Category Archives: christian soteriology

Predestined For all Prayers to be Answered

(With a Divine Guarantee, No Fine Print)

“You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you.” (John 15:16)

Jesus drops this bombshell right in the middle of His farewell discourse, weaving together the threads of divine choice and human action in a way that leaves no room for half-hearted religion. Here we have the Son of God Himself, the most God-centered man who ever walked the earth, linking predestination not to some abstract theological puzzle but to the practical outworking of a believer’s life. He doesn’t stop at bare election for salvation; no, He presses on to appoint us for fruit that endures and prayers that hit their mark every time. If you’ve ever wondered why so many Christians limp along with unanswered petitions, mumbling about “God’s will” like it’s a cosmic lottery, this verse slices through the fog. Predestination, far from being a doctrine to tuck away in dusty seminary tomes, is God’s setup for a life where your requests become reality—because He rigged the game in your favor from eternity past. And if that sounds too bold, well, blame Jesus; He’s the one who said it.

I chose you. You did not choose me. I chose you. You did not choose me. I chose you. You did not choose me. (Okay, I’ll stop repeating it before it turns into a divine earworm.)

This is about predestination. In Romans 9, God said He chose to love one twin and hate the other before they were born or had made any choices of good or evil. God further hammers this point by saying that from a neutral lump of clay—not good or evil—He makes His own choice to shape one for honor and the other for common use. It’s the ultimate mic drop on free-will fantasies. God doesn’t wait for our resumes; He drafts us into His kingdom because He wants to. But Jesus doesn’t park there, as if predestination were just about getting a ticket to heaven. He appoints us “so that” we bear lasting fruit and receive whatever we ask in His name.

God’s sovereign based on what He wants; and so, it’s aimed at producing believers who pray boldly and watch heaven deliver. In other words, if you’re elect, you’re predestined not just to escape hell but to storm its gates with prayers that move mountains—literally, as Jesus teaches elsewhere (Mark 11:23).

Think about how Peter applies this in Acts 2. Fresh off Pentecost, he preaches repentance and baptism, then ties the promise of the Holy Spirit to “all whom the Lord our God will call” (Acts 2:39). Here, election isn’t some insider secret for mature saints; it’s the foundation for receiving power from on high. Peter assumes that God’s calling—His predestining work—doesn’t lead straight to forgiveness, but past that steppingstone to the outpouring of the Spirit for miracles and boldness. If God sovereignly elects you, He sovereignly empowers you to ask and receive. No asterisks, no fine print about “if it’s His will.” The reprobates? They’re left out, not because God couldn’t save them, but because He didn’t choose to—His hatred fixed before the foundation of the world, as Romans 9 unflinchingly states. Yet for the chosen, predestination is a launchpad for faith that demands and gets results. It’s like God handing you a loaded gun and saying, “Fire away; I’ve already loaded it with victory.” If you don’t shoot, then that’s on your unbelief, not His preloaded victory.

Now, contrast this with the faith-fumblers who twist sovereignty into a wet blanket over prayer. You’ve heard them: “Pray, but remember, God’s will might be ‘no’—He’s sovereign, after all.” They parade predestination as if it handcuffs our requests, turning God into a cosmic veto machine. But Jesus flips that script. In John 15, He uses election to embolden us: because you’re chosen, ask big and watch the Father deliver. It’s not arrogance; it’s obedience to the doctrine. These naysayers, often cloaked in Reformed garb, spout “double predestination” or “hard determinism” like it’s profound, but they miss the point. God’s absolute control does negate our agency; and in doing so it guarantees that we align with His promises in faith, so that reality bends at our faith filled words. James echoes this: “The prayer offered in faith will make the sick person well; the Lord will raise them up” (James 5:15). Will, not might. Sovereignty here isn’t a barrier—it’s the muscle behind the miracle.

Jesus is talking about the category of election and predestination here. However, it’s not the same topic as in Romans 9. Romans 9 was about election unto salvation itself, but Jesus isn’t talking about salvation—he’s focusing on the life we live after salvation. Jesus said He chose us to bear much fruit, which means good works. But Jesus doesn’t harp on good works the way most folks do, like tallying up brownie points. No, Jesus specifically means this type of good work: “so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you.” Jesus’ version of good works is about asking in His name, in faith, and then getting whatever we ask for. (Think of it as heaven’s express delivery service—ask, believe, receive.) This is how Jesus teaches what good works are. But setting aside how Jesus flips the usual definition on its head, let’s zero in on the main point.

Jesus says He chose us—or in other words, predestined and elected us—to ask for anything in His name and receive it from the Father. This is an utter and complete death knell to the “if God wills” blasphemy. (Yeah, I said it—adding that caveat is like ordering a pizza and then wondering if the delivery guy feels like showing up.) Jesus says He has predestined you to get all answers to your prayers with a resounding yes. Jesus says what you ask for is the thing the Father will give. There’s no way to misinterpret this without exposing yourself as faithless. It’s too plain and obvious—so if you twist it, you might as well lift up your shirt and flash your doubts to the world. The thing you ask is the thing you get. This is the doctrine of God; this is the doctrine of Jesus Christ. Jesus says He has elected you for this. Thus, the idea of “if it is God’s will” is absolute nonsense and a rejection of Jesus’ doctrine. It rejects God’s predestination and Jesus’ prayer doctrine outright.

Take the Gentile woman in Matthew 15. Jesus initially rebuffs her: it’s not her time, not her covenant. But she persists with a clever argument rooted in faith, and boom—her daughter is healed. Jesus commends her “great faith,” overriding the timeline because her trust in Him demanded it. Predestination didn’t lock her out; her faith unlocked the door. Or consider Hezekiah, pleading for more years despite God’s decree of death (2 Kings 20). God relents, adding fifteen years. Sovereignty yields to faith? No—God sovereignly designed it so that faith accesses extensions of grace. These stories aren’t exceptions; they’re blueprints. If predestination meant prayers bounce off heaven’s ceiling, why bother appointing us to ask and receive? Jesus ties election to fruitful asking precisely because God’s choice equips us to pray with punch.

The critics? They’re often the ones peddling unbelief under pious labels. They balk at “name it and claim it,” but Jesus said, “Whatever you ask in my name…” (John 14:13). They cry “man-centered” when we claim mountains obey us, yet Jesus commanded it (Mark 11:23). Their version of sovereignty shrinks God to a reluctant giver, doling out crumbs if He feels like it. But Scripture paints Him as the ultimate benefactor, swearing by Himself to bless Abraham’s seed—and we’re that seed through faith (Galatians 3:29). Predestination secures this: chosen ones aren’t left guessing; they’re appointed to pray victoriously. If your theology leaves you pleading without expecting, it’s defective—more aligned with fatalism than biblical faith.

