Tag Archives: prophet

Can a Christian Manifest money?

What Does the Bible say?

Written by Tony Egar.

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Hebrews 11:3 (NKJV):

“The things which are seen,
 were not made of things,
 which are visible.”

Introduction:

At the start of the year, a curious thought came to me—one that seemed almost too simple to take seriously. Why not call this year “The Year of the Ladder”? At first, it was just a playful idea, something about promotion and progress, a hope more than a plan. I shared it with family and friends, but mostly it was met with mild amusement or polite smiles.

Then, on a friend’s birthday, I placed a small toy ladder on her cake. A strange gesture, perhaps, but one filled with quiet intention: “May this be a year of promotion.” She didn’t laugh. Neither did I, but the ladder came home with us and took its place on our kitchen bench, perched above the fruit bowl where we passed it every day.

What happened next caught me off guard. Events unfolded around that ladder—unexpected visitors, repairs long overdue, and ladders appearing where none had been for years. And when a fierce storm came through, it brought with it even more ladders and changes that seemed too coincidental to ignore.

Curious, we added something else—something tangible and mysterious—to that toy ladder. And slowly, questions began to form: Could this be more than just a coincidence? Was there something unseen at work, quietly answering a silent call? Was there a connection between a simple toy and the real world that we hadn’t understood before?

There’s a story from ancient times that came to mind—about a man who trusted in things unseen yet worked with what was before him, and in doing so, saw blessings multiply beyond expectation.

What follows in this book is a journey into those mysteries—the small signs that hint at greater truths, the unseen forces that may be working in our lives, and the possibility that something miraculous is waiting just beyond what we can see.

I invite you to step quietly into this story, open your eyes to what might be, and wonder—what if this year is not just about ladders, but about something far greater?

The answers may surprise you.

Chapter 1

At the beginning of the year, I had an unusual thought.
Why not call this year, “The Year of the Ladder.”

When I had this thought, I was thinking about people being promoted.
At their job or in other areas of their life.
My family have heard me trying to forecast the future many times.
My success rate is not very high.
It was a mildly amusing idea and we did not take it seriously.

When my friend had a birthday, I put a toy ladder on her cake.
Then I wrote in her birthday card, “May this year be a year of promotion”.

She did not think it was funny.
My wife and I went home with that toy ladder and put it on our fruit bowl.

We walked past that toy ladder every day because the fruit bowl was on our kitchen bench.

About 3 weeks later a friend of ours was visiting.

He looked up at the ceiling in our dining room and noticed an old water stain.
I told him that I had put some buckets in the roof to catch the water.
And even though water did still leak through the roof tiles, the buckets did their job and the ceiling was now safe.
He is a tradesman who knows how to fix everything.
He came round the next week and got up on the roof and fixed the leak by sealing up the roof tiles.
While he was up there he saw that I had not cleaned the roof gutters for some years.
They were full of leaves and dirt.
Next week he was back with his huge leaf blower.
He got up on the roof once again and cleaned our gutters.

After he left for the second time, I said to my wife.

“Lorna, no one has been on our roof for the last 7 years.
That means that no ladder has been seen around our house for 7 years.

In the last 2 weeks a ladder has been used twice.
Do you think our toy ladder is manifesting?”

Lorna did not think it was connected to our toy ladder.

This was happening in February 2025.

We had a cyclone in March.

  • Cyclone Alfred is the first tropical cyclone since 1974 to hit Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
  • During its slow approach to Southeast Queensland, Alfred brought widespread heavy rainfall and caused major flooding.
  • By March 12, the Insurance Council of Australia (ICA) reported more than 34,000 claims for water damage.

What a surprise.

Guess what?

Our garage ceiling collapsed because of the cyclone.

The insurance company paid for the repairs.

It took 7 days for the tradesmen to put in a new ceiling.

For 7 days we had men on ladders in our garage.
Electricians on ladders.
Men were up on our roof with their ladders.

Ladders were everywhere.

After it was all over, I said to Lorna.

“Do you think our toy ladder is manifesting?”

This time she stopped and thought about all the ladders that had appeared since the beginning of the year.

Now she was thinking like I was.
Maybe something unusual is happening.

What started out as a little bit of fun was now getting our attention.

We had hoped that the year was going to be a year of promotion.

But it was becoming the “Year of the Ladder.”

Then I had a new idea.
If a toy ladder can bring in real ladders.
Why not tape a $50 note to the top of the ladder.

Yes, we put a $50 note on the top of our toy ladder.

Once again, we were thinking it was a little bit of fun.

But inwardly we did begin to wonder what was going on.

If we really did do something that caused ladders to appear in our lives.
How did it happen?

Here are some possible explanations.

  1. We were conscious of the toy ladder and our thoughts made ladders appear.
  2. We looked at the ladder every day in the kitchen and what we looked at manifested.
  3. We talked about ladders and our speech caused something to happen.
  4. Or it was a total coincidence.
  5. Or a mixture of the above explanations.
     

Then I remembered the story of Jacob in Genesis chapter 30.
Jacob was a man who worked diligently, yet he understood that the blessing of the Lord was the true source of his wealth.
He devised a plan involving peeled branches, and through God’s favor and his own wisdom, he prospered.
He didn’t rely solely on human effort; he acted in faith and let God’s blessing multiply what he had.

So, can a Christian manifest money?
Jacob’s story—and our own toy ladder experience—suggest that God’s blessing, coupled with intentional faith and wise action, can indeed cause unexpected provision.
It may start with something small—a toy ladder, a symbolic act—but it grows when we believe in the God who multiplies.

Chapter 2

Jacob’s Prosperity—God’s Way to Wealth

The story of Jacob and Laban in Genesis 30:25-43 is more than a tale of livestock and family intrigue; it is a vivid picture of how a believer, operating under God’s favor, can manifest provision and abundance in a world that often seeks to limit or oppress them.

After Rachel gave birth to Joseph, Jacob knew it was time to return to his homeland. He approached Laban and said, “Send me on my way, so I can go back to my own homeland with my wives and children, whom I have earned through years of service.” Jacob’s bold request was rooted in his awareness that he had served faithfully. He had fulfilled his obligations and now sought to embrace his own future.

But Laban, ever aware of the blessing that Jacob’s presence brought him, pleaded with Jacob to stay. He confessed, “I have learned by divination that the Lord has blessed me because of you.” Even an unfaithful man like Laban recognized that when God’s hand is on someone’s life, prosperity follows. Jacob’s labor had multiplied Laban’s flocks and brought him great wealth. In the same way, the world cannot help but notice when the favor of God rests upon a believer.

Jacob, however, was determined to establish something for his own household. So he proposed an arrangement: he would continue to care for Laban’s flocks, but as payment, he would keep only the speckled, spotted, or dark-colored animals. Laban agreed to these terms, thinking he was outsmarting Jacob. He immediately removed all such animals and gave them to his sons, putting a three-day journey between them and Jacob, hoping to thwart Jacob’s plan.

Yet Jacob was not discouraged. He acted in faith and wisdom, using a strategy that involved peeled branches from poplar, almond, and plane trees. He placed them in the watering troughs, and when the flocks mated near these branches, they produced speckled, spotted, and dark-colored offspring—precisely the kind of animals that were to be Jacob’s wages. Jacob even ensured that only the strongest animals mated in front of the branches, while the weaker ones were left for Laban.

Over time, Jacob became exceedingly wealthy, acquiring large flocks, female and male servants, camels, and donkeys. His prosperity was not the result of mere chance; it was the outcome of faith in God’s promise, diligent stewardship, and a willingness to act wisely in a world that tries to take advantage of the righteous.

This story is a powerful lesson for believers today. Can a Christian manifest money? Yes, when we operate under God’s favor, guided by His wisdom and willing to take action—just as Jacob did. Jacob’s prosperity came because he recognized his work was blessed by the Lord, and he was willing to step into the future God had for him.

In your own life, don’t be discouraged by the schemes of others or by circumstances that seem to limit you. Like Jacob, put your faith in God, be diligent, and trust that He will multiply the work of your hands. The world may try to outwit you, but God’s wisdom will always prevail, and His blessing will bring you into a place of abundance.

Chapter 3

The Power of a Faithful Mindset

Jacob’s story in Genesis 30 begins with a question of fairness and provision. He had served Laban faithfully, and now he wanted to provide for his own family. His first step was to speak up and declare his desire: “Send me on my way so I can go back to my homeland.” Jacob was no longer content to live only for another man’s increase; he knew it was time for his own household to prosper.

As Christians, we can learn from Jacob’s faithful mindset. He recognized that the Lord had blessed Laban because of him (Genesis 30:27). In the same way, we can acknowledge that wherever we go, God’s favor follows us. We must believe that God desires to bless us and that our work can carry His increase.

Manifesting money—or any provision—starts with a faith-filled mindset. Like Jacob, we must believe that God’s blessing is at work in us, and that He wants us to ask for what we need. When Jacob asked for his share, he did it with confidence, not entitlement. He saw himself as a steward of God’s increase, not just a servant of Laban’s household.

Key Reflection:
Ask yourself—do I truly believe that God’s favor surrounds me? Am I confident that my work can be blessed and multiplied? Like Jacob, let your first step in manifesting provision be rooted in faith.

Chapter 4

Seeing the Future and Speaking It Out

After Jacob declared his desire to return home, he did something else that was powerful:
he proposed a specific plan to Laban.
Jacob said, “Let the speckled, spotted, and dark-colored animals, be my wages”
(Genesis 30).
He didn’t just hope vaguely—he spoke out a plan for his future.

This is an essential step in manifestation: seeing what you want and speaking it into existence. Jacob visualized his future flocks. He pictured the increase and described it in detail. His words set the course for what would come.

As Christians, we are reminded that our words carry life and power. Proverbs 18:21 says, “The tongue has the power of life and death.” When we talk about our finances, our dreams, and our future, are we speaking words of faith and expectation? Or are we speaking doubt and defeat?

Jacob’s story challenges us to declare God’s promises and our own goals. Speak them out, even when it seems unlikely. Jacob’s request was not based on what Laban would easily give—Laban tried to trick him! But Jacob’s words were like seeds sown in faith, and God brought the harvest.

Key Reflection:
What words are you speaking over your finances and your future? Are they words of faith, like Jacob’s, or words of fear and scarcity?

Chapter 5

Taking Strategic Action

Jacob’s manifestation did not come from speaking alone—he took creative, strategic action. He used peeled branches in the water troughs, believing that what the flocks saw would influence their offspring. This action seems strange to us today, but it was rooted in Jacob’s understanding of natural principles and God’s creative power.

Jacob didn’t just wish for increase; he used what he had (branches, water troughs, knowledge of breeding) and worked diligently. In the same way, manifesting money as a Christian is not just about prayer—it’s also about wise, diligent action. James 2:17 says, “Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead.”

Jacob’s branches in the water troughs can symbolize the small, consistent actions we take every day:

  • Starting a side hustle or investing wisely.
  • Developing a new skill.
  • Offering your work in a way that multiplies value for others.

God can bless these actions and bring a supernatural increase, just like He did for Jacob.

Key Reflection:
What “branches” can you use in your work or finances? Are you acting creatively and strategically, trusting God to multiply your efforts?

Chapter 6

Trusting God’s Timing and Fairness

One of the most powerful aspects of Jacob’s story is that he didn’t take what wasn’t his. He proposed an arrangement that would clearly show whether God was with him: “My honesty will testify for me in the future” (Genesis 30:33). He trusted that God would make the difference obvious.

Jacob wasn’t manipulating or stealing. His actions were transparent—he trusted God’s timing to prove that the blessing belonged to him. Over time, it became clear that God’s favor was on Jacob, not Laban. Jacob’s flocks grew strong and healthy, while Laban’s flocks weakened.

As Christians, this is crucial. Manifesting money doesn’t mean cutting corners or compromising integrity. It means trusting that God sees your faithful work and will reward it. Sometimes that reward comes slowly, but it comes.

Key Reflection:
Are you patient with God’s timing? Are you letting your honest actions and God’s blessing speak for you, rather than striving or scheming?

Chapter 7

Living in the Overflow of God’s Blessing

By the end of Genesis 30, Jacob had become “exceedingly prosperous” (Genesis 30:43). He had large flocks, many servants, camels, and donkeys. His life was overflowing because he partnered with God’s blessing, took creative action, and stayed honest in his dealings.

For us today, Jacob’s story is a powerful example:

  • God is the ultimate source of provision.
  • Our faith-filled thoughts, words, and actions create a space for His blessing to manifest.
  • The line between the natural and the supernatural is thinner than we think.

So, can a Christian manifest money? Jacob’s life shows that God’s people can indeed see provision and abundance when they walk in faith, speak life, act strategically, and honor God in all things. Like Jacob, we can declare, “The Lord has blessed me wherever I have been.”

Key Reflection:
What does your “Year of the Ladder” look like? How can you combine faith, wise action, and trust in God’s blessing to see overflow in your life?

Chapter 8

The Ladder and the Feeding Trough:

Small Acts, Big Results

After placing that $50 note on top of the toy ladder in our kitchen, I couldn’t help but think about how Jacob used his simple branches to bring in a whole new season of increase.
Isn’t it fascinating how a small object—a toy ladder—placed in a kitchen became a daily reminder and symbol?
In Jacob’s story, it was just some peeled branches placed in a feeding trough.
Jacob’s actions were done in faith, with the expectation that God would use them to bring about something bigger.

When we look at Genesis 30, Jacob carefully selected branches of poplar, almond, and plane trees.
He stripped the bark to create streaked patterns.
These branches weren’t anything special by themselves—they were ordinary, natural materials.
But they were placed in a very strategic location: the watering troughs where the animals came to eat and drink.

In our kitchen, the ladder was also placed in a spot of daily life:
right where we prepare food, where we gather with family.
Just like Jacob’s branches were in the “kitchen” for the animals, our little ladder sat in the heart of our home—where we saw it every day.
It was not about the physical ladder, it was about creating a daily, visual reminder.

This brings to mind a story from our own lives.
When our daughter was very young, she wanted a cat.
We didn’t want one at the time, but she took it upon herself to act out her faith in the most childlike and innocent way.
She made a little house out of a cardboard box and carefully wrote the name “Little Guy” on the front of the box.
She even placed a bowl of water outside the box as if the cat was already there.

We were so moved by her belief and determination that we couldn’t help but go and get her a real cat.
Her simple act of faith—just like Jacob’s branches in the trough or our toy ladder on the kitchen bench—became a catalyst for change.

Jacob’s story and our daughter’s cardboard cat house teach us the same thing: small actions, when done in faith and expectation, create an environment for God’s blessing to show up in tangible ways.

  • Jacob’s branches brought healthy, marked flocks.
  • Our toy ladder brought an abundance of ladders when we least expected it.
  • Our daughter’s cardboard cat house brought a real cat named “Little Guy” into our lives.

God seems to love partnering with the small, creative acts we do in our daily lives.
So often, it’s these simple steps—these “branches in the troughs” or cardboard houses—that set the stage for God’s increase.

Key Reflection:
What childlike, creative, or even “crazy” act of faith can you take today? How can you turn your hope into a small, visible step—trusting that God sees it and will honor it in His perfect timing?

Chapter 9

The Ladder We Didn’t See

One of the most powerful moments in Jacob’s life was not when he was actively working or making plans, but when he was sleeping in an unexpected place. He had left Beersheba and was heading toward Haran, weary from his journey. With the sun setting and nowhere else to stay, he lay down with a stone as his pillow. In that uncomfortable, in-between place, Jacob had a dream of something far bigger than himself: a ladder reaching from earth to heaven.

In the dream, he saw angels ascending and descending on this ladder—an image of God’s continual activity and blessing. And he heard the voice of God promising protection, provision, and a future of abundance. But when Jacob woke up, he was astonished. He said, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.”

