors who spent their lives lifting the hearts of multitudes, and I felt the joy of the ancestors who still stand in witness to the promises of God. The Spirit said, “The same fire that once filled the upper room is stirring again in this generation. Do not mourn the past revivals — stand, for you are the continuation of their song.”

Then came the angel of Revelation 20, holding a scroll of judgment and promise. He declared that the battle is shifting, the Kingdom is advancing, and the saints are being positioned in places they never imagined. The same hands that once trembled now lifted with authority. The same voices once silenced now thundered with decree. And in the midst of it, the Lamb stood radiant — His wounds now windows of glory, forever testifying that suffering has become the gateway to reigning.


Chapter 2 – The Awakening of the Bride and the Restoration of the Word

The Lord spoke again, “I am calling My Bride to rise in righteousness, clothed in fine linen, clean and white — for her beauty is not born of ease but of endurance.” I saw saints who had walked through the furnaces of grief, now shining with an inner fire. Their prayers mingled with the sound of an ancient song, the same melody that once filled the prayer halls of Northfield, the conference grounds, and the humble sanctuaries where faith built nations. These were those who, like Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, trusted in promises unseen — and their faith became the seedbed of awakening.

The Spirit continued: “I am schooling My people again in the authority of My Word. My sons and daughters will no longer quote My truth without power. They will speak, and creation will answer. They will decree, and mountains will move. For I have magnified My Word above all My Name, and I am restoring reverence to those who tremble at its sound.”

Then I saw a generation of intercessors rising — dreamers and reformers — holding worn family Bibles, their pages stained by tears. They prayed not for platforms but for presence, not for fame but for fire. Heaven responded with an outpouring like Pentecost. The 120 became thousands, the thousands became multitudes, and across the nations the cry of revival shook even the coldest altars.

But the Spirit warned, “Do not mistake emotion for anointing, nor movement for transformation. Only those who abide in love will carry lasting glory.” I saw the Lord turn His gaze to those hidden in silence — especially His daughters who had been bound by fear and forgotten by systems of men. And He said, “The very places where the enemy sought to hide you, I will ignite with My favor. From the shadows will come songs of destiny, and through your voice the nations will remember mercy.”

Then a trumpet sounded, and a multitude stood clothed in light, declaring, “Worthy is the Lamb!” The atmosphere was alive with purpose. The Word of God was no longer a text but a living flame. The Bride was radiant, and the King was near. I knew then — we are not waiting for revival; we are its embodiment. The city descending is not merely a future hope but a present unveiling — the holy Jerusalem rising within hearts that have been purified by love.

A Baseball Player from Iowa named Billy Sunday

Powerful Evangelist

There was a man from Iowa named Billy Sunday. He started out as a professional baseball player, but God had a bigger plan for his life. One day, he walked away from fame and success to follow Jesus. He became one of the most powerful evangelists in America. Crowds packed huge tents just to hear him preach. People said he was bold, energetic, and full of life—he preached like a man on fire.

What made Billy Sunday’s life so remarkable is that he didn’t let his past define him. He shook off the old clothes and stepped into God’s new blueprint. He didn’t have a formal education or a polished background, but he had faith. And that faith changed lives across the nation.

This prophetic word carries that same spirit. It’s a reminder that God can take ordinary people from ordinary places and do something extraordinary. Like Billy Sunday, you may feel unqualified or overlooked, but God is marking every part of your life with His victory. When you let go of the old and step into His new grace, there’s no telling what doors will open.

Just like Billy, you can rise up with confidence and say, “God’s not finished with me yet!” The same Spirit that empowered him is at work in you. Your story isn’t over—it’s only just beginning.

Chapter One – Marked by Victory

Friend, when God says, “I am marking every part of your life in My victory,” that means no area is left out. Your health, your relationships, your finances, your purpose—He’s putting His signature of triumph on all of it. You may have been through battles, delays, or disappointment, but God is saying, “I’m not finished with you. I’m about to turn it all for your good.”

Think about the man at the pool of Bethesda. Jesus found him, spoke a word, and the man was instantly healed. That’s what happens when the Lord steps into your story. You may have felt stuck or overlooked, but the Lord has His eye on you. He’s breathing new life into old places.

This is a time of refreshing—a season of deeper encounters with Jesus. He’s awakening His people to who they really are: sons and daughters with authority. It’s not about striving anymore. It’s about resting in the truth that you already have victory because of what Christ has done.