People often wield the sovereignty and predestination of God in the form of “if God wills” to sidestep Jesus’ faith and prayer doctrine. But since Jesus directly ties predestination and election to “when you ask in My name, you get the thing you ask for,” you cannot use God’s predestination against always-answered prayer. It would create a contradiction: God has predestined always-answered prayers and God has not predestined always-answered prayers. (That’s like saying Schrödinger’s cat is both saved and unsaved—nonsense.) Jesus appealed to the law of contradiction in Mark 12:35-37 to interpret scripture. Thus, you cannot have a contradiction in God’s sovereignty without being flat-out wrong.

Jesus says He has sovereignly elected you to pray in His name and get the thing you ask for. Thus, the phrase “if God wills” is irrelevant. The will of God in this context is irrelevant because what God has elected is the relevant factor; the thing Jesus has elected is for you to ask for something and have the Father give it to you. The relevant thing is “your will,” therefore, not “God’s will.” The thing that “you want” or that aligns with “your will” is the key factor established by God’s sovereign election and predestination. To focus on God’s will in this circumstance of prayer is to trample and piss on the predestination and election of God like it’s a worthless pile of trash.

The positive teaching of God’s election in our prayers—to get whatever we want—has been trampled upon by the church for centuries, as they play the part of the whore with Satan as the lead actor. (Cue the dramatic music: Satan’s ultimate plot twist—joining the church to rewrite the script.) The devil fears Christians who can pray and get what they want. Satan has no defense against such an unstoppable force. (It’s like bringing a knife to a prayer-gun fight.) Thus, he infiltrated the church and convinced many to reject Jesus’ doctrine of predestination and faith, stopping the church from wielding its heavenly power. When the church isn’t using its unstoppable power, it’s weak and vulnerable to attacks from Satan and his thugs.

Jesus didn’t pray that way; He commanded storms and demons because He knew the Father’s plan included His authority. We’re in Him, so the same goes for us; we have His name, His authority and His same Spirit anointed power. So, Step up and pray like your election depends on it—because in God’s brilliant design, it empowers it. And if the mountains don’t move? Check your faith, not His sovereignty. After all, He elected you for answered prayers.

Let us turn the tide. It might feel like it’s late in the game, because it’s been 2,000 years since Jesus’ death and resurrection. But why would I care? I was born in this time, and even if it is late in the game, I will be like the returning White Gandalf—more powerful than ever, staff glowing and all.

Let us not be embarrassed by Jesus’ predestination doctrine. Let us not be embarrassed by Jesus’ faith and prayer doctrine. I give you permission to believe Jesus, despite what the faithless say about His teachings. I am telling you: You are allowed to believe Jesus. You should only care about what He says, not what the faithless—who have no healing and hardly any evidence of commonly answered prayers—babble on about. After all, if prayers were a video game, Jesus just handed you the cheat code for infinite wins.

Sugar Flowing in Eden

Think about the Garden of Eden, that pristine paradise where God placed Adam and Eve before sin threw its wrench into the divine machinery. Every tree bearing fruit was there for the taking, lush and abundant, dripping with natural sweetness. We’re talking figs, dates, pomegranates—fruits loaded with sugars and carbohydrates that would make today’s low-carb crusaders faint in horror. And yet, God surveyed His handiwork and called it good, not just tolerable or “okay in moderation,” but unequivocally good. No fine print about blood sugar spikes or insulin resistance. In that unfallen world, sugar flowed like rivers from the trees, a testament to Yahweh’s generous provision, designed to fuel humanity’s dominion over creation without a hint of backlash.

Eden wasn’t a vegan utopia or a keto nightmare; it was God’s blueprint for human flourishing. Genesis 1:29 lays it out plainly: “Then God said, ‘I give you every seed-bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be yours for food.'” Fruits, with their inherent sugars, weren’t temptations lurking in the shadows; they were front and center, essential to the mandate of stewardship and enjoyment. Before the fall, bodies functioned in perfect harmony with creation; no diabetes lurking around the corner, no metabolic disorders to fret over. Adam and Eve metabolized those sweet bounties flawlessly, their physical forms obeying the Creator’s design without rebellion. To partake freely wasn’t gluttony; it was obedience, a joyful acknowledgment of dependence on the One who provides all things richly for our enjoyment, as 1 Timothy 6:17 reminds us.

Fast forward to our post-Eden reality, where the curse of sin has tainted everything, including how we view something as simple as an apple. The fall introduced thorns and thistles, toil and pain, and yes, vulnerabilities in our bodies that make natural sugars seem like enemies rather than allies. Satan also became the god of this earth and with his demons takes advantage of the curse and victimizes people with pain, sickness and diseases ( Acts 10:38). Sickness entered the picture not as God’s original intent but as a consequence of rebellion. Yet, here’s where defective theology creeps in—folks start blaming sugar itself, as if the fruit trees were booby traps set by a capricious deity. In our hyper-focused nutrition culture, even modest amounts—like figs with breakfast, an apple at lunch, a mango for dinner—get labeled “bad” because I had too many carbs and sugars. What God pronounced good, they call evil.

And what does the fall have to do with us today? Everything and nothing, depending on where you stand in Christ. Galatians 3:13 declares, “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us.” If you’re in Him, that curse— including its grip on your health—has been shattered. Romans 8:11 drives it home: “And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies because of his Spirit who lives in you.” Your body isn’t defined by the curse’s decay; it’s dominated by the Spirit’s life-giving power. The curse does not energize my mortal body with death; no, the Spirit energizes my mortal body with Jesus’ life. Grace reigns, not the remnants of Eden’s fallout. If your health still bows to dietary fears, perhaps you’ve missed the memo on redemption— you’re acting as if the cross was a partial fix, leaving you to fend off sugar with human willpower.

The Bible isn’t silent on moderation. We are not to be gluttons. Yet, Scripture celebrates sweetness as a divine gift. Psalm 19:10 likens God’s words to honey, sweeter than the honeycomb. Proverbs 24:13 advises, “Eat honey, my son, for it is good; honey from the comb is sweet to your taste.” Even in the wilderness, God fed Israel manna that tasted like wafers made with honey (Exodus 16:31)—a supernatural provision laced with sweetness, no health warnings attached. Jesus Himself multiplied loaves—carbohydrate central—and fish, feeding thousands without a lecture on glycemic indexes (John 6:1-14). If sugar were the villain some make it out to be, why didn’t the Master Healer warn against it?