Jacob’s story reminds us of something profound: we can be completely unaware of God’s ladder in our lives. Sometimes we go about our days, worrying about our problems and feeling stuck in uncomfortable places, not realizing that God’s blessing and provision are already right there with us—reaching from earth to heaven, connecting us to His promises.

The toy ladder on the kitchen bench, with that $50 note taped to the top, was a funny little sign of faith. But behind it, there’s a deeper truth: God has always had His own ladder for you. A spiritual ladder that connects your earthly needs and hopes to His divine supply. Like Jacob’s dream, it’s a ladder of angels, activity, and promise—a ladder we might not see because we’re caught up in our worries or routines.

Our daughter’s cardboard cat house was another example. She built it with innocent faith, not realizing how God was already working behind the scenes to bring her dream to life. She didn’t know there was a “ladder” in place for her—a connection between her childlike actions and the blessing of a real cat.

Key Reflection:
Jacob didn’t build the ladder. He didn’t even pray for it. It was already there, because God loved him and had a plan. Likewise, God’s ladder of blessing is already in your life—right where you are, even if you don’t see it yet.

  • Are you in a “stone pillow” season, feeling stuck or uncomfortable?
  • Are you overlooking the ladder of promise God has for you because you’re focused on your challenges?

Take a moment to pause and listen. Like Jacob, you might wake up and realize: “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.”

Chapter 10

What Does God’s Ladder Look Like Today?

If Jacob could see God’s ladder in a dusty wilderness with only a stone for a pillow, what might God’s ladder look like in our lives today?

We often think of ladders as tools to climb higher—like that toy ladder in our kitchen, or the ladders we see when repairs are being done. But God’s ladder isn’t just a tool for climbing; it’s a connection. A bridge between His heavenly resources and our earthly needs.

Today, God’s ladder might look like:

  • An encouraging word from a friend. A text message that says, “I’m praying for you.” That word lifts your spirit—like an angel bringing hope from heaven.
  • A small opportunity that opens a bigger door. Maybe you’re given a tiny job or task that seems insignificant, but it leads to something bigger, that you never imagined.
  • A quiet moment of prayer. You might be pouring out your worries to God in the morning, and suddenly you feel peace—like the presence of angels descending to comfort you.
  • A sudden insight or idea. You’re going about your day and a fresh idea pops into your mind—one that could transform your situation or lead to a breakthrough.
  • A financial provision that arrives just in time. You didn’t see it coming, but God did. He sent it down the ladder of His promise and into your hands.
  • A child’s innocent faith. Just like our daughter’s cardboard cat house, sometimes the faith of a child can be the ladder through which God sends blessing.

Jacob’s ladder was real, and it was a sign that God’s activity is always going on—whether we see it or not. God is still active in your life, sending help, hope, and provision down His ladder.

Your Part: Stay awake to His presence.

Jacob almost missed it. He didn’t know God was there until he woke up. Let’s not miss it. Let’s be awake, ready to recognize His ladder in every situation:

  • When you’re stuck, ask God: “Where is Your ladder?”
  • When you’re hopeful, thank Him: “Thank You for the ladder that’s already connecting me to Your promises.”
  • When you’re unsure, rest in the truth: God’s ladder is never taken down. It’s permanent. It’s His promise that He’s always at work—ascending, descending, blessing.


Lord, open my eyes to see Your ladder today. Help me recognize the ways You’re reaching into my life with Your love and provision. I choose to believe that even when I feel stuck, You are still active and present, guiding me step by step. Amen.

Chapter 11

Wake Up to God’s Ladder

Jacob said, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.” He had been asleep—literally and spiritually—until he had that dream of the ladder. When he woke up, he was no longer the same. He realized that God’s blessing had been with him all along.

The same is true for us today.
We can be physically awake—going to work, running errands, even doing church activities—and still be spiritually asleep. We can be so caught up in our routines, problems, or even our own dreams that we miss the ladder of God’s provision and presence right beside us.

What puts us to sleep?

  • Routine and busyness. We’re so busy checking off to-do lists that we forget to pause and listen for God’s voice.
  • Fear and worry. Fear can weigh us down like a heavy blanket, making it hard to see the hope that God has for us.
  • Unbelief. We tell ourselves, “It’s just coincidence,” or “God doesn’t care about the small details,” and we close our eyes to the miracles He wants to show us.
  • Distractions. Social media, endless news, and the rush of life can drown out the gentle whispers of God’s Spirit.

What wakes us up?

  • Thankfulness. Gratitude opens our eyes to see the blessings we already have. It shifts our focus from what’s missing to what God has already provided.
  • Stillness. In quiet moments—whether in prayer, a walk, or simply sitting still—we can hear God’s gentle voice.
  • Childlike faith. Like our daughter with her cardboard cat house, simple acts of faith open the door for God to move.
  • Expectancy. Expecting God to show up—even in small things—puts our spiritual senses on alert. We start noticing the “angels on the ladder” in everyday life.


Lord, awaken my heart. Help me to see You at work in every situation. Open my eyes to Your ladder of blessing, and keep me from getting stuck in routine, fear, or doubt. Help me live each day with childlike faith and expectancy. Amen.

Reflection:
Ask yourself today:

  • Where have I been “asleep” to God’s presence?
  • What blessings am I missing because I’m distracted or worried?
  • How can I pause, even for a few minutes, to thank Him and expect His goodness?

Remember, Jacob didn’t build the ladder—it was already there. In the same way, God’s provision and presence are already there for you. All you need to do is wake up and say, “Surely the Lord is in this place.”

Chapter 12

Climbing God’s Ladder—Partnering with His Promises

We’ve seen that God’s ladder is always there—His way of reaching into our lives with blessing and hope. Now, the question is: how do we climb it? How do we actively partner with His promises?

Unlike a physical ladder we climb with our hands and feet, God’s ladder is spiritual. Climbing it is about aligning our hearts and actions with His ways. It’s about faith, obedience, and expectant living.

Here are some practical ways to “climb” God’s ladder:

  1. Believe He’s Present
    Jacob woke up and said, “Surely the Lord is in this place.” You start climbing God’s ladder when you believe He is near, even if you can’t see Him. Faith is the first step.
  2. Speak His Promises
    Jacob had received God’s promise of blessing. We have God’s promises in Scripture—His “ladder” of provision and care for us. Speak them out loud. Let them shape your thoughts and words. “Lord, I believe You are my Provider,” or “I know You will never leave me.”
  3. Act with Expectancy
    When Jacob worked with the flocks, he took simple actions that aligned with what God had shown him. Likewise, take small steps of faith that reflect your trust in God. If you’re believing for provision, save a little, give a little, plan a little. These small acts of obedience are like steps on the ladder.
  4. Keep Your Eyes Open
    Jacob noticed the branches, the flocks, and the water troughs. In our lives, God often uses everyday situations to reveal His provision. Pay attention to what’s in front of you—an opportunity, a nudge, or an idea. God might be using it as a step on His ladder.
  5. Stay Humble and Grateful
    Jacob knew that the increase in his flocks wasn’t just his own doing—it was God’s blessing. Stay humble, acknowledging that every good thing comes from above. Gratitude keeps your heart soft and your eyes open.
  6. Pray for Guidance
    Jacob was in constant conversation with God—he had dreams, visions, and direction. You can do the same. Invite God into every decision: “Lord, show me where Your ladder is today. Guide my steps.”

Reflection:

  • What promises has God given you that you need to climb toward?
  • Are you taking small steps of faith, even when you can’t see the whole picture?
  • Are you watching for God’s “branches” and opportunities?

God’s ladder isn’t about striving—it’s about trusting and partnering with Him. He’s already at work, and He invites you to join Him in the process.


Father, thank You for the ladder of blessing You have placed in my life. Help me to climb it by faith, one step at a time, trusting that You are always near and always good. Amen.

Chapter 13

Full Nets and Empty Boats

The Hidden Power of Imagination

In the story of Peter’s miraculous catch (Luke 5), there’s a striking image that is easy to overlook. Peter’s nets were overflowing with fish—yet at first, his boat was still empty. It wasn’t until he called for help that the fish were gathered into the boats, filling them to the point of sinking.

This image—full nets but empty boats—invites us to see a deeper spiritual truth. Could it be that sometimes we have fullness in our spirit, yet emptiness in our soul? That what is complete and abundant in the unseen realm must still be transferred into the visible realm of our lives?


Fullness in the Spirit—Emptiness in the Soul

Scripture says that as believers, we are blessed with “every spiritual blessing in Christ” (Ephesians 1:3). In the spirit, there is no lack—no shortage of wisdom, creativity, provision, or healing. Like Peter’s net, there is a fullness that exists in the unseen.

Yet our soul—our mind, will, and emotions—can feel empty. We may feel stuck, discouraged, or like there’s a gap between what God says is ours and what we experience.


The Bridge of Imagination

This is where imagination becomes our unseen partner. Our imagination—our God-given ability to see what is not yet visible—acts like Peter’s net, drawing the catch out of the water and into our daily lives.

Jacob used imagination in Genesis 30: he saw in his mind how the flocks would be influenced by the branches. He acted on that inner vision, and it shaped what appeared in the natural world.

When we use our imagination for good—to picture healing, to see our finances flourishing, to visualize God’s promises—it helps bridge the gap between fullness in the spirit and emptiness in the soul. It aligns our mind and emotions with the spiritual truth of abundance.


Is Our Imagination More Powerful Than We Realize?

Absolutely!
The Bible tells us:

“Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power that is at work within us” (Ephesians 3:20).

Our imagination isn’t just daydreaming—it’s a spiritual tool that partners with God’s power to bring the invisible into the visible. When Jesus said to Peter, “Let down your nets,” He was inviting Peter to act on what He spoke, but also to envision abundance where there had been none.


Practical Ways to Use Imagination in Faith

  • Look at symbols—like Jacob’s branches or our toy ladder. Let them spark faith.
  • Visualize God’s promises—see yourself living in healing, provision, and peace.
  • Speak words that match your vision—like Peter, declare, “Because You say so, I will…”
  • Act in alignment—even small steps can draw what is in the spirit into your everyday life.

Reflection
Are there areas in your life where your “nets” (spirit) are full, but your “boat” (soul) feels empty? What images or symbols can you place before your eyes to keep your imagination engaged with God’s promises?



Lord, thank You for the gift of imagination. Help me to use it as a tool of faith, to see and speak what You have promised. Teach me how to bridge the gap between fullness in my spirit and emptiness in my soul, so that my whole life reflects Your abundance. Amen.

Chapter 14

Abraham—Imagination as the Gateway to Faith

Abraham’s story is one of the clearest examples of how God uses our imagination to draw His promises into reality. Romans 4:17 says God spoke of Abraham as a “father of many nations” before he ever had a single child. He gave Abraham a promise that seemed impossible in the natural.

To help Abraham’s faith grow, God used a vivid image:

“Look now toward heaven, and count the stars if you are able to number them. So shall your descendants be.” (Genesis 15:5)

By looking at the stars, Abraham engaged his imagination. He didn’t just hear God’s words—he saw them in his mind’s eye. Every night when he looked at the sky, he was reminded of the promise, and his imagination stirred his faith.


Imagination and Action—Partners in Manifestation

Abraham’s imagination was not idle. It shaped his decisions:

  • He stopped identifying as “childless.”
  • He spoke and acted as though the promise was real.
  • He and Sarah conceived Isaac because they “judged Him faithful who had promised” (Hebrews 11:11).

This is the same principle we saw with Jacob’s branches and Peter’s nets. Abraham used his imagination to see the stars, and then he acted in alignment with what he saw.


How Can We Use This Today?

Just like Abraham, we can:
Use symbols—like the stars for Abraham, or ladders and branches for us—to anchor our vision.
Fill our imagination with what God says, not just what we see.
Speak God’s promises out loud—let our words match the inner vision.
Take steps of faith, even small ones, that align with what we believe.


Reflection
What promises has God made to you that feel impossible? What symbols or images can you keep before your eyes to strengthen your faith? Are there steps of faith you can take today, even if they seem small?



Father, thank You for the power of imagination. Help me to see with the eyes of faith—like Abraham saw the stars—so I can live in the fullness of Your promises. Teach me to speak, act, and believe in ways that draw heaven’s abundance into my life. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chapter 15

Imagination as a Ladder

for Healing and Opportunity

Imagination is more than just daydreaming—it’s a ladder between our spirit and soul, a bridge that can bring heaven’s power into our lives. In Genesis 28, Jacob saw a ladder reaching from earth to heaven. He said, “Surely the Lord is in this place, and I did not know it.” God was showing him that there’s always a connection between the seen and unseen—if we are awake to it!


Healing the Body—A Ladder of Imagination

Many times, Jesus said, “Your faith has healed you.” Faith often begins in the imagination. The woman with the issue of blood (Mark 5) imagined herself touching the hem of Jesus’ garment and being healed. Her imagination moved her to action.

In the same way, when we imagine ourselves healthy and whole, we’re aligning our soul (mind, will, emotions) with the reality of God’s promises in our spirit. Our imagination becomes a ladder that carries the healing power of God from our spirit to our body.


New Opportunities—Climbing Higher with Imagination

Opportunities can also come when we allow our imagination to dream. In Luke 5, Peter had fished all night and caught nothing. But Jesus said, “Put out into deep water.” Peter didn’t see the fish, but he listened to Jesus and imagined the possibility of abundance. His imagination became the ladder that moved him from empty nets to overflowing boats.


Practical Steps for Using Your Imagination as a Ladder

See Yourself Whole – If you’re believing for healing, don’t just speak it—picture yourself healthy and strong, enjoying life, doing what you love.

See Yourself Blessed – If you’re believing for provision or promotion, use a symbol (like our toy ladder or a verse of Scripture) and imagine yourself already there.

 Speak and Act – Let your words and actions match what you’re imagining. Like Jacob placing the branches where the animals fed, create practical reminders in your life of what you believe.

Trust God’s Presence – Like Jacob said, “Surely the Lord is in this place,” remind yourself that God is with you, even if you don’t see Him yet. His presence is the foundation of your ladder.


A Personal Reflection
I often think about how our daughter’s cardboard cat house became the bridge that brought “Little Guy” into our lives. Her imagination wasn’t just wishful thinking—it was a ladder of faith that reached into our family and brought a new companion home.



Father, thank You for the gift of imagination. Help me to use it as a ladder of faith, climbing higher into Your healing, provision, and opportunities. Teach me to see with the eyes of my spirit, to speak Your Word boldly, and to act in faith. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chapter 16

Casting the Net of Your Imagination

When Jesus stood in Peter’s boat, He gave an instruction that changed everything: “Put out into deep water, and let down your nets for a catch.” Peter’s response shows the journey of every believer: “Master, we’ve worked hard all night and caught nothing. But because you say so, I will let down the nets.”

Peter’s empty nets were like our own empty dreams—efforts that didn’t produce fruit, work that felt in vain. But Jesus invited Peter to see differently. He challenged Peter to use his net again, not just with his hands, but with faith and imagination.


Your Imagination is Your Net

Imagination is like a net you cast out into the waters of possibility. It stretches out into places you can’t physically reach. When you imagine God’s promises coming true, you’re letting down your net into the depths of His faithfulness.

Just as Peter’s net pulled in a catch beyond anything he’d seen before, your imagination can gather in blessings that were always there, waiting for you to reach out in faith.


How to Cast Your Net of Imagination

Get Jesus in Your Boat
Peter’s turning point wasn’t just the net—it was the presence of Jesus in the boat. Invite Him to sit at the center of your thoughts. Surrender your imagination to Him.

Trust Beyond Past Disappointments
Peter had fished all night and caught nothing. Maybe you’ve “fished” for years—dreamed, tried, worked hard—but seen no results. Let Jesus’ words fill you with fresh expectation. Your net of imagination works best when you cast it out again in faith.