The Lord is saying to many, “Prophesy your way out of the old.” Stop rehearsing what went wrong. Stop wearing the old clothes of defeat, guilt, or regret. Shake off what’s behind you and step into the new grace God has prepared. New mantles, new assignments, new confidence are being released right now.

If you’ve been believing for healing, hold on. God’s promises are for all His children. He said He would take away all sickness. That’s not “some.” That’s all. When He calls Himself Jehovah-Rapha—the Lord who heals you—that’s a forever promise. You’re not the sick trying to get well; you’re the healed learning to walk in what’s already yours.

Maybe you’ve battled fear or felt pressure on every side. The Lord is saying, “I’m delivering you from old limitations.” You don’t have to live with the fear of man, or the lies that say you’re not enough. God is breaking those chains. You’re stepping into freedom, confidence, and divine purpose.

Listen, this is not just about getting through—it’s about rising up. God’s saying, “Welcome back.” Welcome back to joy, to vision, to intimacy with Me. You haven’t missed your moment. The best is still to come!


Chapter Two – Stepping into New Blueprints

This is a season of new blueprints—fresh direction, divine ideas, and God-inspired strategies. The Lord is doing something new in your life, and it’s bigger than you can imagine. He’s saying, “Don’t limit Me by what you’ve seen before. I’m doing something that will surprise you.”

God is raising up a generation that walks in authority—authority over sickness, fear, and lack. When you know who you are in Christ, you don’t have to beg for miracles; you speak with confidence. Jesus gave His followers power over demons and disease. That same power is in you today.

I believe we’re entering a time when faith will rise stronger than ever. Our young people will be marked with the beauty of Jesus. They’ll walk in boldness and humility. They’ll pray for the sick, share the gospel, and expect God to move in everyday life.

Maybe you’ve faced financial pressure or felt the weight of lack. The Lord says, “Don’t worry. I’m bringing new provision and restoring what was lost.” God is the ultimate restorer. He not only brings you out, He brings you out better. There’s a blessing with your name on it.

Now is the time to let God’s fire go deeper. Let Him burn away the fear, the pride, the distractions. Stay humble, stay surrendered, stay full of love. The Lord is preparing His people to shine—to live with a first-love passion that can’t be faked.

You may not see everything yet, but God is working behind the scenes. He’s moving you from pressure to promotion, from testing to testimony. What was meant to break you is going to bless you.

Friend, step into those new grace clothes. Lift your head high and say, “I am marked by victory!” Your best days aren’t behind you—they’re still up ahead.

The Prophetic Strength of Corrie Ten Boom

Though not born in Idaho, Corrie ten Boom—the Dutch Christian who survived the Holocaust—visited and ministered in Idaho in her later years, especially in Boise and surrounding regions. Her life vividly mirrors the prophetic word of infusion and restoration. After years of imprisonment and loss, Corrie became a living testimony of divine strength that reached the cellular level of her being.

When she spoke in Idaho in the 1970s, she carried a holy fire that touched generations. Many who attended her meetings recalled how her frail frame seemed charged with supernatural vitality—her presence itself infused with resurrection hope. What the enemy used to silence her voice in the camps became the very channel through which her message thundered worldwide: “There is no pit so deep that God’s love is not deeper still.”

This prophetic word speaks of God bringing His people up and out—just as He brought Corrie out of the darkness of Ravensbrück and into a life of radiant purpose. The strength that sustained her was not emotional resilience, but divine infusion. Even as her body aged, her spirit grew younger, vibrant with the power of forgiveness and resurrection.

In Idaho’s quiet churches and mountain towns, her words still echo: that God restores what suffering attempts to steal, and that His power renews not only faith, but flesh. Corrie’s legacy embodies this prophetic season—where those once broken rise infused with heavenly vitality, carrying the fragrance of resurrection to a weary world.

The Infusion of Strength

Beloved, hear the Word of the Lord: “I am bringing you up and out of what has tried to steal your joy, steal your voice, and steal your strength.” This is the hour of divine reversal, where the hands that once pressed you down will no longer define your motion. The Spirit says, “I am infusing you—not only in your soul, but down to your very cells—with My supernatural strength.”

The enemy has sought to drain My people, but I am restoring vitality that man cannot explain. You will not rise merely in endurance; you will rise in infusion. I am altering your internal composition with resurrection power. Your body will testify, your voice will resound, and your mind will think thoughts aligned with heaven’s wisdom.