This paranoia about sugar betrays a deeper issue: unbelief masquerading as wisdom. When we obsess over “Did I have too much fructose today?” we’re training our minds to start with sensory experiences and human efforts rather than God’s revelation and His power. It’s carnality in a health-food wrapper, no different from the man enslaved to lust or greed. Romans 8:6 warns, “The mind governed by the flesh is death, but the mind governed by the Spirit is life and peace.” Constantly tweaking diets to avoid imagined threats fights against being spiritual; it’s epistemology rooted in the flesh, power drawn from self-discipline instead of faith. The Bible endorses supernatural health through God’s power, not your plate. Medicine? It doesn’t condemn it outright, but neither does it commend it for your health needs. If adjusting your intake helps you feel better, fine—the Scripture leaves room for that without judgment. But chasing nutrition, like a broken record playing in your mind? That’s sidelining the Healer for a salad.

This focus on nutrition isn’t just misguided—it’s a straight path to carnality, the very mindset Scripture warns against in Romans 8:5-8, where those who live according to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh, leading to death and enmity with God. When you obsess over macros, glycemic loads, or whether that banana will spike your insulin, you’re starting your epistemology with sensory data—how the body feels, what the scale says, or what the latest study claims—rather than with God’s self-authenticating Word as the first principle. It’s human speculation dressed in lab coats, inductive guessing that pretends to be wisdom but is anti-logic at its core. Deduction from Scripture demands we begin with God’s promises: healing by His stripes, life-giving Spirit in our mortal bodies, abundance without fear. But nutrition paranoia flips the script, making your gut the god and your willpower your savior. No wonder it breeds anxiety; it’s flesh-dependent, not faith-dependent.

Worse, this carnal lens trains you for human effort over supernatural provision, turning health into a self-made idol rather than a received gift. Day in, day out, scanning labels and portioning plates becomes your ritual, a subtle works-righteousness that sidelines prayer, faith confession, and commanding sickness to flee in Jesus’ name. God’s provision is miraculous—manna from heaven, water from rock, multiplied loaves with carbs galore—yet you opt for the sweat of your brow, post-fall style. Faith says, “Speak to the mountain of diabetes and it moves”; carnality says, “Track your carbs or perish.” One unleashes God’s power; the other exhausts you in futility. And let’s be real—if you’re more tuned to your Fitbit than the Spirit’s whisper, you’ve already lost the battle before it starts.

Consider the bleeding woman in Mark 5:25-34. She spent everything on physicians, only to worsen under their care. Human efforts failed spectacularly. Then, with a touch of faith, she tapped into Jesus’ power and was healed instantly. No dietary overhaul required. Or King Asa in 2 Chronicles 16:12, who sought doctors alone for his diseased feet and died—his fault wasn’t medicine per se, but excluding God from the equation. Contrast that with the centurion’s faith in Matthew 8:5-13: “Just say the word, and my servant will be healed.” No questions about the servant’s carb intake; faith unleashed the miracle. In our redemption, we’re called to this level—commanding health by faith, not cowering before calories.

Labeling sugar “bad” even in Eden’s context dishonors the Creator. Those fruit trees weren’t accidents; they were intentional, reflecting God’s goodness. To fear them now is to limit the Holy One of Israel, as Psalm 78:41 describes the Israelites who grumbled despite manna from heaven. They confessed lack amid abundance; we do the same when we treat God’s provisions with suspicion. Post-fall, yes, bodies can rebel—diabetes is real, a symptom of the curse. But Jesus was already a  curse for us. Isaiah 53:4-5 proclaims, “Surely he took up our pain and bore our suffering… by his wounds we are healed.” Jesus bore the curse, including its physical tolls, so we could reclaim Eden’s freedom. Not a literal return to the garden, but a spiritual one where faith makes all things possible, even a fantastic metabolism (Mark 9:23). This is why Moses was full of vigor to the last of his days. The curse, because he was under Abraham’s gospel in faith, held no sway over his body. The curse was afraid of Moses. The curse is afraid of the man who has faith in God.

Tradition peddles a gospel of moderation laced with fear—eat this, avoid that, or else. But Jesus offers abundance: “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10). Full life includes enjoying creation without paranoia. Sure, gluttony tests God (Matthew 4:7), but so does unbelief that hoards health through human schemes. The reprobate theologians—those faith-fumblers who dilute the promises—would have you limping through life, confessing weakness instead of victory. They slap “God’s will” on sickness, forgetting that healing glorifies Him, as in John 9:3 where the blind man’s restoration displayed God’s work, not his affliction.

So, what’s the takeaway? Embrace the sugar flowing in Eden as a shadow of God’s goodness, redeemed in Christ. Don’t idolize diets or demonize delights; let faith govern your health. If a mango calls your name, enjoy it with gratitude, trusting the Spirit for vitality. And if sickness knocks, resist it like Satan himself—command it gone in Jesus’ name. After all, in this divine setup, you’re not the victim of carbs; you’re the victor through faith. Unbelief might leave you counting calories till kingdom come, but faith? It moves mountains—and maybe sweetens your tea while at it.

In conclusion, Eden’s sweetness wasn’t a setup for failure but a reality of God’s provision. The curse twisted it, Satan takes advantage of it, but redemption restores. Today we have faith over fear, Spirit over spreadsheets. God’s not stingy with His gifts; why should we be suspicious. If we are trained, not by carnal starting points, but faith in God’s promises, then the curse will fear us. Diabetes will tremble in fear before a man with faith, as loudly as demons scream in fear before the man who wields Jesus’ name.

Confess with me. “I have been redeemed from the curse, because Jesus already took the curse away from me. He has already given me the gospel of Abraham’s excessive blessings, excessive increase and the abundance of the Spirit and miracles. The sugar God called good is still good for me today. When I eat sugar it nourishes my body, makes my blood healthy, makes my bones limber and strengthens my flesh. Sugar is not bad for me, it does not create diseases and health issues for me; rather, sugar makes me healthier. In Jesus Name.”

Receiving God’s Love #2

When someone asks what it means to receive God’s love, they’re often looking for a feeling, a warm glow, or some mystical experience that makes everything right. But that’s not how the Bible frames it. God’s love isn’t a fleeting emotion or a pat on the back for good behavior; it’s a sovereign reality, rooted in His unchanging nature and revealed through His Word. Receiving it starts with faith—assenting to what God has already done and said about you in Christ. It’s not about chasing a high; it’s about agreeing with God that His promises are your reality, even when life throws curveballs. And let’s be honest, if God’s love was just a sentiment, it would be as reliable as your morning coffee mood—up one day, crash the next. No, it’s power, it’s provision, it’s the force that crushes sickness and lack underfoot.