See What Others Can’t See
The fish were there all along, but Peter couldn’t see them. Sometimes the blessings are invisible until faith and imagination work together. When you imagine God’s promises, you’re opening your eyes to what’s already possible in His Kingdom.

Expect Overflow
Peter’s net didn’t just bring in enough fish for himself—it was so full that he needed help to gather the abundance. Your imagination, too, can bring in blessings beyond your own needs, spilling over to bless others around you.


A Net of Faith and Imagination

We often think of imagination as “daydreaming,” but it’s far more than that. In Scripture, faith itself is described as the substance of things hoped for (Hebrews 11:1). That substance begins in the unseen—right where your imagination lives.

  • Imagination helps you see God’s promises as real.
  • It gathers up the invisible blessings and brings them into your reality.
  • Like a net, it draws in the harvest of faith you’ve planted.

Questions to Reflect

  • What promises of God are you seeing in your spirit today?
  • What “deep water” is Jesus asking you to cast your net into?
  • Have you given up casting because of past disappointments?


Lord, I give You my imagination—my net. Teach me to cast it out in faith, to see what You see, and to believe that You have more for me than I can even imagine. Fill my net with blessings, not just for me, but for everyone You’ve called me to bless. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chapter 17

From Invisible to Visible: The Fisherman’s Secret

Imagine a fisherman standing at the edge of a lake. The water is calm and blue. On the surface, there’s no sign of life—no fish to be seen, no ripples to hint at what lies beneath. But the fisherman knows a secret: just because you can’t see it, doesn’t mean it’s not there.

When the fisherman casts his net into the water, he’s reaching into the invisible realm. The fish are there—hidden, silent, moving in a world we cannot see. The net plunges down, disappearing for a moment as it enters this hidden world. Then, just as suddenly, the net reappears, bursting with the abundance that was always there but unseen.


The Net: A Bridge Between Realms

This is the mystery of the fisherman’s net: it is both visible and invisible. Above the water, you see the net’s edge. Below, it vanishes into the unseen depths. When it reappears, it carries the invisible into the visible world.

This is the same way your faith and your imagination work. Jesus said, “Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you” (Matthew 6:33). When He said this, He wasn’t just talking about religion or a far-off heaven—He was inviting us to reach into the invisible realm of God’s kingdom.


The Kingdom: The Invisible Realm

The kingdom of God is real, but it’s not always visible to the natural eye. It’s a realm of promise, healing, abundance, and purpose. When Jesus says to seek this kingdom, He’s saying:

  • Go deeper than the surface of life.
  • Reach with your faith and your imagination into the invisible world of the Spirit.
  • Pull into your life what was always there, waiting for you.

Just like the fisherman’s net, your imagination disappears for a moment when you use it—it leaves the visible world and enters the realm of dreams, faith, and spiritual reality. Then, just as suddenly, it reappears, bringing with it the blessings you couldn’t see before.


Faith and Imagination: Your Spiritual Net

  • Your faith is the edge of the net—it’s what you believe.
  • Your imagination is the net itself—it stretches, curves, and dives down where you cannot go.
  • When you cast it out—when you imagine God’s goodness and promises—you are fishing in the invisible realm.
  • What you bring back is the manifestation of God’s abundance in your life.

The Invitation: Dive Deeper

Jesus told Peter, “Put out into deep water, and let down your nets for a catch” (Luke 5:4). He’s still saying that to us today. Go deeper. Let your faith and imagination dive into the kingdom of God. Don’t be afraid of what you can’t see—God’s realm is teeming with abundance, waiting to be pulled into your world.


Reflection Questions

  • What blessings are you seeking to bring from the invisible into the visible?
  • How can you let your imagination and faith work together as a “net”?
  • Are there places where you’ve been content to fish only in the shallow water, when Jesus is calling you to go deeper?


Father, thank You that Your kingdom is real, even when I can’t see it. Teach me to cast out the net of my faith and imagination, to bring Your promises into my life. Help me to trust that even when I can’t see it, You are working in the invisible realm. Let my life overflow with the blessings You have prepared for me. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Chapter 18

Called to be a Miracle Worker?

What if I told you that your real calling as a Christian is to move things from the invisible world and make them appear in the visible world? Would that surprise you? It surprises a lot of people. Many of us have been taught to keep our heads down, be humble, and not expect too much. But what if that very humility is actually hiding a much bigger calling?


The Surprising Calling of the Christian

Throughout the Bible, we see people who partnered with God to bring what was unseen into the realm of sight and touch. Abraham believed in a child he couldn’t see. Moses called water from a rock. Elijah called fire from heaven. Jesus took five loaves and two fish and multiplied them to feed thousands. Each of them reached into the invisible world of faith and brought back something that changed lives.


Jesus: The Ultimate Example

Jesus said, “I only do what I see my Father doing” (John 5:19). What was He seeing? He was seeing the invisible kingdom of God—already complete, already abundant. He brought it into the visible world—healing the sick, feeding the hungry, calming the storms.

And then He said to us:

“Whoever believes in Me will do the works I have been doing, and they will do even greater things than these.” (John 14:12)

He was talking about you.


A New Perspective on Humility

Many of us have thought that humility means not expecting much, not wanting too much. But real humility is agreeing with what God says about you—even if it feels bigger than you imagined! If God says you’re called to bring heaven to earth, then agreeing with Him is the humble thing to do.


Imagination and Faith: Your Spiritual Tools

If we are indeed called to be miracle workers, then our imagination and faith are the tools we use to reach into the invisible world. It’s like Jesus telling Peter to let down the nets—He was teaching Peter to see abundance where there was emptiness, to trust that God’s supply was bigger than the natural world showed.


The Invitation: Becoming a Miracle Worker

  • Are you willing to let God stretch your faith?
  • Are you willing to imagine more than you’ve dared to before?
  • Are you willing to believe that He wants to work miracles through you?

If so, you’re already stepping into your real calling.


Reflection

  • What miracle has God put on your heart, even if you’re not sure how it will happen?
  • Where have you been afraid to dream bigger, because you didn’t think it was “humble”?
  • How can you start partnering with the invisible kingdom of God today?


Lord, open my eyes to see the invisible. Help me to see what You’re doing and to agree with it. Show me how to partner with You to bring Your kingdom from the invisible into the visible world. I’m willing—teach me to be a miracle worker for Your glory. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Final Chapter

From a Ladder to Miracles — Your Call to Wake Up

It all began with a simple, even playful thought: why not call this year “The Year of the Ladder?” A small toy ladder sat on our kitchen bench, a symbol—at first just a joke—that somehow started to manifest real ladders into our lives. Little did I know that this small idea was a whisper from God, nudging us into something far greater.

Now, as we come to the end of this journey together, I want to offer you another thought. It might seem a little bold, maybe even humorous at first—what if we renamed this year “The Year of Miracles?”

Not just to hope for miracles but to realize that God may actually be calling you—yes, you reading this—to step into your true identity as a miracle worker.

You’ve heard the stories—the net is already in the boat, but you have to cast it out. You’ve dreamed of ladders, branches, and nets; now it’s time to wake up those parts of your mind and heart that have been asleep.

It’s time to move from dreaming to doing, from seeing to acting.


Wake Up, Everyone!

You are not just a spectator. You are called to be an active participant in God’s kingdom.

  • Let down your net — cast your imagination and faith into the invisible realm, and watch God bring in the catch.
  • Climb your ladder — step up in your faith and purpose, moving higher into the calling God has placed on your life.
  • Peel your branches — prepare the environment where blessings will multiply and manifest in your life.

This is your moment. The net is in your boat. The ladder is before you. The branches are waiting.

God’s invitation stands:
Wake up! You are a miracle worker.

Will you step out in faith and answer that call today?


Thank you for journeying with me. May this Year of Miracles be the year your faith transforms the invisible into the visible, and your life becomes a testimony of God’s supernatural power at work.

Let down your net. Climb your ladder. Peel your branches. Wake up—and walk in the miracles God has already prepared for you.

Bonus Chapter

The Net is Full

You may be staring at an empty boat right now. You’re not alone—many of us have been there, seeing only what’s lacking. But let me remind you: in the story of Peter, the net was full while the boat was empty. Jesus asked Peter to let down his net, not because of what was already in the boat, but because of what was waiting in the invisible realm, just beneath the surface.

What if your net is already full, even if your boat looks empty?

This is an invitation to wake up the eyes of your imagination. To look beyond the empty boat and see the net, teeming with possibilities that exist in the spiritual realm, waiting for you to draw them in.

We live in a world that believes in invisible things. Every time you use a debit card, a credit card, or your phone to make a purchase, no one sees the money—yet everyone accepts that it’s there, moving unseen through computer networks. Even paper money, the cash we hold, is really just an idea—an agreement, a symbol of value that we all believe in.

What if moving resources from the spiritual world to the material world was just as real—and just as normal—as these transactions? What if God is ready to train you in this unseen world, but you’ve been unaware of His heavenly training school?

Here’s a simple invitation: place an object somewhere in your home that will remind you of this mystery.
A toy ladder, a picture, anything that speaks to your heart.
Let it be a silent signpost, a call to your imagination and your faith.

Begin to experiment. See what happens.
Watch for the surprising ways the invisible becomes visible, for the small signs that hint at bigger truths.
And as you do, let us know what you discover.
Share the stories of your own “full net,” so that together we can learn and grow in this journey of faith and imagination.

The net is full.
The boat may look empty, but it’s time to let down your imagination—and see what rises to the surface.

Thank You for Reading

Thank you for joining us on this journey of ladders, nets, and the beautiful mysteries of faith.
We hope these words have stirred your imagination.
And helped you sense the blessings waiting to be gathered.

May you discover the full nets in your life, even when the boat seems empty.
May you climb every ladder, let down every net, and never stop dreaming with God.

With love and gratitude.

Tony Egar
Brisbane, Australia

www.tonyegar.com

Can a Christian expose the Thief: What does the Bible say?

Proverbs 6:31

Yet if he is caught, he must pay sevenfold,
though it costs him all the wealth of his house.

Amazon
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FG51SQCC

Google Play
https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=JYVpEQAAQBAJ

Introduction:
The Empty Way of Life

Modern Western Christianity is an empty way of life.
Yes, we get saved.
Yes, we believe in Jesus.
But somewhere along the way, the simple gospel was traded for a marketing campaign.

We are told—week after week—that tithes and offerings are the keys to unlocking blessings. “Give to the church, and God will bless your finances.” Yet all that usually does is make the preacher rich… and you poor.

It’s become a cycle. A system.
Every Sunday, a little speech accompanies the offering basket. Promises of divine wealth are handed out like coupons—if you just sow your seed first. If you bless the church financially, God will bless you financially. But is that what the Bible really says?

There’s a scripture—1 Peter 1:18–19—that tells a different story.
It dares to tell the truth, in plain sight:

“For you know that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you were redeemed from the empty way of life handed down to you from your ancestors, but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect.” (1 Peter 1:18–19, NIV)

The Bible does not say we are redeemed by giving.
It does not say we are redeemed by money.
It says we are redeemed by blood.

The precious blood of Jesus.

Chapter 1
Can the Blood Redeem? YES

Let’s be honest: most of the modern church uses scripture the same way a politician uses a slogan—out of context, for personal gain, and stretched to fit a desired result.

They have their three unspoken rules:

  1. Use scripture out of context.
  2. Use scripture with the wrong motive.
  3. Exaggerate the results.

So I thought—why not play by their rules for a moment?

Let’s look again at 1 Peter 1:18–19.
Let’s take it apart and apply it differently—not as doctrine for a pulpit, but as a personal prophetic encouragement for someone in real pain.

Here’s what that scripture really says:

  1. You were redeemed from the empty way of life.
  2. Handed down from your ancestors.

In its true context, this refers to salvation. The “empty way” is religion without power. The “ancestors” refer to the Law—the system of works and rituals that could never save. But what if—just what if—we applied this personally, not theologically?

Imagine:
You just left church, having given what little money you had, hoping for a miracle.
You’re driving home with less than you arrived.
The preacher is driving off in a luxury car.

But before you leave the parking lot, you run into me.
Not a pastor. Not an expert. Just a friend.

You share your struggles. Your financial fears. Your despair.
I listen—and I give you a word. Not a teaching. A word.

I say to you:

“You will not be rescued from your financial empty way of life with tithes and offerings.”
“You will be rescued by the blood of Jesus.”
“Because poverty is a curse—and the blood of Jesus broke every curse.”

Then I quote Galatians 3:

“Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us… He redeemed us in order that the blessing given to Abraham might come.” (Galatians 3:13–14)

You go home and tell your wife. She’s hopeful, but still cautious.
You both wait and watch.

So what is it?
Is the church right? Will your “seed” bring the harvest?
Or is the Bible right—that we are redeemed by the blood, not by our wallets?

Galatians 3 warns:

“All who rely on the works of the law are under a curse.”
“Cursed is everyone who does not continue to do everything written in the Book of the Law.”

And here’s the hard question:
Are tithes and offerings a form of self-effort?
When have you given enough? Did you do it with the right motive? Were you giving to get?

Galatians continues:

“Clearly no one who relies on the law is justified before God, because ‘the righteous will live by faith.’”

Now here’s a little cheeky thought:

Even the Grace Preachers—those who preach freedom from the Law—still tell you to give money.
I heard Joseph Prince say he believes Christians should tithe.
Yes, even the kings of “grace” won’t let you off the hook financially.

So now it’s your decision.

Would you like to prosper because you gave to a church?
Have you tried that for a few years?

Or…
Would you like to prosper because you trust in the blood of Jesus?

You decide.

Chapter 2
Miracles at 30,000 Feet

There are some stories so full of God’s presence, they echo long after you’ve heard them. This one took place in the sky — high above Siberia — where there were no pulpits, no offering plates, and no choir singing “Just as I Am.” Just snow below, wind around, and a man of God sitting quietly in his seat.

R.W. Schambach was known for fire, boldness, and faith. He preached like every word would bring down the heavens — and sometimes, it did. His ministry shook tents and towns, but it was never based on gimmicks or guilt-driven offerings. His message was simple: “You don’t have any trouble. All you need is faith in God.”

On this particular day, he and his daughter, Donna, were flying into Moscow for a gospel crusade. As the plane crossed the vast, frozen stretches of Siberia, the pilot interrupted the flight with troubling news. A strong headwind was draining fuel faster than expected. If it didn’t change, they’d be forced to land somewhere in Siberia — a cold, uncertain, and potentially dangerous delay.

At that moment, while concern rose among the crew and passengers, Schambach didn’t stand up and preach. He didn’t take an offering. He didn’t ask who had tithed that week or who had sown a seed for protection. He just prayed.

“Father,” he said gently, “we ask You to turn this headwind around. We declare in Jesus’ name that You’ll give us a tailwind instead. Let Your power be known, even in the skies.”

Minutes later, the pilot’s voice returned — this time with awe:
“The headwind has stopped. We now have a strong tailwind. We’ll arrive early in Moscow.”

Now here’s the question:
Was that prayer answered because R.W. Schambach had given money to someone?
Did God shift the wind because of a good deed or a donation receipt?

Or…
Was the prayer answered because Schambach prayed as a son?
Was the prayer answered because of the blood of Jesus — which opens heaven’s throne to anyone bold enough to believe?

Scripture says in Hebrews 10:19:

“Therefore, brothers and sisters, since we have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus…”

That tailwind didn’t come because of tithes or offerings.
It came because of access.

The blood of Jesus gave Schambach — and gives every believer — access to the throne of grace. Not as beggars. Not as debtors. But as sons and daughters. And when sons speak in faith, heaven listens.

Those flight attendants — who had just minutes before rejected the gospel — were now trembling. “Your preacher prayed,” one of them said, “and it actually happened.”

They wanted to know more about this Jesus.