Watch now, for provision will come from every direction. What was loss will become overflow. What was silenced will now sing. Even as in the days of old, when small gatherings birthed great awakenings—where a hymn printed for a penny carried fire through a nation—so shall it be again. Hidden obedience will ignite public revival.

I am awakening mothers, sons, laborers, and students. The weary will prophesy, and the quiet ones will roar. What you thought was burned beyond recovery will bloom in beauty. “You meant it for evil,” says the Lord, “but I have meant it for good, to bring forth many lives.”

I am realigning My Church. The fractures of division are being healed through intimacy, not argument. Tread slowly, lean closely on My chest, for I am whispering divine secrets that will restore your sight. The revelations you receive in this season will not be for display but for transformation.

There is a glorious urgency moving in the Spirit. My hand is stretched out over you—massive, unyielding, tender. I am pressing down not to crush, but to imprint My nature within you. You shall emerge as light in a dark place. My infusion will silence fear, heal exhaustion, and reveal the reality of My resurrection within you.


The Rising of the Infused Ones

The Lord says, “Prepare your heart to know the way of the Lord and to do it.” For the time of mere hearing is over; the age of demonstration has come. You have prayed for revival, but I tell you—revival has been praying for you. It groans for vessels unafraid of transformation.

You will see My supernatural provision in every direction. The storehouses of heaven are open, and I am pouring out resources, wisdom, and favor. The enemy’s plan to exhaust you has only cleared the way for My Spirit to fully fill you. Watch as your inner strength multiplies beyond human explanation—hope returning, creativity resurrected, and joy becoming your warfare.

The Church is coming back into alignment. I am knitting hearts together across generations and movements. Where there was suspicion, there will be unity. Where there was competition, there will be collaboration. I am removing the veil of misunderstanding that has divided My body. The breath of My Spirit will empower the young and restore the elders.

Even now, I am teaching My people to meditate again—to see My Word as living light. The imagination of My people shall be redeemed; new songs will be written that carry frequency, healing, and authority. What once felt like empty repetition will now pulse with divine life.

And to those who have felt spent, I say, “I am infusing you with hope, life, and strength.” You are not dying—you are transforming. The pressing was never punishment; it was preparation. You will soon testify: “I was beaten down, but the Lord gave me more than I ever had before.”

Rise, O infused ones. Rise with the joy that no thief can steal. Rise, with the power that even time must obey. For this is your resurrection season, and you will never again walk in weakness.

3 New Audiobooks on YouTube

REMOVE THE RULES: How to turn the rules into suggestions.
Why do you react when asked to do something?
Do you want a happy home?
In this book I use my wife and our marriage as an example.
Lorna and I are now a happily married couple.
We found the rules and threw them out of our house.
We found a new sense of freedom.
The source of all anger is a broken rule.
Turn that rule into a suggestion and watch the peace come into your home.
Brisbane, Australia. Tony Egar.

How To Be Rich in Faith Kindle Edition

by Tony Egar (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars   (30)

“Tony has always been fascinated by the effect believing has on our lives. After years of reading books and going to conferences he has found the effect was temporary. His personal belief is that we have a believing switch somewhere within us and if we can get it turned on; everything works, but when it is turned off nothing works. This is his journey to find that switch and turn it on”.

Christian Woman: My Wife’s Story Kindle Edition

by Tony Egar (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars   (10)

When Lorna enters a room the love of God comes with her.
Her early life explains some of this.
Something about her is special beyond normal understanding.
I have watched her interact with people for more than 35yrs.
This invisible feeling moves some to tears of joy, others just want to hug her and tell their deepest secrets.
I cannot believe it has taken me this long to write her story.

A GIFT OF HEALING: Receive your healing as a seed Kindle Edition

by Tony Egar (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars   (59)

Healing grows like a plant.
In scripture the Lord likens the kingdom of God to the planting of a grain of mustard seed.
It grew and became a tree.
On another occasion he describes the growth in a slightly different way and says,
“first the blade, then the ear, then the full grain in the ear.”
The nature of the kingdom is to grow from being small to being fully developed.
Divine healing is a part of the kingdom of God.
That is what Jesus meant when he said,
“Heal the sick and say, the kingdom of God has come near to you.”
The nature of the kingdom is to grow.
Where there is faith, the essential nature of divine healing is to increase.
Once you have been prayed for, you believe the prayer has worked.
Believe you have received your healing in the form of a seed.

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