Let’s start with the basics, because if we don’t ground this in Scripture, we’re just spinning human speculation, and that’s Satan’s playground. The Bible declares that God’s love predates everything—it’s eternal, sovereign, and initiating. 1 John 4:19 puts it plainly: “We love because he first loved us.” Before you could muster a thought about God, He loved you. This isn’t some vague universal affection; it’s targeted, predestined for His elect. In Ephesians 1:4-5, Paul explains that God chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world, predestining us in love to be adopted as sons. Think about that—God’s love isn’t reactive to your performance; it’s proactive, decreed from eternity. He didn’t wait to see if you’d measure up; He sovereignly decided to pour out favor on you through Jesus. That’s not mystery or paradox; that’s the laws of identity and contradiction straight from God’s mind. If He swore by Himself to bless Abraham’s seed—and we’re that seed by predestination and expressed by our faith (Galatians 3:29)—then receiving His love means claiming that inheritance now, not in some distant heaven.

But what does this love look like in action? It’s not abstract; it’s substantial, tied to Christ’s atonement. Romans 5:8 nails it: “But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” God’s love isn’t just words; it’s wrath-absorbing, curse-crushing substitution. Jesus bore our sins, but Isaiah 53:4-5 expands it: “Surely he has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows… and with his wounds we are healed.” Matthew 8:16-17 applies this directly to physical healing, quoting Isaiah to show Jesus took our infirmities. Peter echoes in 1 Peter 2:24: “By his wounds you have been healed.” Notice the past tense—it’s done. Receiving God’s love means assenting to this finished work: your sins forgiven, your body healed, your needs met. It’s not begging for scraps; it’s bold access to the throne (Hebrews 4:16), where you ask and receive because God’s love demands it. If He loved us enough to send His Son to the cross, how much more does He love giving good things to those who ask (Matthew 7:11)?

When Grief hits like a freight train, we go to His promises: “I will never leave you nor forsake you” (Hebrews 13:5). I confessed His love over the pain—”Father, You turn mourning to dancing” (Psalm 30:11)—and God lifted me out of the pit. The devil whispers abandonment, but God’s Word shouts sonship. Receiving His love meant rejecting feelings for divine revelation: I’m righteous in Christ, healed by His stripes, prosperous through Abraham’s blessing. No valley of sorrow is too deep for mountain-moving faith (Mark 11:23). And yeah, if that sounds too triumphant for some, remember: God’s love isn’t a consolation prize; it’s conquest over the curse.

God’s love is sovereign, not sentimental. He doesn’t send sickness to “teach lessons”—that’s Satan’s gig (Acts 10:38). God relates to us in blessings under the New Covenant, where Jesus ministers life, not death. Receiving love means proximity to this God—drawing near by faith, where His Spirit empowers (Acts 1:8). Jude 1:20-21 ties it to building faith and praying in the Spirit to stay in God’s love. No tongues? No miracles? Then question if you’re truly receiving His love or just a feel-good counterfeit. The Bible’s ethic: Ask in faith, get it, whether forgiveness or healing (John 16:24). No maybe—necessity flows from God’s nature of love. He’s the law of non-contradiction; His yes is yes.

So how do we receive this love? Faith confession—speak God’s Word over your life. “Father, You first loved me; I receive Your righteousness, healing, prosperity.” Reject unbelief like the plague: “No sickness from Satan sticks to me—I’m blessed!” It’s not arrogance; it’s agreement with God. Strong confessions like that, is agreeing that God does love you, and so you speak it out loud, just as you speak out loud your love to your spouse, family or friends. Don’t coddle doubt; crush it with truth and confession it with your lips. If grief grips, confess: “Weeping endures for a night, but joy comes in the morning” (Psalm 30:5). Faith shortens troubles, and in doing so eradicating patience’s need.

1 John 4:10, which declares, “This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.” Here’s the punchline: we didn’t love; God love us. We were rebels, dead in sin, incapable of loving Him—our hearts were stone, not valentines. Yet He moved, sending Jesus as the propitiation, turning wrath into favor. Receiving this love isn’t about us giving back; it’s about us taking what He’s already given. We’re the needy ones, not God. He doesn’t need our offerings—He owns the cattle on a thousand hills (Psalm 50:10). Instead, He favors us by giving: righteousness, healing, peace. It’s a one-way street of grace. Assent to this truth—confess, “I receive Your favor, Father”—and watch faith unlock the storehouse.

This flips human logic upside down, and that’s the beauty of it. Love, biblically, is favor shown, not earned. We can’t give God anything He lacks; our “love” to Him is just echoing His gift back, like a kid handing Dad a crayon drawing made with his own crayons. But God’s love is original, creative, sovereign. He favors us by giving His Son, and through Him, every blessing. In my room, waiting for Dad’s discipline, I was still in his house—safe, loved. So it is with God: even in correction, His love pours out, not takes away. It is Satan who takes away, steals and kills you. Receive it by faith—declare, “I’m favored, not forsaken”—and you align with His definition of reality. It’s not pride; it’s obedience to the God who loved us first, and keeps on giving.

In conclusion, receiving God’s love isn’t passive—it’s faith-fueled warfare against unbelief, claiming what’s yours in Christ. God’s love is power: initiating, sovereign, triumphant. It crushes curses, heals hurts, prospers paths. Don’t settle for feelings; grab revelation. Jesus marveled at faith, not patience. God’s love isn’t a mere hug in the dark—it’s the dawn blasting shadows to bits.

Your Blessed: Even If You’re in the Wrong

September 28, 2025 

Let’s dive straight into the heart of God’s unshakeable covenant with His people, a truth that shines through the stories of Abraham and Isaac like a divine spotlight cutting through the fog of human failure. In Genesis 12:10-20, Abraham, driven by famine, heads to Egypt and pulls a fast one: he tells Pharaoh that Sarah is his sister, not his wife, fearing for his life. Technically, she’s a half-sister, but the omission is a lie by any honest measure. Yet, when Pharaoh takes Sarah into his palace, God doesn’t thunder down on Abraham with a rebuke. Instead, He plagues Pharaoh’s household, forcing the king to confront the deception and send Abraham away loaded with wealth—silver, gold, livestock. Abraham is in the wrong and God slaps Pharaoh instead. Think about that.  Abraham walks out richer, unscathed, while the pagan ruler gets the divine smackdown. Fast-forward to Genesis 26:6-11, and Isaac pulls the same stunt with Rebekah in Gerar, claiming she’s his sister to King Abimelech. Again, no heavenly finger-wagging at Isaac. Isaac not only escapes harm but reaps a hundredfold harvest in a drought-stricken land (v. 12), blessing upon blessing despite his fear-driven fib.