By the time the plane touched down in Moscow, the wind had shifted more than just the aircraft. It had shifted hearts. Those attendants came to the meetings, gave their lives to Christ, and stepped into the same blood-bought access that had turned the skies.

So I ask you again:

Was it giving money that moved God?
Or was it the blood of Jesus that gave one man the confidence to ask for a miracle — and receive it?

You decide.

Chapter 3
Headwinds, Tailwinds, and One Prophetic Word

Headwinds and tailwinds don’t just happen at 30,000 feet.

Sometimes they show up in your inbox, in a courtroom, at the bank, or from someone with influence over your life. In the Bible, we see this same pattern — resistance and assistance — headwinds and tailwinds — in the Book of Ezra.

Let me take you back for a moment.

The Book of Ezra tells the story of the Jewish people returning from exile in Babylon. They had been taken from their land, their temple destroyed, and their worship silenced for seventy years. But then, out of nowhere, a miracle happened: King Cyrus, the ruler of Persia, issued a decree that the Jews could go home and rebuild the temple in Jerusalem.

Tailwind.

He even sent silver and gold, temple articles, and allowed them to take offerings from their neighbors. Why? Because God stirred his heart. That’s what the Bible says. Not a tithe. Not a bribe. Not a deal. Just the divine stirring of a king’s heart.

But then came King Artaxerxes, the next ruler. And he brought a headwind.

He read through the records, saw that the Jews had a history of rebellion, and shut the whole project down. No building. No progress. No help. Just resistance. The people were discouraged, defeated, and broke. They stayed stuck for years — not because they weren’t faithful — but because there was no assistance.

And then, almost twenty years later, a new king, Darius, rose to power. But this time, something shifted.

A prophet named Haggai spoke.

It wasn’t long. It wasn’t elaborate. It was a simple prophetic word: “Is it a time for you yourselves to be living in your paneled houses, while this house remains a ruin?” (Haggai 1:4)

That word stirred the people. They got up, picked up the tools, and started building again — even without permission.

And guess what? When King Darius heard about it, he didn’t stop them. In fact, he did the opposite.

He issued a decree to support the building of the temple.
He gave them funds from the royal treasury.
He even commanded their enemies to stay far away.

Tailwind.

All because of one prophetic word.

So here’s the question: What if the people resisting you today suddenly started helping you?
What if the headwinds in your life turned into tailwinds?
What if God stirred someone’s heart to bless you — just because He wanted to?

Let me go further: Can a normal Christian give a prophetic word?
Not a preacher. Not a prophet on TV. Just a believer.
Someone who knows Jesus.
Someone like me.
Someone like you.

Here’s my prophetic word to you, the one from Chapter 1:

“You will not be rescued from your financial empty way of life with tithes and offerings.”
“You will be rescued by the blood of Jesus.”
“Because poverty is a curse — and the blood of Jesus broke every curse.”

That’s not theology. That’s testimony.
That’s not manipulation. That’s a declaration.
That’s not a fundraiser. That’s freedom.

If one prophetic word from Haggai could shift an empire — and turn a king into an ally — why not today?
Why not your situation?
Why not your life?

Because one word from God…
Can move a king.
Can turn resistance into assistance.
Can turn poverty into provision.

Tailwinds are coming.

You decide.

Chapter 4
A New Reformation:

Built on the Blood, Not on the Sand

In 1517, a German monk named Martin Luther walked up to the Castle Church in Wittenberg and nailed a piece of paper to the door. On it were 95 Theses — statements of protest against the practices of the Catholic Church. The most explosive issue?

Indulgences.

The Church had started selling forgiveness. They told the people that if they gave money, they could buy their way out of purgatory. They could purchase pardon for themselves — or even for their dead relatives.

It was a cash-for-cleansing scam.

And it split the Church.

What started as a protest turned into a Reformation — one that would shake Europe, birth new movements, and fracture the Church for the next 500 years.

But Luther’s core message was simple:
We are saved by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone — not by works, not by payment, not by any church institution.

Fast forward five centuries.

And now, in the modern Western church, we’ve done something hauntingly similar.

We may not be selling indulgences…
But we’ve started selling blessings.

“If you give, God will bless you.”
“Sow a seed, and you’ll get a harvest.”
“Send in your tithe, and God will open the windows of heaven.”

Let me ask plainly:
Are we building the modern church on grace… or on transaction?

Is it possible the Prosperity Gospel — though wrapped in Scripture — is just a 21st-century version of indulgences?

We’ve replaced “buy your forgiveness” with “buy your breakthrough.”
We’ve exchanged “give to the church to escape purgatory” with “give to the preacher to escape poverty.”

Different language.
Same lie.

It’s time for another split.

Not a denominational one.
But a spiritual one — a prophetic break from false foundations.

Because prosperity is real.
Blessing is biblical.
Breakthrough is available.

But the foundation matters.

“For no one can lay any foundation other than the one already laid, which is Jesus Christ.”
(1 Corinthians 3:11)

Jesus is not a business partner.
He’s not an investment broker.
He is the Lamb of God, whose blood purchased every blessing — salvation, peace, healing, and yes, even provision.

Let’s ask the hard question:

Are we receiving heaven’s help because we’ve given the right amount…
Or because we’ve trusted in the blood of Jesus?

Because when the storm hits, money won’t hold your house up.

And Jesus warned us about that kind of religion:

“The rain came down, the streams rose, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell with a great crash.”
(Matthew 7:27)

That’s what happens when we build on sand.

When we build on performance.
When we build on pressure.
When we build on percentage points instead of the Person of Jesus.
It’s time to rebuild the Church on the rock again.

Not on hype.
Not on manipulation.
Not on the bank account of the faithful.

But on the blood of Jesus, which speaks a better word than any offering plate.

Chapter 5
The Thief in the Camp

There is one thing you will almost never hear from a modern Western pastor:

“I was wrong.”

They won’t admit they misquoted the Bible.
They won’t say their promises didn’t come true.
They won’t apologize for preaching that if you give more, you’ll get more — even when you didn’t.

When the offerings don’t work, when the “hundredfold return” never comes, when your debt piles higher and your prayers go unanswered — the pulpit goes silent.

Except for the one testimony.

Always — always — there’s a random testimony.

Someone says they sowed a seed on Sunday, and by Tuesday, they got a check in the mail.
And that one story becomes the fuel to keep the engine of false hope running.

It’s not that God never blesses. He does.
It’s not that miracles never happen. They do.

But we have to ask a harder question now:
Are these blessings from heaven — or are they used as bait by men?

When Joshua led Israel into the Promised Land, they had a string of victories — until they came to a small place called Ai. A city they should have defeated easily.

Instead, they lost.

“Then the Lord said to Joshua, ‘Stand up! What are you doing down on your face? Israel has sinned; they have violated my covenant… They have taken some of the devoted things; they have stolen, they have lied.’”
(Joshua 7:10–11)

Joshua was on his face praying.
God told him to stop praying and find the thief.

Until the thief was exposed, the blessings would stop.

Could this be the moment we’re in?

Is there a thief in the camp?

Has the modern Western Church taken what belongs to God and turned it into profit?

Have the very people entrusted with spiritual leadership been using God’s name to write their own checks?

In California, a former assistant pastor named Curtis Frank Lemons was sentenced to prison for stealing $200,000 from his church — while the founding pastor lay dying.

He wrote himself a cashier’s check from the church account.
He laundered the money.
He betrayed the trust of the flock — at the moment they were most vulnerable.

Yes, he accepted responsibility.
But how many more have stolen, and never confessed?

We’re not just talking about stolen money — but stolen trust.
Stolen hope.
Stolen truth.

And Jesus doesn’t take that lightly.

“Jesus entered the temple courts and drove out all who were buying and selling there. He overturned the tables of the money changers… ‘My house will be called a house of prayer,’ but you are making it a den of thieves.”
(Matthew 21:12–13)

The only time Jesus got violent… was with religious people using money to corrupt worship.

Today, it’s not just tables that need flipping.
It’s platforms.
It’s TV empires built on manipulation.
It’s networks of preachers who smile while making promises they can’t deliver.

Do we need a public apology from every Western preacher who ever used Malachi 3 out of context?
Every TV evangelist who promised miracles in exchange for money?
Every “seed faith” peddler who forgot to mention that Jesus already paid the full price?

Until the thief is dealt with, we will keep losing battles we should be winning.

Because assistance from heaven does not come through religious fraud.

It comes through faith in the blood of Jesus.

If all the people who were once against you suddenly turned to help you — that would be prosperity.

But maybe what’s holding us back is not just spiritual warfare.
Maybe it’s not the devil.
Maybe it’s a thief in the temple.

And maybe, just maybe…
God is waiting for someone to stand up like Joshua, look the camp in the eye, and say:

“Something is wrong — and we will not move forward until we deal with it.”

Chapter 6
The Judas Foundation

It was Jesus who made the decision.

He knew what Judas would do.
He knew what was hidden in his heart.
Yet He still put Judas in charge of the money bag.

“He was a thief; as keeper of the money bag, he used to help himself to what was put into it.”
(John 12:6)

Jesus wasn’t ignorant.
He was testing.
Not testing Himself — but testing Judas.

And maybe, just maybe, He’s been doing the same with us.

The Judas spirit is alive and well in the Church.

Judas wasn’t greedy all at once.
It started slowly — a few coins here, a secret deal there.
But when Mary poured perfume on Jesus’ feet, Judas finally snapped.

“Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor?” (John 12:5)

He made it sound righteous.
He made it sound generous.

But it was a cover.
A cloak of false virtue hiding a self-serving agenda.

And the same cloak has been worn in pulpits across the world.

Modern preachers talk about the poor.
They talk about the mission.
They talk about “spreading the gospel.”

But like Judas, they take from the bag.

In Australia, a 42-page whistleblower report exposed how Hillsong Church charged Compassion International $1 million a year just for the right to promote child sponsorship at their events.

Not out of love.
Not out of mission.
But for profit.

A Christian charity, with a reputation for integrity, was treated like a brand sponsor.

The same Jesus who flipped tables in the temple is still watching.
Still grieving.
Still calling for repentance.

The deal was cloaked in noble language: child sponsorship, strategic alliance, global mission.

But make no mistake — Judas used the same script.

He said it was “for the poor,” while he lined his pockets.

It was never about the poor.
It was about the profit.

And what happened to Judas?

He never apologized.
He never turned around.
He destroyed himself.

“Judas threw the money into the temple and left. Then he went away and hanged himself.”
(Matthew 27:5)

That is what unrepented deception does.
It doesn’t just harm others — it becomes self-destructive.

What if the modern church is walking the same path?

Lavish honorariums.
Private jets.
Paid vacations disguised as “mission trips.”
Secret deals hidden in “ministry partnerships.”
Money laundering. Sexual cover-ups. Public lawsuits.

And still — no apology.

Still, the same system remains in place:
Use the name of Jesus…
Use the face of the poor…
Charge for access…
And call it “kingdom business.”

But Jesus is not mocked.

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

He put Judas in charge of the money to see what he would do.

And perhaps Jesus has allowed the modern church access to wealth, platforms, and influence — not to bless them, but to test them.

Now the test results are in.
And we are seeing the fruit.

Not every preacher is Judas.
But the system has been infiltrated by the Judas model:
One who walks with Jesus publicly, but betrays Him privately — for thirty pieces of silver.

So now we must ask:
Is our foundation built on Judas… or Jesus?

Because Judas carried the bag — but Jesus carried the cross.
Judas served himself — but Jesus served the world.
Judas traded the blood — but Jesus shed the blood.

It is the blood of Jesus, not the schemes of man, that brings salvation and blessing.

“You were not redeemed with perishable things like silver or gold…but with the precious blood of Christ.”
(1 Peter 1:18–19)

We don’t need a new campaign.
We need a new foundation.
One that doesn’t require bribes, partnerships, or polished performances.

We need to return to the blood-soaked ground of Calvary.

There is still prosperity.
There is still provision.
But only when it flows from the Lamb who was slain, not the preacher who is paid.

Let the Judas churches fall.
Let the Jesus Church rise.

Chapter 7
The Blood Over the Dragon

There was a moment before the betrayal, so small it’s easy to miss.
A whisper in the shadows.
A decision made in secret.

“Then Satan entered into Judas…”
(Luke 22:3)

He wasn’t possessed at birth.
He didn’t begin with evil.
He walked with Jesus, saw miracles, heard truth.
But still — Satan entered him.

And now we ask:
Has the devil entered the modern Church?
Not with horns and smoke.
But with ideas.

Whispers.
Principles.
Twisted truth wrapped in scripture.

The same serpent that entered the Garden entered the upper room — and now he’s walked right through the back door of our sanctuaries.

He came with a teaching.
Not “worship Satan,” but “sow and reap.”
Not “serve the world,” but “invest in your miracle.”

It sounded scriptural.
It looked biblical.
But it dethroned the blood of Jesus.

“Give, and it shall be given unto you.”
Yes, Jesus said it.

But He never said, “Give money to preachers and I will make you rich.”
That came later — from another mouth.

And we swallowed it whole.

The church has been preaching “sow and reap” as if it’s the new gospel, building altars to a principle while abandoning the Person.

But principles don’t bleed.

Principles don’t hang on a cross.

Principles don’t rise from the dead.

We’ve built a golden calf from a law meant for harvests and called it “faith.”

But now the cracks are showing.

Testimonies of sowing and reaping are getting quieter.
The tithers still can’t pay rent.
The “offering” givers are still waiting for their promised breakthrough.
The pastors keep telling them it’s coming, but they know — it’s not.

Why?
Because you cannot overcome the devil by sowing seeds.

“They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony…”
(Revelation 12:11)

This is not a war you win with money.
This is a war you win with the blood.

Satan didn’t tremble when Judas held the bag.
He trembled when Jesus poured out His life.

The blood defeats the dragon.

Not your giving.
Not your tithe record.
Not your generous sowing.

Only the testimony of blood.

We have to stop testifying that “sowing works.”
We must start testifying that the blood has already worked.

“Now have come the salvation and the power
and the kingdom of our God,
and the authority of his Messiah.
For the accuser of our brothers and sisters…
has been hurled down.” (Revelation 12:10)

The dragon is enraged.
Because he knows his time is short.

So he’s turned his attention to the Church.
To those “who keep God’s commands and hold fast their testimony about Jesus.”
Not their testimony about sowing.
Not their testimony about success.
But their testimony about Jesus.

This is the moment we must return to the foundation.

Turn away from the lie that sowing money guarantees your miracle.
Turn back to the truth that Jesus IS the miracle.

The dragon was defeated in heaven.
He’s been cast to earth.
But the blood still speaks.

And when the Church lifts its voice,
not to boast about seed,
but to testify of the Lamb—
the dragon flees.

So today, we prophesy:

“You will not be rescued from your financial empty way of life with tithes and offerings.”
“You will be rescued by the blood of Jesus.”
“Because poverty is a curse—and the blood of Jesus broke every curse.”

The Church doesn’t need another campaign.
It needs a cleansing.
The devil was invited through sowing-based salvation.
He must be cast out by blood-based truth.

Let us rise.
Let us overcome.
Let us testify of the blood
And let the dragon be defeated once more.

Chapter 8
The Thief in the Temple

How do you spot the thief?

Jesus told us plainly:

“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy…” (John 10:10)

He wasn’t just speaking of the Devil—He was warning us about imposters in the flock.
Not every shepherd is true.
Not every church is holy.
Not every voice speaking over the offering plate belongs to God.

There is a sound in many sanctuaries that ought to make us tremble.
It is not the sound of praise—it is the sound of plunder.

“It’s time for the tithes and offerings,” they say,
and the people reach for their wallets
believing they are purchasing favor from God.

But Jesus never taught the tithe to His Church.