This isn’t sloppy storytelling in Scripture; it’s a deliberate showcase of God’s covenant loyalty, a Contract so ironclad that it overrides human sins and turns them into triumphs. God’s unmerited favor supplies man; man does not supply God. Abraham and Isaac weren’t earning brownie points here—they were fumbling in fear, yet God’s promise to Abraham in Genesis 12:2-3 (“I will bless you… and you will be a blessing”) kicks in like an unstoppable force. The Almighty rebukes kings, plagues palaces, and pours out prosperity, all while His chosen ones learn on the job. It’s almost comical, in a sobering way: picture Pharaoh scratching his head over sudden household chaos, or Abimelech sweating through a nightmare, while the real culprits—Abraham and Isaac—stroll away with upgrades. God isn’t winking at sin; He’s demonstrating that His Contract isn’t fragile like human deals. It’s sovereign, absolute, and directly orchestrated to showcase His glory through imperfect vessels.

Now, zoom out to the bigger picture: this covenant power isn’t ancient history; it’s amplified in the New Contract through Jesus Christ. Galatians 3:29 declares, “If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” That promise? The blessing of Abraham, including supernatural favor that makes kings back off and resources multiply, even when we’ve messed up. Jesus became the curse for us (Galatians 3:13), swapping our failures for His righteousness, so that God’s contract with us—sealed in blood—guarantees ongoing goodness. Hebrews 8:10-12 spells it out: God writes His laws on our hearts, calls us His people, and remembers our sins no more. This isn’t license to abuse grace, as Paul warns in Romans 6:1-2—we don’t sin so grace abounds. But it is a reminder that God’s favor isn’t performance-based; it’s promise-based. When we stumble, He doesn’t abandon ship; He rebukes the “kings” in our lives—be they bosses, circumstances, or even demonic forces—and redirects the fallout to our benefit. Think of it: your mistake at work leads to a promotion because God stirs favor; a health scare turns into miraculous recovery because the Contract (not your performance) demands healing. Reprobates scoff at this, calling it “health and wealth heresy,” because they would rather trample Jesus blood and believe in Him.  

Yet, here’s where faith enters the fray, and it’s not optional—it’s the ignition switch. Abraham and Isaac’s stories show God’s initiative, but our response matters. In both cases, their partial truths stemmed from fear, not faith, yet God honored the underlying covenant. For us, post-cross, we’re called to higher: Our faith needs to catch up to who we already are in Christ. Ephesians 2:6 seats us with Christ in heavenly realms, far above earthly kings and blunders. But if we wallow in guilt or unbelief after a slip-up, we limit God, confessing our mess instead of His mercy. Jesus modeled this perfectly: even when Peter denied Him, Christ didn’t rebuke with threats but restored him (John 21:15-19), focusing on future fruit. We’re not to abuse grace by plotting deceptions, but when we falter by the weakness of the flesh, God’s contract kicks in. He promises in Romans 8:28 to work all things for good, rebuking obstacles and supplying needs.

This truth dismantles defective ethics that peddle guilt as godliness.  Faith-fumblers, preach a gospel where God’s always mad, ready to zap you for every misstep. Nonsense. The same love the Father has for Jesus, He gives to His elect. If God rebuked kings for Abraham’s sake, how much more for us, united with the resurrected Christ? We’re His children, not probationary hires. He promises in Psalm 105:14-15, “He allowed no one to oppress them; for their sake he rebuked kings: ‘Do not touch my anointed ones; do my prophets no harm.'” That’s Contract protection, extending to us as Abraham’s heirs.

Let these stories fuel bold confession: “God, even in my stumbling, Your Contract stands; rebuke the ‘kings’ in my path and pour out Your goodness.” Faith catches up by meditating on promises day and night (Psalm 1:2-3), assenting to God’s definitions over our feelings. You’re not defined by mistakes; you’re defined by the Contract—accomplished, effective, eternal. And if He rebuked pharaohs for patriarchs, imagine what He’ll do for you. It’s not arrogance; it’s agreement with Scripture.

Satan’s Sticky Fingers: Robbed of Speech

Sept / 16 / 2025

“A spirit has robbed him of speech.”

Picture this: a desperate father, elbowing through a crowd in ancient Galilee, clutching the frayed edges of his hope like a man who’s just realized his wallet’s gone missing in a divine pickpocket scheme. “Teacher,” he blurts out in Mark 9:17, “I brought you my son, who is possessed by a spirit that has *robbed* him of speech.” Robbed. Not gently borrowed, not misplaced in some cosmic filing error—robbed. As if Satan himself is out there running a black-market operation on human dignity, snatching voices, health, and futures with the glee of a thief who knows the cops are on coffee break. And Jesus? He’s not there to commiserate over the loss. No, He’s the divine restitution agent, the one who turns the tables and declares, in essence, “That’s not how this story ends.” Because while Satan steals, kills, and destroys, Jesus—that is, God in the flesh—shows up to give life, and life to the full (John 10:10). It’s a total takedown, a comprehensive comeback, where the enemy’s heists meet their match in the King’s vault of abundance.

Let’s not rush past that word, though: “robbed”. The NIV nails it here, capturing the raw theft at play. This isn’t some vague affliction drifting in from the ether; it’s a deliberate grab, a demonic mugging. The father isn’t whining about a genetic glitch or the general brokenness of a fallen world—he’s pointing the finger straight at the spirit doing the dirty work. And Jesus doesn’t correct him with a theological footnote about Adam’s ancient fumble in the garden. No, He rolls up His sleeves, rebukes the foul spirit, and sends it packing, leaving the boy whole. It’s a scene that echoes through the Gospels like a divine audit: Satan as the ultimate con artist, pilfering what God intended for flourishing. But here’s the frank truth, straight from the self-authenticating pages of Scripture—our epistemology’s unyielding foundation: This robbery isn’t God’s idea. It’s not His script. God doesn’t script poverty of body or spirit; He authors prosperity, health, and unhindered communion. To think otherwise is to buy into the devil’s counterfeit theology, where lack masquerades as piety and suffering as sanctity. What a con. What a waste.

Dig a little deeper into Jesus’ ministry, and you see this contrast isn’t a one-off plot twist—it’s the central narrative arc. From the synagogue in Capernaum to the dusty roads of Judea, Jesus doesn’t just forgive sins in some ethereal corner of the soul; He pairs it with healing the body, restoring the broken, and multiplying the loaves like He’s got a divine expense account with no limits. Remember the paralytic lowered through the roof in Mark 2? “Son, your sins are forgiven,” Jesus declares. The scribes mutter about blasphemy, so He follows up: “Which is easier: to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Get up, take your mat and walk’?” Then—bam—the man walks. Forgiveness and function, absolution and ability, bundled together like a covenant combo meal. It’s total salvation on display, where spiritual restoration isn’t isolated from material wholeness. Satan robs on both fronts: voices silenced in shame, bodies bent in pain, wallets emptied in want. But Jesus? His life-giving ministry hits back harder, broader, deeper. He doesn’t offer a half-measure grace that patches the soul while leaving the flesh to fester. No, He restores the whole package, because anything less would dishonor the God who, from Genesis onward, pronounced creation “very good”—abundant, integrated, thriving.