Search the red letters.
Search Acts, the epistles, the upper room.
You will not find one command to tithe under grace.
You will find giving, yes—joyful, voluntary, Spirit-led giving.
But not one call to tithe.

And yet, in today’s church:

  • Websites flaunt the tithe like a badge of honor.
  • Preachers say it is a hedge of protection.
  • Some even say, “If you don’t tithe, you’re cursed.”
    That is not Christianity.
    That is spiritual extortion.

That is theft.

So how do you spot the thief?

  • He preaches Malachi louder than he preaches Messiah.
  • He promises blessing for payment when the blood already paid it all.
  • He leads people back to Mount Sinai when Christ brought us to Mount Zion.

And yes—he collects a salary doing it.

Even now, some will say, “That’s harsh.”
But truth is not soft when the flock is being robbed.

Let’s talk plainly.

Creflo Dollar—one of the most visible prosperity preachers in America—stood on his stage in June 2022 and said something shocking:

“The teachings I’ve shared in times past on the subject of tithing were not correct.”

He admitted it.
He confessed to preaching error for years.
He called it “The Great Misunderstanding.”
He told his congregation to “throw away every book, every tape, every video” he ever made on tithing—unless it aligned with the grace of Christ.

And yet—he refused to apologize.

“I won’t apologize,” he said,
“’cause if it wasn’t for me going down that route, I would have never ended up where I am right now.”

Where is that, exactly?

Owning two private jets.
Owning two multimillion-dollar homes.
Owning offshore companies in the Bahamas through a shell corporation called World Heir. (Yes—World Heir.)

Preaching a new message, but keeping the money from the old one.
Correcting the doctrine, but not correcting the damage.

That’s not repentance.
That’s rebranding.

True humility would have looked different.

  • It would have included financial transparency.
  • It would have included restitution.
  • It would have said: “We deceived the people. Now we will restore them.”

Instead, the man who taught millions to “sow for a harvest” is now harvesting applause for his “courage,” while still living off the seeds he falsely gathered.

Church, wake up.

What would Martin Luther say if he stood in a megachurch today?
Would he sit quietly during the tithes and offerings segment?

No. He would rise.
He would take his hammer again.
He would nail to the front doors of these religious empires:

“The blood of Jesus Christ, not money, brought your blessing!”

Tithing did not open the windows of heaven.
The torn veil did.
The sacrifice did.
The blood did.

Let’s be clear:

  • Every church that still teaches tithing as law for the New Covenant is a thief.
  • Every preacher who promises blessings to the tither is stealing glory from the cross.
  • Every website that teaches tithing without repentance needs to come under divine correction.

This is not a minor issue—it is a theological cancer.

Jesus overturned tables for less than this.

If the Church wants revival, it must begin with repentance, not just for private sins—but for public doctrines that have robbed the poor, burdened the faithful, and shamed the cross.

Let a campaign arise.

Let someone of boldness and influence say:

“This ends here.”

Let churches publish their repentance.
Let pastors confess in front of their congregations.
Let giving be untangled from manipulation.
Let faith be restored to the gospel of grace.

Because the only true blessing flows from Calvary, not your bank account.
And the Church must stop saying,

“You’re blessed if you tithe,”
and start proclaiming,
“You’re blessed because He died.”

You want to spot the thief?

Watch what they say before the offering.
Watch how they talk about the blessing.
Watch whether their gospel leads you to Jesus—or to an ATM.

Because the true Shepherd laid down His life for the sheep.

The thief built a mansion with their wool.

Chapter 9
The Day the Thief Pays Back

For four hundred and thirty years, the Hebrews were not just enslaved—they were robbed.
Their freedom was stolen.
Their honor was stolen.
Their wages were stolen.
Generation after generation, the enemy said, “Work for me,” but never said, “Here’s your reward.”

Egypt stole 430 years of life—and thought God would never notice.
But Heaven keeps record.
And the Judge never forgets.

Then, suddenly, the Lord said:

“Tell every family to take a lamb. Without blemish. Without defect.
Slaughter it. Paint the doorway in blood.”

Not silver.
Not gold.
Not grain.

Blood.

And when the destroyer passed over the land, it looked for one thing:
Not tithes, not offerings—just blood.

“When I see the blood, I will pass over you. No destructive plague will touch you…” (Exodus 12:13)

The blood protected them.
The blood exempted them.
The blood stopped judgment from entering their homes.

And once the judgment fell—once Egypt wept and Pharaoh begged—the Lord said one more thing:

“Tell the Israelites to plunder their neighbors.” (Exodus 12:35–36)

The same hands that held the whip now handed over wealth.
The same mouths that had cursed them now opened to bless.
Unpaid wages were returned.
Disgrace was repaid with honor.
Funds for the future flowed into their hands.

Not because they tithed.
But because they were covered in blood.

This is a picture of our time.

The Church has been robbed.
Not by Egypt—but by pulpits.

Pastors who preach tithing as law—they are the thief.

They took our eyes off the Lamb.
They bound our wallets with fear.
They promised us God’s favor in exchange for money—favor already bought by the cross.

Now Heaven is stirring.

The Judge is at the door.
And the question is:

“Have you put the blood on your house?”

Not religion.
Not rituals.
The blood of Jesus—the spotless Lamb.

And here comes the next part:
The thief must pay.

“If the thief is caught, he must pay back sevenfold, even if it costs him all the wealth of his house.” (Proverbs 6:31)

So long as the thief hides, nothing is returned.
But when he is caught—when the lie is exposedjustice awakens.

And now, many are catching him.

  • The man who says tithing is required? That’s the thief.
  • The church that links blessing to money? That’s the thief.
  • The doctrine that replaces the cross with coins? That’s the thief.

Expose him—but not with your fists.
Not with a protest.
Not with arguments or Facebook debates.

Expose him in your heart.

Say quietly:

“I see the lie now. I reject it. I forgive the preacher.
But I will never again give to get. I will give because I am free.”

You don’t knock on his door.
You knock on Heaven’s.

You stand before the courtroom of God and say:

“I plead the blood. I am not here to beg—I am here to receive.
Justice is due. Restitution is written. I believe the thief is caught.
And I believe in the sevenfold return.”

This is not revenge. This is restoration.

And it’s coming.

You will see the same people who made life harder begin to help you.
You will watch the system that drained you now fund you.
You will see wealth return to your hands—pressed down, shaken together, and running over.

Not by manipulation.
Not by giving to get.
But by trusting the blood.

The cross paid it all.
But Heaven still remembers what was stolen from you.
And Heaven is not silent.

So release your faith:

  • The blood of Jesus protects me from the thief.
  • The courtroom of God hears my case.
  • My stolen years, stolen peace, and stolen provision are being returned—seven times over.
  • I forgive all. I resent none. But I still expect justice to be done—and to be seen.

And then say boldly:

“Here comes my stolen money…times seven.”

The Lamb has spoken.
The blood has been applied.
The thief has been caught.

Now, watch the windows of justice open.

Chapter 10

Here Jesus is rejecting the tither.

Luke 18

To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everyone else, Jesus told this parable: 

“Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. 

The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed:

‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. 

I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.’

“But the tax collector stood at a distance.

He would not even look up to heaven,

but beat his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on me, a sinner.’

“I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God.

For all those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.”


When Justice Arrives

What does it look like when Heaven rules in your favor?

Does justice fall like lightning?
Does the enemy stumble and collapse?

Yes.
But sometimes it is quieter than we imagined.
It comes not with noise, but with a shift.

The wind that was in your face…
Now fills your sails.

The resistance that tried to stop you…
Now builds your momentum.

The very king who once opposed the work of God…
Now writes letters, funds the mission, and commands the neighbors to help.

“The king should know… we are rebuilding the temple…” (Ezra 5:8)
“Then the king issued a decree: Leave them alone. Do not interfere.” (Ezra 6:6)
“Moreover, the expenses are to be fully paid out of the royal treasury…” (Ezra 6:8)

That is justice.
That is restitution.
That is the hand of the Lord.

And when they heard the decree of the king, the people of God rejoiced with joy that could not be measured.
Ezra says:

“They celebrated the dedication of this house of God with joy.”
“And the prophets of the Lord continued to encourage them.” (Ezra 6:16, 14)

Here is what justice looks like:

  • Joy where there was once sorrow.
  • Encouragement instead of fear.
  • Provision flowing from places that once said no.

That’s what’s about to happen for you.

Where the doors were shut, they will now be opened.
Where systems were designed to exhaust you, they will now empower you.
Where kings once said stop, they will now say go—and here’s the money to go with you.

That’s the justice of God.

And now Jesus tells us a story.

Two men walked into the temple.
One was a tither.
The other was a sinner.

The tither prayed proudly:

“I fast. I tithe. I’m not like these other people.”

But Jesus said:

“Only the sinner went home justified.” (Luke 18:14)

Why?

Because the blood speaks mercy, but the tithe speaks pride.
Because the tax collector trusted in God’s compassion, but the Pharisee trusted in his giving.

And in the courts of Heaven, only humility is heard.

This is why justice has been delayed for some—because they thought giving would earn them favor.
But favor does not flow through giving.
It flows through the cross.

We are not justified by how much we give.
We are justified by whom we trust.

That’s why Jesus said:

“Those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.”

And when justice comes, it will exalt the humble.

  • Your faithfulness will be remembered.
  • Your tears will be weighed.
  • Your prayers will be heard.
  • Your lost wages will be paid—sevenfold.

Expect it.

Expect headwinds to become tailwinds.
Expect hearts to soften where they were hard.
Expect policies, systems, supervisors, bank accounts, and leadership decisions to suddenly shift in your favor.

Don’t look for drama—look for direction.
Don’t look for a fight—look for the finger of God quietly writing a new decree.

Like in Ezra’s day.

Like in Jesus’ parable.

Like today.

And when it happens—when your joy returns, when the money comes back, when the same people who cursed you now assist you—don’t forget what made it all possible:

The blood of the Lamb.
Not your giving.
Not your fasting.
Not your works.

Just the blood.

And the prophets will still be needed.

They will still be there, encouraging the people, pointing them away from law and into grace, reminding them that the justice of God flows from the cross—and not from the collection plate.

So open your hands.
Open your heart.
Let justice flow like a river.

And say it out loud if you dare:

“The tide has turned. The thief has been caught.
The blood has spoken. My justice is here.”

And the prophets say:
Amen.

Chapter 11

Summary of Chapters 1–10

This book has traced a prophetic journey, exposing one of the most persistent and overlooked deceptions in the modern Western church: the misuse of tithing. Chapter by chapter, we have peeled back the layers of religious manipulation, self-interest, and deeply ingrained tradition to reveal a truth that has long been hidden in plain sight.

In Chapter 1, we began by asking a bold question: Can a Christian expose the thief? We challenged the silence and fear that surround confronting financial manipulation in the church, declaring that God is awakening His people to injustice.

Chapter 2 laid the foundation by calling believers back to the authority of Scripture—not traditions or sermons—urging us to check every doctrine against the Word. The Bereans tested Paul, and we must test our pastors.

Chapter 3 examined the misuse of Malachi 3, exposing how preachers manipulate this Old Testament passage to extract money by fear. The curse in that chapter was not written to New Covenant believers covered by the blood of Jesus.

In Chapter 4, we uncovered how the early church operated—not by the law of tithing but by Spirit-led generosity and shared abundance. We contrasted this freedom with modern systems that replicate religious control.

Chapter 5 asked a hard question: Is the church today like the camp of Joshua with a hidden thief? The blessings don’t flow because deception remains. We highlighted a real-life example of theft by a pastor, connecting ancient Scripture with modern exposure.

In Chapter 6, we looked at Judas—put in charge of the money. Like some modern leaders, he claimed to care for the poor but helped himself instead. Judas’ secrecy and self-destruction mirror the hidden financial abuse in the modern church.

Chapter 7 showed how Satan entered Judas, and asked: Has the Devil entered the church through false teaching on sowing and reaping? Revelation 12 reminds us that we overcome not by giving money, but by the blood of the Lamb and our testimony.

Chapter 8 taught how to spot the thief. Any church promoting tithing as a biblical obligation under the New Covenant is participating in theft. We revisited the story of Creflo Dollar, who admitted error but failed to offer restitution—highlighting how exposure without repentance still leaves damage.

Chapter 9 paralleled the Exodus story. Just as Egypt was judged after 430 years of theft, and the Israelites received restitution when the blood was applied, we too are called to trust in the blood of Jesus and expect justice. When the thief is caught, Proverbs says he must repay sevenfold.

And finally, in Chapter 10, we envisioned what that justice might look like. Like in Ezra, where resistance turned into assistance, and tailwinds replaced headwinds, we are entering a season of restoration. Jesus rebuked the tithing Pharisee and exalted the humble tax collector. So must we shift from performance to grace.

Now we stand at the door of justice—not knocking on people’s homes, but heaven’s courtroom—where blood speaks louder than money and mercy overrules manipulation. The thief has been seen. The people are waking up. And justice is coming.

Chapter 12

The Thief Is Exposed

Now Comes Justice

The thief has been exposed.

No longer hidden in robes, pulpits, or polished websites. No longer protected by tradition, silence, or fear. The mask has slipped. The illusion has shattered. And what we see now is clear: wherever pastors have taught that New Covenant believers must tithe to be blessed, they have preached a lie. Wherever churches have linked financial favor with giving 10%, they have robbed God’s people of grace. But now the thief is caught. And the Word of God says that when the thief is caught, he must repay sevenfold (Proverbs 6:31).

Justice is not just possible—it is promised.

This is the hour when the captives begin to dream again. The same God who judged Egypt after 430 years of bondage is moving again. And just like then, the blood of a lamb marks the difference between judgment and deliverance. In Moses’ day, God told the Israelites to place the blood of a lamb on their doorposts so the angel of death would pass over them. That night marked the beginning of justice. The next day, the wealth of the Egyptians was handed over.

But we have something even greater. The blood of Jesus is not on our doors—it is sprinkled on our hearts. His blood has redeemed us—not with silver or gold, but “with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect” (1 Peter 1:18–19). His blood silences the accuser, cancels every curse, and opens the gates to justice.

Now is the time to refresh this truth. Put that Scripture deep in your heart and mind. Memorize it. Meditate on it. Declare it. The blood speaks better things than tithes, offerings, or formulas. It speaks mercy, redemption, and divine repayment.

God is not unjust. He has seen the years of manipulation. He has heard the cries of those who gave out of fear, guilt, or obligation. He has recorded the widow’s two coins, the mother’s quiet tears, the father’s faithful service. And now—He repays.

Expect sevenfold.

Expect doors that were closed to swing wide. Expect help from those who once resisted you. Expect strength where there was weakness, favor where there was rejection, and restoration where there was theft. This isn’t about bitterness or revenge—it’s about righteous justice from a holy God.

You do not have to go knocking on doors. You only need to knock on the door of heaven’s courtroom with faith. Stand in the finished work of Christ, stand in the power of the blood, and stand in your divine right to expect restoration.

The thief is exposed.
The blood is enough.
And the justice of heaven is on the move.

Final Chapter

A Word from the Author

Dear reader,

Thank you for walking this journey with me. From the first page to the last, your time, attention, and hunger for truth have honored the message—and I believe heaven has taken notice.

This book was not planned long in advance. Just last week, a scripture dropped into my heart like a spark:
“For you know that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you were redeemed… but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect.” —1 Peter 1:18–19

That verse lit a fire. It opened my eyes again to the surpassing value of the blood of Jesus—and to how many believers have unknowingly traded that blood for a principle. That’s when I knew: it was time to expose the thief.

When Joshua exposed the thief in his camp, the tide of battle turned. Victory returned. The people began to win again. And I believe it’s time for all Christians to start winning again—not by tithing formulas, not by manipulation, not by the law of sowing and reaping used as a spiritual bribe—but by simple, raw, living faith in the blood of the Lamb.