And let’s not kid ourselves: This robbery extends to the material realm, too. The same spirit that mutes a boy’s speech whispers lies about scarcity, convincing folks that God’s too stingy for silver or too sovereign to care about supper. But Scripture shreds that nonsense. Satan steals health *and* wealth, binding people in cycles of lack that mock the Creator’s generosity. Look at the widow’s oil in 2 Kings 4—multiplied by God’s word through Elisha—or Abraham’s flocks swelling under heaven’s favor. These aren’t anomalies; they’re previews of the blessing that flows from faith. Jesus embodies it fully: feeding five thousand from a boy’s lunch, turning water to wine without a single budget meeting. His high priesthood isn’t one of half-rations and holy poverty; it’s the ministry of righteousness, healing, and prosperity (as Peter sums it up in Acts 10:38). To claim Jesus as your priest while nursing a theology of deprivation is like hiring a chef who specializes in feasts and then settling for stale bread. It’s not devotion; it’s delusion. God’s unmerited favor supplies man—man doesn’t supply God. Satan peddles the lie that lack builds character; Jesus proves abundance glorifies the Father.

Now, pivot to that sevenfold restoration—the Bible’s bold promise of over-the-top payback. Joel 2:25 thunders it: “I will repay you for the years the locusts have eaten—the great locust and the young locust, the other locusts and the locust swarm—my great army that I sent among you.” Not just a refund, mind you, but a surplus, a divine interest rate that turns theft into treasure. Zechariah 9:12 echoes the vibe: “Return to your fortress, you prisoners of hope; even now I announce that I will restore twice as much to you.” Twice? Try seven, as the pattern holds from Job’s double-down restoration to the prodigal’s fatted calf welcome. This isn’t cosmic compensation for pity’s sake; it’s God’s sovereign logic at work, where what the enemy meant for ruin becomes rocket fuel for glory. Satan robs your speech? God restores your voice—with volume, clarity, and a testimony that echoes through eternity. He robs your health? Expect not just mending, but vitality that turns heads and topples strongholds. Wealth pilfered? Watch as storehouses overflow, not from sweat alone, but from the blessing of Abraham crashing through the gates of grace.

But here’s where the rubber meets the road, and the wit turns a shade sharper: If the curse of Adam looms in the background—and it does, that primal fracture rippling through creation—Jesus didn’t leave it hanging like a bad sequel. Galatians 3:13 lays it bare: “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us, for it is written: ‘Cursed is everyone who is hung on a pole.'” Substitutionary atonement in action: Jesus absorbs the thorns, the sweat, the silence of the tomb, so you get the garden’s bounty. The father in Mark 9 doesn’t blame Adam’s echo; he names the demon. Jesus doesn’t theologize about original sin; He evicts the intruder. The bent-over woman in Luke 13? “Ought not this woman, a daughter of Abraham whom Satan has kept bound for eighteen long years, be set free on the Sabbath day?” Satan, not some vague curse, gets the credit for the crook in her spine. Sure, the Fall set the stage for such invasions, but Jesus spotlights the squatter, the thief in the night. And why? Because pinpointing the robber empowers the resistance. If it’s just “the curse,” you shrug in fatalism (aka the Christian word for “if it is God’s will”). But if it’s Satan—and Scripture screams it is—then you’ve got a command: Resist the devil, and he will flee (James 4:7). Cast out spirits, heal the sick, reclaim the stolen. Faith isn’t passive therapy; it’s aggressive restitution.

Frankly, if you’re sitting on robbed health or pilfered prosperity, nursing it like a badge of spiritual maturity, you’re not just missing the plot—you’re aiding and abetting the heist. You’re a willing accomplice, handing Satan the getaway car keys while Jesus stands ready with the restitution check. Maxim 16 cuts like a surgeon’s scalpel: Reprobates who resist faith on demand for healing and blessings have sided with demons to trample the blood of Christ. Ouch? Good. Truth should sting when it exposes the lie. God isn’t the miser doling out affliction for your “growth”; He’s the Father who, through the Son, has already swapped curse for blessing, poverty for plenty. Abraham’s seed? That’s you, insider to the Contract, heir to the abundance; inheritor of Jesus who is the resurrection of life “now,” not just pie-in-the-sky later. To accept the robbery without a fight is to declare Jesus’ cross as ineffective, His resurrection a footnote. But no—His life is abundant, total, sevenfold-plus. Satan steals your speech? Jesus restores your shout of praise. He binds your back? You walk tall in dominion. He empties your coffers? You sow in faith and reap barns that burst.

Don’t let the thief define your story. Scripture interprets itself, originalist to the core, and it screams restoration over ruin. Start with the self-authenticating Word: Your faith saved you—from sin, from sickness, from scarcity. Confess it daily, relentlessly: “Satan, you robbed what was mine, but Jesus redeemed it sevenfold. I take it back now, in His name.” Command the mute spirit out, the bent frame straight, the empty hands full. Reality obeys faith, because the resurrected King backs your play. It’s not arrogance; it’s agreement with God, whose love to you, makes you worth the overpayment. And when the loot rolls in—health humming, wealth working, voice vibrating with victory—remember: This glorifies Him, who is the power, the love and the giver; not you. It’s the Father’s joy to lavish on sons who believe.

In this fallen farce of a world, where Satan still pickpockets the unwitting, be the one who turns the tables. Robbed of speech? Speak life. Robbed of strength? Stride bold. Robbed of substance? Scatter seed and watch the harvest mock the thief. Jesus didn’t come to commiserate; He came to compensate, to conquer, to crown the believer with triumph. By faith, you’ll save yourself from Satan’s steal. And in doing so, God boasts of you before the heavens, as the hero He always scripted you to be. No more victims in the kingdom. Only victors, voices restored, vaults replenished. That’s the gospel’s punchline—and it’s hilariously, eternally good.

Identified with the Resurrected Christ, Not the Earthly Jesus

Posted: August 25, 2025 

I want to hammer home a truth from 2 Corinthians 5:16-17 on how we see ourselves in Christ. Paul writes: “So we have stopped evaluating others from a human point of view. At one time we thought of Christ merely from a human point of view. How differently we know him now! This means that anyone who belongs to Christ has become a new person. The old life is gone; a new life has begun!” (NLT).

The big idea: Our new creation in Christ isn’t modeled after the Jesus who walked the dusty roads of Galilee, healing the sick and casting out demons as a man under the law. This would be an amazing thing, but the point Paul is making is greater. No, that’s the “human point of view” Paul warns against—the old way of thinking that limits God and shackles your faith. Our identity is fused with the resurrected Christ, the exalted King seated at the right hand of Power. We’re not mimicking the pre-cross Jesus; we’re embodying the post-resurrection Lord. This isn’t some fluffy spiritual metaphor—it’s the explosive reality that unleashes miracles, crushes mountains, and makes “all things possible” a daily command, not a distant dream. And hey, if faith can move mountains, imagine what it does to your Monday morning coffee slump?

Let’s break this down biblically, because human speculation is just satanic superstition dressed up in theological jargon. Paul says we once viewed Christ “from a human point of view.” Think about it: During His earthly ministry, Jesus operated as a man—fully God, yes, but voluntarily limited, born under the law (Galatians 4:4), baptized in the Spirit for power (Luke 3:22, 4:1), and doing the Father’s works through that anointing (John 14:10). He was the forerunner, showing us how a Spirit-empowered human crushes the devil’s works. But that was the old covenant shadow. Post-resurrection? Jesus ascends, pours out the same Spirit on us (Acts 2:33), and now sits enthroned, far above all rule and authority (Ephesians 1:20-21). That’s the Christ we know now—the victorious, glorified One whose name we wield like a divine sledgehammer. Swing it wisely, folks; for Paul tells us, with great power should come great love.

Your new creation isn’t a refurbished version of your old self; it’s a total reboot, a supernatural species upgrade. “The old life is gone; a new life has begun!” Paul shouts. And this new life isn’t tethered to the earthly Jesus—it’s identified with the heavenly One. Colossians 3:1-3 nails it: “Since you have been raised to new life with Christ, set your sights on the realities of heaven, where Christ sits in the place of honor at God’s right hand. Think about the things of heaven, not the things of earth. For you died to this life, and your real life is hidden with Christ in God.” Raised with Him? Seated with Him? That’s not poetry; that’s positional truth. God sees you already enthroned above every principality, every sickness, every mountain-sized obstacle. Ephesians 2:6 doubles down: “For he raised us from the dead along with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms because we are united with Christ Jesus.”

Reprobate theologians—those faith-fumblers who peddle unbelief—love to drag us back to a “human point of view.” They say, “Well, that was Jesus; we’re just sinners saved by grace, limping along until heaven.” That’s defective metaphysics, limiting the Holy One of Israel. If we’re seated with the resurrected Christ, our identity is His identity. We are not identified in irrational ways like eternality, infinity, and immutability, because by definition we cannot. However, we’re co-heirs (Romans 8:17), joint-partakers in His divine nature (2 Peter 1:4), and authorized to use His name as if we were Him. Jesus didn’t say, “Ask in My name, but only for small stuff because you’re not Me.” No! In John 14:12-14, He promises: “Anyone who believes in me will do the same works I have done, and even greater works… You can ask for anything in my name, and I will do it.” Why? Because using Jesus’ name by faith isn’t cosplay—it’s identification so profound that your request is as if Jesus Himself spoke it. The sovereign God has decided that when you ask for something in Jesus’ Name, it is as if Jesus asked Him directly. God always hears and gives the Son what He asks for, and God has decided to do the same for us when we ask; He did this because God decided to make Jesus’ identity our identity. God decided to do this because He is sovereign and because He wanted to do it, and because He loves you.

The power is ultimately God’s and not that we have inherent power in ourselves, or in our words. However, with that being said, our identification is so substantially and relationally integrated in God’s sovereign thoughts about us that when we command something in faith, it happens. My body does not have inherent power to move, except by the power of God, even when I am typing this essay. However, God has made my body and thoughts so identified together in a relational sense that I consider my body as my own and I naturally move my fingers to type as I want. This is the same reality we now have in our identity with the resurrected Jesus. The power, authority, rich inheritance, and name of Jesus are so integrated with me in the relational sense that when I pray, stuff happens, and mountains move at the sound of my voice. Talk about a voice-activated universe—Siri’s got nothing on this!

God did all this to give us unshakable confidence to ask and receive, by showing us how intellectually, relationally, and ontologically we are identified with Jesus. However, all this is overlooking what Jesus said in John 16 by saying, in that day, I will not even ask on our behalf, because the Father loves you. As if you don’t even need a mediator, because God loves you so much—or better said, the Father loves you so much that He has already made mediation happen and be so complete that you can ask Him directly. As natural as it is for Jesus to be in His own throne room and walk around is the same degree it is for me to walk boldly in God’s throne room and walk around, because I have been so deeply identified with Jesus. This is how the sovereign God thinks about me. And only His thoughts and choices matter.

Maxim 12 from my book rings true here: “God’s gospel is a total salvation. God saves. His chosen ones are clean, righteous, co-heirs with Christ and have the Mind of Christ. They will judge the world and angels; they inherit the world. All things are theirs.” All things! That’s not hyperbole; that’s gospel fact. When you pray in Jesus’ name, commanding a mountain to move (Mark 11:23), it’s the resurrected Christ—seated above all—backing you up. Your faith confession isn’t a beggar’s plea; it’s a king’s decree. Why? Because you’re so united with Him that God hears your voice as His. “By faith” isn’t a caveat—it’s the ignition key. Faith assents to God’s definition of reality: You’re not the old you; you’re the new creation, exalted with Christ.

But here’s where the rubber meets the road—and where defective ethics creeps in. If you evaluate yourself from a “human point of view,” you’ll limit God. You’ll say, “Healing? Miracles? That’s only for Jesus’ earthly ministry, not me.” Wrong! That mindset dishonors the resurrection. Jesus’ ascension and enthronement amplify our authority, not diminish it. In His earthly ministry, He was one man in one place; now, through His body—the church—He’s multiplying miracles worldwide. As great as it would be, to be identified with Jesus’, under the law, in His earthly miracle ministry, it is still a limitation, because what we have is greater.  This is why Jesus promised we would do Greater works! If you doubt that, you’re siding with the faithless, those who trample the blood of Christ by rejecting the full scope of our new creation.

Remember the Israelites? They limited God by unbelief (Psalm 78:41), confessing giants instead of confessing confidence in God’s promise. We’re worse if we do that now—post-resurrection, post-Pentecost. Colossians 3 urges us to “set your minds on things above,” because that’s where our life is hidden. Faith to move mountains? It’s yours because you’re seated above them. Command demons? Absolutely, for you’re far above all powers. Ask for the desires of your heart? Yes, because the Father loves you as He loves Jesus (John 17:23), and your requests in His name glorify the exalted Christ and Himself.

In my book, I dedicate a chunk to ethics: “You Are the Promises of God.” That’s you—new creation, promise-embodied. Don’t evaluate Christ or yourself from a human viewpoint anymore. Know Him as the resurrected King, and know yourself as seated with Him. Faith unleashes God. Faith unleashes your identity in Jesus. Faith unleashes this: Speak to the storm, the sickness, the lack—in Jesus’ name—and watch reality bow. It’s not arrogance; it’s obedience to our new identity; it’s agreeing with God’s definition about this reality He created.