I look forward to hearing your testimonies—of freedom, of favor, of provision coming back into your life not because of your money, but because of His mercy. When the blood of Jesus becomes our only boast, the courtroom of heaven moves on our behalf. And justice comes.

So go forward now, not with pressure or guilt, but with boldness and joy. The thief has been exposed. The blood is enough. And the victory is yours.

With faith for your future,

Tony Egar

Brisbane, Australia

www.tonyegar.com

A Word for the Financially Stressed

The Divine Pattern of Power and Purpose

Thus says the Spirit: “You were never meant to observe My power from a distance—you were called to walk in it.” The words of Jesus echo through eternity: “Whoever believes in Me will do the works I do, and greater works than these will he do” (John 14:12). You are not powerless. You are not an exception. You are the continuation of His ministry on Earth.

Jesus came as God, but He walked as a man filled with the Spirit to show you what’s possible for one fully surrendered. His miracles weren’t to dazzle—they were to demonstrate. He laid down divine privilege so that, through the Holy Spirit, you could pick up divine authority.

You are no longer a servant of the Law, condemned by sin. You are now a child of grace, washed, clean, and filled with resurrection life. The old system covered sin; the new one removes it entirely. You don’t just get a second chance—you get a new nature. You are the righteousness of God in Christ.

You are not waiting to die to receive life—you already have it. Jesus said, “Whoever believes in Me will never die” (John 11:26). That’s not poetry—it’s a reality. The same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead now quickens your mortal body. Even your bones carry promise.

Stop using your past as a blueprint for your future. The pain you’ve endured is not your inheritance. The failures you’ve survived are not your identity. The enemy wants you to say, “This is just how life goes.” But Heaven is declaring, “This is not how your story ends.”

Rise into the greater works. Rise into the fullness of Christ. Rise into the boldness of the Spirit. The world doesn’t need more spectators—it needs a people who know who they are. And you, beloved, were born for this hour.


Jubilee Is Not a Date—It’s a Person

Jesus is your Jubilee. Not a once-in-50-years celebration, but an eternal declaration. When He stood in the synagogue and said, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me… to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor,” He was revealing Himself as the very embodiment of restoration.

In Him, debts are canceled, prisoners are released, and captives come home. You’re not waiting for a shift in economy—you’re standing in the middle of God’s promise. Restoration isn’t just something you hope for; it’s someone you walk with.

You’ve lost time? He can redeem it. You’ve lost years to fear or addiction? He can restore them. You’ve lost relationships, joy, strength? He is the God who brings back better than before. The world may give compensation, but God gives multiplication.

You’re not in bondage to the past. You’re not a victim of your failures. You’re not defined by what didn’t happen. Jesus, your Jubilee, has stepped in. And when He enters, He restores what no man could ever replace.

Let the lie be broken that says, “Maybe it’s too late for me.” No—it’s not. You’re not expired. You’re not disqualified. You’re not behind schedule. You are exactly where the Lord can lift you into something new. He wastes nothing. He uses everything.

You carry beauty for ashes. You carry praise for heaviness. You carry hope for mourning. The world may see broken pieces—but God sees a vessel ready for glory.

So lift up your eyes. Your Redeemer lives. And He’s not watching from afar—He’s walking with you. This is not the season of surviving. This is the season of returning, rebuilding, and rejoicing.


A Prophetic Word for the Financially Pressed

To those pressed by hardship, weighed down by unpaid bills, empty fridges, and endless worry—hear this: God sees. God knows. God provides.

The Lord is not distant from your struggle. He walked this earth without a home. He multiplied loaves when there was no food. He provided coin from a fish when there was no silver. He understands lack—but He also commands abundance.

You are not forgotten. You are not forsaken. You are not alone. What you’re facing is not a sign of God’s absence—it’s a setup for His provision.

This is not the end. This is the stretching of your faith and the beginning of overflow. The pressure is real, but the promise is greater. God is not asking you to manufacture a breakthrough—He is asking you to trust Him for one.

Stop repeating the language of despair. Don’t say, “I’ll never get out.” Start declaring, “I serve a God of more than enough.” Poverty is not your portion. Shame is not your destiny. You were created to carry light, not burdens.

Let go of the idea that you have to earn God’s help. He gives because He’s good, not because you’ve been perfect. You don’t have to buy His attention—you already have it. He knows every tear, every fear, every moment you almost gave up.

This is the time to speak life over your finances, over your mind, over your future. Say it now: “I am not finished—I am flourishing. I will not sink—I will rise. I will not beg—I will bless.”

God is releasing ideas, opportunities, and favor. Expect solutions from unexpected places. Expect doors to open, bills to be paid, and peace to replace panic.

You will come through this—not barely, but boldly. And when you do, you’ll testify:
“God did not just carry me through—He lifted me up and made me whole.”

Amen.

Testimony: Mortgage Paid Off Supernaturally

Story: A woman named Betty King, a pastor in London, was facing intense financial pressure.
Not knowing where her provision would come from.
Shortly after, someone who had attended her meeting felt led by God to pay off her entire mortgage, completely unexpected and without strings attached.
This miracle launched a season of expanded ministry and renewed faith.

Source / URL:
https://www.charismamag.com/story/financial-miracle-mortgage-paid-off/

Emptiness leads to spiritual awakening

The prophetic message of a divinely instilled emptiness leading to spiritual awakening finds a tangible reflection in recent developments within the United Kingdom. In the past six months, a notable resurgence in religious engagement, particularly among the youth, has been observed—a phenomenon described as the “Quiet Revival.

According to a Bible Society report, church attendance among 18- to 24-year-olds in England and Wales has seen a significant increase, rising from 4% in 2018 to 16% in 2024. This surge is especially pronounced among young men, whose attendance grew from 4% to 21% over the same period . This trend suggests a collective response to an inner void, aligning with the prophetic notion that God created humanity with an inherent emptiness to draw individuals toward Him.

Further supporting this shift, the Church of England has announced a record £1.6 billion ($2.17 billion) spending plan for 2026–2028 to enhance clergy stipends and support financially struggling parishes. This decision follows a notable increase in church attendance in the UK, particularly among young men post-COVID, reversing long-standing trends of declining Christian participation in Western nations.

This revival is not confined to the UK. In the United States, similar patterns emerge. Reports indicate that Generation Z, particularly young men, are increasingly participating in religious activities, reversing decades of declining religious affiliation . Analysts suggest that the COVID-19 pandemic, which disproportionately affected Gen Z, may have catalyzed this renewed interest in religion as young people seek community and connection.

A Divine ache. The whole world groans.

These developments underscore the prophetic insight that spiritual emptiness is not a flaw but a divine design, prompting individuals to seek fulfillment through a relationship with God. The observed resurgence in faith among the youth serves as a testament to this truth, highlighting a global awakening that aligns with the prophetic message.

The whole world groans with a thirst it cannot name. A woman rises before dawn in Tokyo, a farmer prays under his breath in Kenya, a young man stares blankly at his phone in Los Angeles—all pierced by the same invisible longing. It is not cultural. It is not psychological. It is the echo of eternity in the soul. Romans 8:20 declares, “For the creature was made subject to vanity, not willingly, but by reason of Him who hath subjected the same in hope.” God Himself baked this emptiness into our design—not as a punishment, but as a holy invitation.

You were born with a divine ache that cannot be satisfied by success, sex, sensation, or even the solace of religion. It is Christ alone who satisfies. Yet how many wander, reaching for one counterfeit after another? Like Jeff and the fly—controlling creation for a moment, tasting power that didn’t come from heaven—we’ve flirted with forces beyond our understanding, mistaking Beelzebub’s tricks for divine favor. But that season is ending.

The Lord calls forth witnesses now. Not proud voices, but humble vessels through whom torrents of living water may flow. He said in Acts 1:8, “You shall receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you; and you shall be witnesses to Me.” Not performers. Not manipulators. Witnesses. Those who bear the image of the Invisible One through purity, prayer, and surrender.

This generation is not lacking in potential; it is starving for purpose. The Church must refuse the stage and return to the altar. We are not entertainers—we are intercessors. Prayer is our battlefield. Before we bind spirits in cities, we must bind the pride within ourselves. Before we prophesy to nations, we must kneel in the secret place.

Even children are crying for reality. In a world where demonic worship parades as art, Christianity must no longer be a whisper—it must be a consuming fire. Yet we must give without boasting, preach without pleading for money, and serve without spotlight. The Lord told one of His servants, “Don’t insult Me by complaining about the wages.” He is Jehovah Jireh. He funds His mission, not through gimmicks, but through glory.

There is a storm coming—one that will test every shallow foundation. This short season will shake even the most confident. Many who’ve never known trial will find themselves drowning. And the surprising truth? Many will choose rebellion, not righteousness. Why? Because they never knew Him. They knew church. They knew religion. But they didn’t know Him.

So rise up, dry bones. Let the Spirit breathe upon you. The thirst is not your curse—it is your compass. Follow it to the well that never runs dry.


Powerless Religion and the Cry for Real Authority

The true issue of mankind is not location, not legislation, not education—it is the unyielding rebellion of the heart. A better environment won’t save us. A cleaner planet won’t redeem us. We need transformation from the inside out, and only the Spirit of God can perform that surgery.

The heart of the matter is the matter of the heart.

Jesus said it plainly in John 3:17–18: He did not come to condemn but to save. Yet condemnation already rests upon those who refuse to believe. It is not merely the sin of immorality or idolatry that damns men—it is the rejection of Christ. The Spirit convicts of sin because they believe not on Him.

Even now, the mystery of lawlessness works. The beast system rises, clothed in commerce and cloaked in ideology. Revelation 17 speaks clearly: the whore rides the beast, drunk with the blood of saints, but her judgment is sure. God has set it in their hearts to fulfill His will—even their evil serves His purposes until the words of God are fulfilled. Babylon will fall.

Yet the Church is not called to flee in fear—we are called to rule in love. Every believer, no matter how small their platform, has been given a sphere of influence. You are a leader. You set the tone. But remember: those who rule must first be ruled. We must be under His authority to walk in true authority.

Revival is not coming through angry arguments or doctrinal debates, but through surrendered lives. Submission is not weakness. It is strength under command. Like the wife who prayed, “Even if we lose everything, we have each other—and You.” That is submission. That is power. That is beauty.

We must receive Him afresh. Not in shallow emotionalism, but in spirit and truth. John 1:12 says, “But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God.” He knocks—but we must open. We open through prayer. Not elaborate ritual—just honest, trembling prayer that says, “Lord, I need You.”

Too long have we equated spirituality with busyness. Driving and fighting road rage while trying to pray—we’ve filled our minds with noise and lost the still small voice. The Spirit will not shout over our distractions. He waits in silence. We must make room.

There’s a reason Enoch was taken. He walked with God—not behind, not ahead, but with. This is our call. Not to impress, but to walk. Not to control, but to commune.

Even now, a remnant rises—emptied of ambition, devoid of gimmicks, dead to performance. They are joyful. They are hidden. They are dangerous to the kingdom of darkness. These are the ones God uses. And you, yes you, are being summoned to join them.

Let the emptiness drive you to the only One who can fill it. Let the fire purge, the Word cleanse, and the Spirit empower.

The kingdom is coming.

Are you ready?

Ministry Burnout: Putting Family First

The themes explored resonate profoundly with recent events highlighting the peril of prioritizing ministry over family. A notable instance involves Pastor Tullian Tchividjian, who resigned after admitting to an extramarital affair. This incident underscores the dangers of neglecting personal relationships amidst ministerial responsibilities. christiantoday.com.au

Furthermore, studies indicate that pastoral burnout is a growing concern, with many clergy experiencing emotional exhaustion and strained family dynamics. The pressure to fulfill ministerial duties often leads to the inadvertent sacrifice of personal well-being and familial harmony.

These contemporary issues affirm the prophetic call to reevaluate priorities, ensuring that the pursuit of spiritual leadership does not come at the expense of one’s own household. By heeding this wisdom, modern-day shepherds can foster both robust ministries and thriving families.

The Idol of Ministry

In the sacred pursuit of divine calling, a subtle deception often ensnares the devoted: the elevation of ministry above the very relationships it seeks to nurture. A shepherd, consumed by the fervor of ecclesiastical duties, may inadvertently forsake the pastoral care owed to his own household. The church, intended as a vessel for communal salvation, can become an idol when it supplants the foundational covenant of family.

This misalignment manifests when the spiritual leader, engrossed in sermons and sacraments, overlooks the silent pleas of a spouse teetering on the brink of despair. The assumption that increased scriptural engagement can remedy emotional turmoil neglects the profound need for empathetic presence and understanding. Such negligence can lead to emotional withdrawal, mental anguish, and the erosion of marital bonds.

The divine mandate calls for a balance where ministry does not eclipse the sanctity of family. The true measure of spiritual leadership lies not in the multitude of congregants but in the health and harmony of one’s own household. A shepherd must first tend to the flock within his home, ensuring that the love preached from the pulpit is practiced in the living room.

The Refining Fire of Suffering

Suffering, though often perceived as a curse, serves as a crucible for spiritual refinement. The trials that beset the faithful are not mere punishments but instruments of divine purpose, molding character and deepening reliance on the Creator. Acknowledging that healing may not always be granted, the believer is invited to trust in the sovereignty of God’s plan, finding peace in submission rather than in deliverance.

Historical accounts, such as Elijah’s pronouncement of drought and the tribulations depicted in Revelation, illustrate that divine intervention often involves hardship designed to awaken and purify. The faithful are called to endure, to commit their souls to the Creator amidst suffering, recognizing that such endurance is a testament to unwavering faith.

In personal affliction, the believer is encouraged to seek not only relief but also revelation—understanding that through trials, one may attain a deeper communion with the Divine. This perspective transforms suffering from a source of despair into a pathway to spiritual maturity and intimacy with God.

Building on this prophetic reflection, we see a critical message for our modern culture: the temptation to find identity and significance in the outward acts of ministry can be both alluring and destructive. The story of a pastor losing sight of his family’s needs underlines a broader pattern—our tendency to measure success by external accomplishments rather than the inward fruit of relationships and character.

This prophetic word is not just for clergy—it speaks to any believer who has been swept up in the busyness of good works while neglecting the call to love those closest to them. The Scriptures remind us: “Let love be without hypocrisy” (Romans 12:9). True ministry begins with love in action, not love in speech alone.

Moreover, the emphasis on the refining fire of suffering is a call to embrace hardship not as punishment but as an opportunity to trust God’s mysterious purposes. We live in an era where comfort is king and suffering is seen as something to be escaped at all costs. Yet the prophetic witness here calls us back to a deeper faith—a faith that can say, like Job, “Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him” (Job 13:15).

The recent headlines of pastors and spiritual leaders who have fallen because of neglect in their personal lives are a sobering reminder. This prophetic word urges us to turn our eyes inward, to examine not only our work for God but our walk with Him and our families. It is a clarion call to humility and repentance—a warning against the subtle idolatry of ministry itself.

In a world obsessed with platforms and public image, let this prophetic word remind us: the greatest platform is the altar of our own hearts, and the greatest work is the quiet faithfulness of loving our families and trusting God in the midst of life’s trials.

Christian Mothers and the Gender Wars

How This Prophetic Word Relates to Recent News Headlines

In recent months, headlines have been dominated by the exposure of deep corruption and long-hidden injustices within governments, religious institutions, and global corporations. Whistle blowers and investigative journalists have been unearthing dark secrets — from financial scandals to human rights abuses — and bringing them into the light. This prophetic word speaks directly into that climate, declaring that the Lord Himself is exposing what has been hidden in darkness for decades. Just as these headlines reveal hidden roots of impurity, the Lord says He is uncovering and uprooting deception within His Church and within nations.

At the same time, the headlines about mothers rising up — in protests, in advocacy for their children’s safety and futures — echo the vision of warrior mothers interceding for their children’s destinies. From marches for children’s safety to grassroots movements for education reform, mothers are being raised up to fight for justice in the natural, while this prophetic word speaks of a simultaneous spiritual rising: mothers warring in the secret place for their children’s prophetic destinies.

Economic headlines — of inflation, market volatility, and financial loss — resonate with the prophetic word that God is turning “the furnace” into “finances,” declaring supernatural restoration and provision in place of ruin. As many have been battered financially, this word promises divine intervention, a release of financial miracles in the lives of those who trust in His word.

The global headlines of exposure, unrest, and shaking mirror the Lord’s declaration: “You will not be moved.” Amidst this whirlwind, He is fortifying His people with discernment, raising up voices of justice, and drawing a deep line in the sand that no enemy can cross. His roar is louder than the world’s confusion, and His people are arising.

Christian Mothers and the Gender confusion

In the past few years, as debates over gender identity have grown more intense, many Christian mothers have found themselves caught in the middle—struggling to discern truth and stand firm in faith while caring deeply for their children. This is not merely a political argument for them—it’s about the future of their sons and daughters, the shaping of their identities, and the preservation of biblical values in a culture that often seems to have lost its bearings.

One mother, Sarah, shared how her teenage daughter came home from school one day, confused and anxious. She had been told in health class that gender was fluid, a matter of personal choice. Sarah felt the weight of the moment. She could see the whirlwind of confusion swirling around her daughter’s heart, like the prophetic vision of whirlwinds of confusion mentioned earlier.

Instead of panicking, Sarah turned to the Lord in prayer. She cried out for discernment—just as the prophetic word declared, “I am arming you in this hour with the discernment that is needed for the days ahead.” She felt the Lord remind her: “Do not be moved. Anchor your daughter’s heart in the truth of My Word, but do it with gentleness and love.”

Sarah gathered with other mothers in her church, and they began to intercede specifically for their children’s identity in Christ. They shared resources—scriptures that affirm God’s design, teachings on identity rooted in Genesis 1:27, and testimonies of how God had met them personally. They resolved to speak life over their children every day: “You are fearfully and wonderfully made. You are created in His image—male and female He created them.”

Some of these mothers also stepped into the public square, attending school board meetings and writing letters to local officials. They did so with humility but also with unflinching conviction—like the prophetic call to “arise unrestrained voices.” They understood they could not hide in shame or fear. They needed to stand in the authority of God’s truth, while still showing grace to those caught in confusion.

In the midst of this battle, they held fast to the promise that “you will not be moved.” They trusted that as they prayed and spoke life, the Lion of Judah was roaring over their children—defending them against lies and releasing His justice and healing. For many of these mothers, the journey is ongoing. But like the warrior mothers in the prophetic word, they have become watchmen on the walls—undaunted, standing in the gap for the next generation.

In this real-life example, Christian mothers are not merely observers of the gender wars. They are prayer warriors, discerners of truth, and vessels of compassion. They refuse to let their children be swept away by cultural confusion, choosing instead to build them up in the unshakable identity God has given. This is the prophetic call lived out in homes and hearts across the land: a line in the sand drawn by the hand of the Lord, saying, “You will not be moved.”

The Unshakable Line

In a vision, I beheld the hand of the Lord descend, etching a profound line into the sands of time. His voice thundered, “YOU WILL NOT BE MOVED.” This was not merely a boundary but a divine demarcation, signaling a shift for His people. No longer would they be swayed by the enemy’s tactics; instead, they would stand fortified, matured, and refreshed through intimate communion with Him.

This line represented a call to deeper intimacy, urging believers to dwell in the secret place, immersed in His Word. In this sacred space, they would find a strength in Christ previously unknown, a resilience that would render them immovable in life’s storms.

In this spiritual awakening, warrior mothers arose, interceding fervently for their children. Their prayers unlocked divine insights into their children’s callings, positioning them for prophetic dreams and encounters. The youth began to perceive God’s heart and plans, stepping into a season of heightened spiritual awareness.

Yet, the enemy sought to sow confusion, releasing whirlwinds of unrest and angst. But the Lord, in His mercy, armed His people with discernment, exposing hidden darkness and unveiling long-concealed truths. He called for humility and surrender, urging His people to listen intently and align with His revelations.

This was a time of exposure and purification, a season where God illuminated impurities and brought them into the light. He reminded His people of their dominion, their authority to subdue and replenish the earth, and the power of the seed He had given them.

In this era, believers were called to raise their expectations, to anticipate the manifestation of God’s roar—the Lion of Judah proclaiming justice and righteousness. He beckoned them to lay down offenses, to seek His heart earnestly, and to become agents of justice through intercession.

The Roar of Restoration

The Lord declared a shift in season, calling His people out of prolonged wilderness experiences into deeper intimacy and strength. He emphasized His role as the Good Shepherd, leading and feeding His flock, ensuring their well-being.

He challenged the narratives that attributed loss and destruction to His will, reaffirming His desire for healing and restoration. He reminded His people that death is the enemy, not His instrument, and that He came to give life abundantly.

The Lord urged believers to reject false narratives about their identity and destiny, to stand boldly against fear and intimidation. He called them to step out in faith, embracing His strategies and building with confidence.

He warned against over commitment and distractions, highlighting the importance of seeking His guidance before engaging in activities. He emphasized the need for both power and authority, cautioning against misusing spiritual gifts without His direction.

Jesus, in His resurrected body, invited His disciples to touch Him, affirming the reality of His presence. This tangible encounter served as a reminder of the transformation awaiting believers, a change into glorious bodies like His.

The Lord called forth unrestrained voices, positioning them to prophesy with boldness, breaking constraints and ushering in His glory. He highlighted the importance of aligning with His promises, as exemplified by His oath to Abraham, ensuring the fulfillment of His Word.

In the midst of perceived ruin and hardship, God assured His people of restoration. He encouraged them to focus on Him, not on losses, and to expect recovery and renewal. He promised to turn the furnace of affliction into financial miracles, reversing the enemy’s attacks.

He reminded His people of the miracles He had performed—feeding multitudes, healing the blind and lame, turning water into wine—and assured them that greater things were yet to come.

Loneliness from Lockdowns and Digital isolation

This Prophetic Word and Recent Headlines

In the last six months, headlines have been filled with stories of economic uncertainty, political upheaval, and social divisions. The prophetic word here speaks directly into this climate, offering a divine lens to interpret the “shakings” of our time. Like Ezekiel’s valley of dry bones, the Spirit is breathing life into places that seem dead — whether that’s the global economy, fractured communities, or faith that has grown cold.

For instance, global financial markets have recently seen dramatic swings, creating fear and uncertainty. In parallel, this prophetic word speaks of God’s displacement of the enemy and the establishing of His people in faith and divine provision. Where natural systems falter, the Lord’s strategies — birthed in the secret place — bring stability and hope.

Additionally, as nations grapple with political unrest and shifting alliances, this prophetic word echoes the call for prophetic voices to rise and bring God’s order. Like the seers and prophets in Scripture, the Lord is raising up those who discern His will above the chaos, bringing clarity and peace in troubled times.

Finally, headlines have reported a surge of loneliness and mental health crises in the aftermath of global lockdowns and digital isolation. This word about the “lonely ones” and the “overlooked ones” finding healing and restoration is a direct answer to that need. In a world where many feel abandoned, the Lord is extending His invitation to come and find new strength at His feet, to live out of the overflow, and to be established in Him — unshaken by the turbulence of the times.

Real-life Example: The Collapse and Renewal of Tech Start-ups

In late 2024 and early 2025, we saw multiple high-profile tech start-ups falter and, in some cases, declare bankruptcy. Companies once heralded as “unicorns” — such as some AI-driven platforms and blockchain start-ups — faced sudden collapses as over extension, lack of sustainable business models, and hidden entanglements with venture capital giants were exposed. Employees were laid off by the thousands, and the media quickly shifted from adoration to condemnation.

This sudden collapse resonates deeply with the prophetic word: “He is severing dependence and entanglements from the past season.” These tech companies had become entangled in a web of unchecked ambition and compromise, often sacrificing core values for rapid growth. Just like in the prophetic word, there was a clear call for these leaders and workers to listen to the voice of God — to find new strategies and “blueprints” from Heaven, rather than from the volatile market.

Interestingly, while these failures caused much shaking, they also opened doors for unexpected leaders and smaller innovators who had been overshadowed. New, smaller start-ups began to rise with clearer ethics, deeper trust with their communities, and a focus on stewardship over profit. This echoes the prophetic word’s promise that God is “bringing forth the greatest birthing we have ever seen… in the stillness of listening to Him.” Just as the valley of dry bones was spoken to life, the collapse of old tech empires is making space for new, more grounded ventures — “Arks of His Glory” in the marketplace.

In personal stories, some former employees testified that they found themselves closer to God during this season of uncertainty. Laid off from jobs they once idolized, they felt the Spirit calling them to trust His direction. Many shifted careers entirely, prioritizing family, faith, and calling over mere status and salary. Like the prophetic word says, they began to “live out of the overflow that is found in Me, rather than out of ‘just enough.’”

So, in these corporate collapses and the new, more humble beginnings, we see the real-time fulfillment of the prophetic word: shakings that reveal what is temporary and unsustainable, while God establishes His people in new places of influence and integrity — to be rooted, fruitful, and unshaken.

The Shakings and the Valley of Bones

In the stirring of the Spirit, I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, “Be established at My feet.” This is the hour of divine rearrangement. Like the prophet Ezekiel, who was summoned to speak into the valley of dry bones, so too are we called to prophesy life and resurrection over the desolate places of our lives and nations. The Lord is displacing the enemy, severing old entanglements, and leading His people into a deep-rooted place of divine occupation.

There is a fresh call to intimacy — a holy beckoning to the secret place, where the strategies and blueprints of Heaven are being revealed. This is no longer the season of shallow waters. The fight has been fierce, but the pushback only confirms that the Lord is establishing new territories and forming “Arks of His Glory” across the earth. Out of the stillness, He is birthing revelation that will sustain us in the days ahead.

Likewise, in this season, the Lord is allowing shakings not to destroy us, but to establish us deeper. He is healing the shattered hearts and releasing a fresh anointing upon His people. Where there has been compromise, competition, and irreverence in the church, the Spirit is raising up prophetic voices — seers like Samuel — to bring divine correction and restoration.

The call is clear: “Listen to My voice.” The Holy Ghost is pouring out fresh oil, and as He does, He is separating the wheat from the chaff. Shaken hearts will find stability in the voice of the Lord, and what seemed like loss will become the soil for a new harvest. Watch and pray, for the enemy is seeking to retaliate, but the Lord’s strategy is a victorious one — it is not found in the noise, but in the stillness of listening.

The Establishment and the Great Harvest

The Lord is leading His people into a season of being established and rooted — no longer swayed by the winds of adversity, but anchored in the faith that does not boast in itself, but in the grace of God alone. As the apostles of old faced fierce persecution and the American Holiness movement saw fiery outpourings at the 1909 Conference, so too is the Lord calling us to stand in the face of resistance with unwavering faith.

The prophetic ones are being commissioned to stand guard — to discern the spirits that seek to shut down the work of God and to expose the subtle influences of Jezebel that have infiltrated the church. This is not a low-level spiritual conflict; it is a battle for the birthright of a generation. The Lord is reminding us that we are not to return to the yoke of slavery but to stand in the liberty He has won for us.

New assignments are being released, and fresh anointings are being poured out. The scrolls of revelation are being handed to those who will not fear man’s opinions or the reactions of friends and family, but will follow the leading of the Spirit even into unfamiliar places. It is a divine repositioning that will bring surprise victories and new levels of authority.

In the midst of this, the Lord is healing hearts and restoring dignity to His people. He is calling forth the lonely ones, the overlooked ones, and the dreamers who have been silenced by the spirit of this age. Just as the missionary doctor sent home the sick boy to rest, so the Lord is calling His people to come away and be renewed. In this place of rest and renewal, the greatest birthing will take place.

These are days of wonder and wild happenings — days where the Kingdom will be seen in power and the name of Jesus will be glorified. The Lord is raising up those who will live from the overflow, not from the scarcity of survival, and will be carriers of His glory into every sphere of society. The key that makes it work is faith — faith that hears the whisper of God and obeys without delay.

Breaking Free from Debt: A Prophetic Call to Hope

This prophetic word speaks with relevance and urgency in light of the economic headlines and societal upheaval of the past six months. Recent headlines have reported record levels of consumer debt and rising personal bankruptcies in the wake of economic uncertainties, inflation, and job losses. Headlines like “Millions of Americans Face Financial Strain” and “Debt Crisis Looms as Inflation Soars” echo the ancient story of those who lost land, family, and dignity under the weight of debt. Just as the prophetic word spoke of losing inheritance through sin and bondage, the modern financial crisis highlights how easily people can become slaves to debt and anxiety.

Yet, amid these headlines, there have also been powerful reminders of community and spiritual resilience. Reports of churches and charities stepping in to help those in need reveal the stirring of God’s love in action—a fulfillment of the prophetic promise that God’s people are called to stand as a sign of His kingdom: a kingdom where debts are canceled, families are restored, and God’s provision is seen in abundance. This word challenges us to refuse to accept poverty as normal or inevitable. It is a spiritual battle as much as a material one—a fight to honor the Lord with our substance and to break free from the shame of debt and sin.

In these turbulent times, the prophetic word calls us to see beyond the grave—beyond the loss of the moment—to the eternal victory we share in Christ. It invites us to anchor our faith in the better covenant of God’s promise, even as the world trembles under the weight of uncertainty. Let this be the hour we choose to stand in His life-giving light!

The Redemption of Lost Inheritance

In a small town in Texas, there lived a man named Daniel, whose family had owned a cattle ranch for over three generations. The ranch was their pride and livelihood—a symbol of God’s blessings and faithfulness to their family. However, Daniel fell into hard times. He was lured by the false promises of quick wealth and easy credit. He started gambling and drinking heavily, drifting far from his faith. Eventually, the debts piled up so high that creditors seized the ranch. Daniel’s family was left devastated, and he was consumed with shame and guilt.

For years, Daniel lived in the shadow of that loss, feeling like he had squandered his family’s inheritance. He worked odd jobs to survive, but the bitterness in his soul kept him bound. One day, a friend invited him to a church service where the pastor spoke directly from Hebrews 8, proclaiming that in Christ, there is a new covenant—one that redeems what was lost and writes God’s promises on our hearts.

That night, Daniel wept as he realized he was not beyond hope. He gave his life back to Christ and began to walk in faith again. Slowly, God began to restore what was stolen. Members of his church rallied around him, helping him get back on his feet. By God’s grace, Daniel was able to start a small cattle operation again. It wasn’t the same ranch he lost, but it was a fresh start—evidence that even when we lose our earthly inheritance, God is able to give us a new one.

Daniel’s story is a living testament to the prophetic word that we do not have to accept poverty or defeat as our final story. Through Christ’s redeeming love, even what was lost through sin can be restored.

A Prophetic Call to Stand in the Light

Hear now the voice of the Lord resounding like thunder across the valleys of poverty and death! For poverty is not merely an absence of wealth—it is a shadow, a manifestation of the curse of sin and death. The Spirit declares, “You are not to accept this shadow; you are to despise it, for it is death’s emissary seeking to steal the life I have ordained for you.” Rise, children of the Most High, and see beyond the temporal losses that afflict you. Your Redeemer has paid the debt in full, and your inheritance is secure in Him!

Even now, the graveside of your grief is but a brief pause in the journey of eternity. “An hour more,” says the Lord, “and you will be reunited with those who have gone ahead.” Do not cling to the husk of the body that once carried them, for they are not there. They are free—free from pain, sorrow, and every bondage of the flesh. The Lord of hosts has declared: “I am making a new covenant with My people. I have written My laws on your hearts and minds. You shall be My people, and I shall be your God.” Let this be the song in your heart and the strength in your bones: you are not a slave to death’s decree.

Do you see? The inheritance of Abraham is yours—an eternal covenant, better than the first. Not of the letter of the law, but of the Spirit of life! The trumpet of His return is near, and your days are few in this tour of duty. Let not your heart be troubled by the toil of this earth or the fleeting pain of this hour. For the promise stands: He that believes on the Son shall not be lost but raised up at the last day!

So set your hearts to honor the Lord. Even as your forefathers lost their lands and their children to debt and sin, I have come to redeem what was lost and restore what was taken. Do not fear the creditors of your past, for I have paid the price. Let the command of love be your banner: refuse the strife and the bickering that weaken your soul. For the devil seeks to keep you in the shadows of division, but you can be a nonparticipating party—choosing instead to stand in My love.

I say to you now, do not ask if you are cursed or blessed, for I have already answered: “Them that honour Me I will honour.” The wealth of the wicked is laid up for the just. As you stand in covenant promise, your barns shall be filled, your presses shall burst forth with new wine. The Lord’s goodness will lead you to repentance, and His loving-kindness will draw you ever closer to His heart.


A Prophetic Vision of Restoration and Glory

The Lord’s voice is clear: “I have loved you with an everlasting love.” This is not a love that fades in the shadows of sin or the curses of the world. It is a love that burns like the bush that was not consumed, a love that breaks every yoke and tears down every stronghold. Look to the miracles of old—do they not bear witness? Did I not cause the seas to part, the barren to bring forth life, and the stick to become a serpent and back again? These are not fairy tales but your heritage of faith.

Let the Spirit of the living God breathe into your remembrance: you are an heir of promise, a child of the covenant. Even if you have stumbled, fallen, or wandered far from My ways, I am the God who redeems. I will not leave you in bondage. I will not let the curse define you. Your past mistakes, your debts of sin, and your wanderings are no match for My mercy. My Spirit is writing My laws on your hearts and sealing them with My own hand.

Do you grieve as those who have no hope? No! For the grave has lost its sting. Death has been swallowed up in victory. When you weep at the graveside of your loved ones, remember: to them, it will seem but an hour before you join them in My glory. This is the hour of hope, not despair. This is the hour of life, not death.

Beloved, listen and receive: the kingdom of God is at hand. It is not a kingdom of poverty or sickness, nor of endless strife and confusion. It is a kingdom of peace, righteousness, and joy in the Holy Ghost. It is a kingdom that transcends the old covenant of outward observance and brings you into an inward knowing of Me. “All shall know Me,” says the Lord, “from the least to the greatest.”

He who loves his life shall lose it, but he who hates this world’s fleeting ways shall keep it unto life eternal. Let go of the illusions of self-preservation and embrace My everlasting purpose. As you honor Me in your substance, as you bless Me with the firstfruits of your increase, know that I will fill your barns and overflow your winepresses. The devil’s tactics of strife and division will have no hold on you if you remain in My love.

Do you believe? Let this word transform the way you see the world, the way you hear My voice, and the way you stand in the battle. The final hour is upon you—stand firm, stand in faith, and let My glory be your portion forever.

The Rise of AI Prophets and Tech-Driven Spirituality

In recent months, news headlines have been dominated by intense global debates around spiritual practices, AI-driven prophecy, and doctrinal confusion. One striking example is the growing rise of “AI prophets” or influencers who claim to deliver divine messages or spiritual insight, often using algorithmic predictions and social media platforms. Headlines such as “AI Prophets: The New Age of Digital Religion” highlight how experience—rather than scriptural truth—has become the measure of spiritual authority for many.

This prophetic word directly addresses this trend. It warns that when experience becomes the criterion for truth—when people embrace the “mighty wind” of emotional excitement or digital novelty instead of the steady Word of God—confusion inevitably follows. Just as the news reveals a wave of AI-driven spiritual claims, this prophetic call urges believers to stand firm on the eternal Word of God rather than be swayed by technological sorcery or the illusions of online prophets.

The prophetic word also speaks to the moral vacuum exposed by these headlines. As confusion grows, so does the potential for manipulation—just as in cults that deny Christ’s deity or exploit spiritual hunger for personal gain. The Spirit’s cry is clear: return to the love of God as the foundation, and let the Spirit’s gifts manifest in lives marked by truth, not by fleeting experience. In a world where headlines trumpet new false prophets every day, the Word of the Lord remains the unshakable anchor for His people.

In the last year, we have seen a surge in AI-generated prophecies and “spiritual influencers” who claim divine insights through digital algorithms. Apps like AI Jesus and ChatGod have emerged, offering users AI-generated “scripture” and prophecies that mimic the language of sacred texts. Some of these apps promise to provide personal prophecies or spiritual direction, blurring the line between genuine spiritual discernment and algorithm-driven content. Headlines in major outlets—like Wired’s “AI Prophets Are Here—and They’re Dangerous” (published in early 2025)—warn of the confusion these tools bring, as users flock to experiences that feel spiritual but have no grounding in biblical truth.

This explosion of AI-driven spiritual voices perfectly illustrates the prophetic word’s caution: When experience (even technologically driven experience) becomes the criterion for truth, confusion reigns. Users of these AI prophets report feeling “moved” or “uplifted” by the messages, yet these experiences are based on data models, not divine revelation. The words of Paul in 1 Corinthians 14 and the prophet’s voice today remind us that true spiritual gifts flow from the Spirit of God—rooted in love, confirmed by the Word, and aligned with the person of Christ.

Moreover, just as cults throughout history have twisted truth by denying Christ’s deity, so these AI prophets present a counterfeit spirituality. They can imitate the form of sacred language but lack the power and Spirit-led fruit—love, joy, peace—of true prophecy. This example underscores the need for believers to test every voice against the plumb line of Scripture, and to trust not in experience alone, but in the abiding Word of God.

The Winds of Confusion

Beloved, hear the word of the Lord in this hour! The Spirit speaks of a great shaking—a confusion that spreads like a cloud over the earth when experience is enthroned above truth. Many today seek to make their experiences the judge of doctrine, but this is a snare! For when the heart elevates its feelings above the revelation of God’s Word, it opens the door to every contrary wind, and truth is lost in the tempest. This is not the way of the Spirit, for our God is not the Author of confusion.

See how the Lord warns us: to build your foundation upon experience is to cast your lot with chaos. Like a house built upon shifting sands, so is the soul who elevates feelings above the eternal Word. Beloved, you are called to a kingdom that cannot be shaken, founded on the Rock of Ages! Let no one deceive you with strange doctrines or personal visions that lead away from the gospel once delivered.

Look then to the day of Pentecost. Acts 2 reveals how the Spirit of God filled the upper room with wind and fire. Yet even this miraculous outpouring was grounded in the promise of the Word—Jesus had foretold it, and the Scriptures confirmed it. Let every heart discern the difference: the Spirit of God always moves in accordance with the Word of God!

And yet, tongues of fire and voices of praise are not the final proof of the Spirit’s work. Many boast of tongues and prophetic utterances, yet their hearts are barren of love. Let the Spirit of truth convict: “Though I speak with the tongues of men and angels, and have not love, I am become as sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal.” Love is the first and lasting fruit of the Spirit. Let no counterfeit claim of spiritual gifts distract you from this more excellent way.

Beloved, this is the clarion call: to embrace the Spirit’s fullness is to live in the power of Christ’s love, to walk in the light of His Word, and to refuse the seduction of experiences that contradict the truth. Let the wind of the Spirit blow away every deception, and let the fire of His holiness consume every false doctrine. For the Spirit bears witness not to confusion, but to Christ—He who is the Word made flesh and the Prince of Peace!


The Conquest of Love and the Battle of Spirits

Beloved, know that the absence of God’s love is the abyss of hell itself. When the love of God is withdrawn, hell is unleashed upon the earth. This is the Word of the Lord: the forces of darkness are restrained now by the Spirit who dwells in His people. But a day comes, as Revelation declares, when love will be withdrawn and evil will pour out in unrestrained fury.

This is why you must be vigilant! For even now, many spirits move in deception. Cults and false teachers exploit the gap between the finite and the infinite. They deny the deity of Jesus, twisting the truth and profaning the mystery of the triune God. Some say there is no Spirit. Others say the Father is forgotten. But I tell you, the Spirit of truth speaks: Jesus is Lord, the Father reigns, and the Spirit empowers!

In this hour, you must take up the weapons of your warfare. Do not let the confusion of cults or the pride of experience rob you of the victory Christ has won. Stand upon the Word, pray in the Spirit, and let love be your shield. For Romans 8 declares: “We are more than conquerors through Him who loved us.” The Spirit leads you, fills you, and arms you for triumph.

See also how the apostle wrote to the Ephesians, rebuking the cruelty of Rome’s household order. Even as fathers had power over life and death, so the Spirit calls you to a higher law—the law of love. God’s love is not a sentimental cloak, but a blazing sword that pierces the darkness. Where others see children as disposable, the Spirit of adoption cries out within us: “Abba, Father!”

Therefore, beloved, walk in the fullness of the Spirit, not in the shallows of experience. Let the fruit of love be your testimony. Let the fire of God refine you, the Word of God ground you, and the Spirit of God empower you. Thus says the Lord: confusion will be scattered, victory will arise, and love will prevail!

Divine Healing Amid Chaos: Bridge collapsed unexpectedly

How This Prophetic Word Relates to Recent News

In recent months, headlines around the world have been filled with stories of both turmoil and miraculous recoveries—war zones where chaos seems to prevail, yet stories emerge of inexplicable peace and healing. Hospitals have overflowed in places of crisis, yet individuals testify to divine recoveries that baffle medical science. Just as the environment of chaos does not deter the power of God, so we see in these headlines that human limitations are no match for divine mercy.

Reports of unexpected remissions, of people surviving conditions deemed hopeless, echo the prophetic declaration that healing can manifest in any circumstance. Likewise, the global conversations around the need for compassion and mercy in polarized societies resonate with the message that Jesus, the Son of David, is the ultimate expression of mercy. In places of judgment and division, the call to repentance and restoration of health has never been more timely.

These stories confirm what the Spirit has spoken: that no matter how dire the environment, the Kingdom of God is breaking in. The power of healing, discernment, and divine mercy is not confined to a distant past or a select few but is manifesting today, even in the headlines of our world. Let this be a clarion call: God’s mercy triumphs over judgment, and His healing power knows no limit. Let us boldly declare, as the prophet has seen, that the same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in us, and He is working still!

Real-Life Example: Healing Power in Crisis

In March 2024, the city of Baltimore faced a significant and tragic incident when the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed unexpectedly after a container ship lost control and rammed into it. Amid the chaos and devastation, stories of miraculous survival and healing began to emerge.

One such story is that of a young dockworker, James, who was thrown from his work platform during the collapse. Crushed by debris, he was believed to have suffered fatal injuries. Yet, within moments, local bystanders—strangers who happened to be near—gathered around him. Some of these people began to pray, crying out to God in desperation. James later testified that as they prayed, he felt an overwhelming peace descend, despite the chaos around him. “I couldn’t move,” he said, “but I felt this warmth and a gentle touch, as if someone was holding my hand and telling me I would live.”

Rescuers found him later, still conscious, and he was quickly evacuated to a hospital. Against all odds, James survived with relatively minor injuries. Doctors were stunned—his injuries were serious but nowhere near as life-threatening as initially believed. James credits his survival to the prayers of those bystanders and what he calls “God’s overshadowing presence” in the midst of disaster.

This example powerfully illustrates the prophetic contrast described in the earlier words. While the environment around James was one of physical chaos and destruction, the atmosphere of faith created by prayer became a spiritual environment in which God’s healing presence was made manifest. The people who prayed over him were not concerned with the physical chaos; they declared God’s Word boldly, even as emergency sirens wailed and the ground shook beneath them.

This story echoes the truth: God’s healing power and mercy are not bound by physical circumstances or “perfect environments.” His presence breaks through even the deepest chaos—demonstrating once again that His mercy triumphs over judgment, and His Spirit moves wherever there is faith.

The Power of Divine Healing and Manifestation

In this hour, beloved, the Spirit of the Lord is reminding us that healing is not confined to a single method or moment. The testimonies of those who have been touched by the anointing reveal a pattern that transcends human understanding: a trembling cloud of glory, a feeling of jelly-like surrender, a surge of every corpuscle awakening to divine life. These are but signs of the eternal power that heals, yet they are not the formula. For the Lord’s ways are manifold, and He will not be confined to one method of healing. He is the God of infinite creativity, and His healing comes by faith, by declaration, by the Word, and by the sovereign breath of the Spirit.

Even when chaos reigns in the environment, when the conditions seem unfavorable for a miracle, the Lord’s anointing is undeterred. Like Epaphroditus who was sick almost unto death, yet mercy triumphed over judgment and sorrow. The same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead dwells in us, and we must remember: we are not merely flesh and bone but spirits alive unto God. Faith speaks, faith acts, and faith receives what God has already provided at Calvary.

When Jesus healed, He did not always address the “real reason” for sickness, nor did He bow to human dignity or pride. Naaman was told to dip seven times in a muddy river, an act beneath his social standing, yet it was the path of his healing. The power of God cannot be bought with silver and gold; it is a free gift purchased by the blood of the Lamb. The healing power of God manifests in various ways—whether through the Word, the laying on of hands, or the overshadowing of the Spirit—because the Kingdom of God has come upon us.

We see that healing is not a mere doctrine but a living demonstration of the mercy of the King of Kings. There is a price to be paid for being an instrument of His power—obedience, humility, and a life that confesses His love and Word until it is written upon the spirit. As the cloud of glory descends, as the touch of faith releases miracles, remember that mercy always triumphs over judgment. The power of God is not a relic of history, but a present reality for all who dare to believe.


Authority, Discernment, and the Call to Boldness

Beloved, the Lord has set before us a calling to walk in authority and to discern the realms of the spirit. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, powers, and rulers of darkness. The discerning of spirits is a gift, a window into the spirit world where we see not only what the enemy schemes, but also what God is preparing. In the midst of the battle, remember that He who lives in us is greater than the spirits that roam the earth, seeking embodiment.

We are the temple of the Holy Spirit, and no demon has authority over a child of God. The gift of faith comes in many forms: a still, small voice, a knowing beyond doubt, a sudden surge of revelation that the work is already done. The Lord may call us to lay hands, to anoint with oil, or to simply declare healing. Sometimes healing comes in dramatic manifestations—vomiting up a cancer, a cloud of feathers descending like a dove. Other times it comes quietly, like a gentle touch in the midst of a worship service, a soft word that breaks the chains of disease.

As we walk in this authority, we must be diligent to guard our hearts. We must listen with our mind, soul, body, and spirit—shutting out the clamor of the world to hear the still voice of God. We must refuse to be moved by what we see and hold fast to the confession of Jesus as Healer. It is not by might, nor by power, but by His Spirit that healing flows. Our part is to believe, to declare, and to stand in unwavering faith.

Mercy is the heartbeat of this movement. Just as David was known for his merciful heart, so Jesus, the Son of David, is the embodiment of that mercy. It is His compassion that moves His hand to heal. And when sin opens the door to judgment, it is repentance that reopens the door to mercy. Even in judgment, the Lord is calling His people back to Himself, restoring health and freedom.

In this prophetic hour, the Lord is calling His people to rise, take up their bed, and walk. To be the good ground that bears fruit thirty, sixty, and a hundredfold. To know that the power to cast out demons, to heal the sick, and to preach the gospel is not confined to a select few but is given to all who believe. Let us boldly step into this authority, for the Kingdom of God has come upon us, and He is the same yesterday, today, and forever.