Your Words Always Carry Authority

Sometimes the faith preachers can go too far in their teaching on words, confession, and giving Satan authority through your words of unbelief. Most of the mistakes boil down to one of two things. First is their demonic doctrine of Arminianism. Their denial of the Bible’s sovereignty leads them to say God gave up some of His power and authority and handed it to man, and then man passed it to Satan, and so on. The second is a borderline superstition about words. Jesus said, “Lazarus is dead” (John 11:14). This did not cancel His ability to raise him from the dead, because Jesus said it along with the statement, “we will go and wake him up” (John 11:11). Jesus did not say he was dead in unbelief, fearful that Lazarus could not be raised from the dead, but as a statement made on the human level of observation. Jesus said what could be observed, but contradicted empiricism by faith: “We will go and wake him up.”

With that being said, there is some truth to what is being said, and we need to address it. Proverbs 18:21 declares that life and death are in the power of the tongue. The most obvious way to see this is in salvation. If you believe and confess with your tongue, you will be saved (Romans 10:9-10). However, sometimes the confession of the tongue can be as simple as tears. For Jesus said to the woman who washed His feet with her tears, and to whom He said all her sins are forgiven, “Your faith has saved you” (Luke 7:50). Jesus, the most God-centered man who ever lived, did not say, “God saved you”; no, He said, “Your faith has saved you.” Thus, we see it is more than just words, but words backed up by faith.

Moses said, “I present before you life and death; choose your path” (Deuteronomy 30:19). And the way we choose is by unbelief or faith. If unbelief, then words of unbelief will follow. If faith, then words of faith in God will follow. This is why Jesus said to the woman, regarding the forgiveness of her sins, “Your faith has saved you,” rather than saying “God saved you.” Faith-filled words or unbelief-filled words determine the course of your life. Your position in life is finalized by your confession.

Talk about a divine mic drop—your tongue’s basically a cosmic remote control; hit ‘faith’ for blessings, or ‘unbelief’ for the eternal buffering screen.

God Is Sovereign and Still Is

Because God has not given up any of His direct and absolute control over all things, He therefore still does all that He wants. He defines His own creation and establishes connections and cause and effects. He was sovereign when He made the promises, and so He is sovereign and faithful to do them, no matter how incredible they are.

Thus, when God made the earth, God gave dominion of the earth to man, commanding man to steward it (Genesis 1:28). God did not stop being the only real cause of all things, but on the relative level, because God is in control of all things, it was His choice to put the earth under man’s authority and stewardship. Adam did not ask for this authority and dominion. It is because God is sovereign that Adam had this responsibility and authority even though Adam did not ask for it.

Because the earth was given to man, when Adam sinned, much authority and power was transferred over to Satan, by God’s choice and design. Even though Adam did not ask for the stewardship and responsibility of managing the earth, it was his because God sovereignly made it so. Thus, even if Adam did not want the responsibility for his choices and words of unbelief to result in earthly authority being transferred to Satan, he had no choice in the matter because this dynamic was established by God. The devil said to Jesus, “I will give you all their authority and splendor; it has been given to me, and I can give it to anyone I want to” (Luke 4:6). Jesus did not refute Satan. After Jesus’ resurrection, He said to the disciples, “All authority has been given to Me” (Matthew 28:18). Jesus took it back, and all those united to Him not only have the original authority and stewardship given to Adam, but much, much, much greater; it is as great as the authority Jesus has. Jesus has made us royal priests in Him forever (1 Peter 2:9, Revelation 1:6). We are not just sub-heirs, but co-heirs with Jesus (Romans 8:17). We are united to Jesus’ body; therefore, because all things, including all powers, authority, rulers, and dominions are under Jesus’ feet, they are under our feet (Ephesians 1:22-23). Jesus has given us the privilege and authority to use His Name to ask for whatever we want and get it (John 14:13-14, & ch 15, and 16). He has endowed us with the power of the Holy Spirit; the same Spirit that empowered Him (Acts 1:8).

As a believer, I did not ask to be made a royal priest in Jesus. And yet, this position of authority and power is mine, whether I want it or not. By my words, as a royal priest, I can command sickness to leave and rebuke Satan to his face. I do not go in and out of being a royal priest who can use Jesus’ name. I always have this position, whether I want it or not. Thus, my words always carry royal priesthood weight and authority because in God’s mind, He thinks I am a royal priest in Jesus. For example, if a king mutters to himself, “I want some water,” even if he did not intend for a servant to go get him water, a servant will get him water, because the word of the king is law. This is exactly what the Canaanite woman did with Jesus’ word (Matthew 15:21-28). Jesus’ word put her as a dog in the house, under the table. Thus, the woman demanded some crumbs, because it was Jesus’ word that put her there, even if Jesus did not intend for her to get healing. Even though the woman hijacked Jesus’ word, on the other hand, she honored His word as that of a King, whose word is law. Jesus was in a position of authority, and the woman was demanding that Jesus honor His word.

 Sovereign God hands out authority like candy at a parade—Adam fumbled it to Satan, Jesus snatched it back, and now we’re co-kings; just don’t trip over your own tongue, or you’ll end up cursing yourself.

This is what we mean by our words having life and death. It is not that we have inherent power in our words, but God in His sovereign choice has put us into positions of authority and power, whether we want it or not. It was this way from the beginning with Adam. Adam lost much of this authority, but God began to give it back starting with Abraham, and in Jesus much more has been given to the believer. It does not matter if you acknowledge your position of authority and power, because God in His mind thinks you are in a position of authority and power, therefore, God will see to it personally that the words you speak will bring death or life to you. It is because God is sovereign and we are accountable to Him that words bring life and death. It is because God is sovereign that I have the power to command sickness to leave, to shut the mouths of demons, and tell mountains to fly away (Mark 11:23).

This results in a double-edged sword. On the one hand, you can curse yourself with death, pain, sickness, shame, and demons, or you can bless yourself with life, peace, prosperity, the Holy Spirit, health, and glory. Even if you shut your mouth, just your tears are enough for God to use His sovereignty to ensure they either damn or bless you.

There is only one word in the Bible for demon possession, and it means to be demonized, and it includes anything from being slightly harassed to outright possession. Because Adam sinned in a position of authority, this led God to give man’s authority over to the devil, and this allowed Satan to demonize mankind. For example, in Acts 10:38, Peter says Jesus healed all those being victimized by the devil. Thus, much sicknesses are caused by demons, and so sickness is largely caused by being demonized. If you are sick, then it is likely due to being demonized, although sometimes it can be just God’s curse at the fall (Genesis 3:16-19).

This is why words are so important. If the doctor says you have stage 4 cancer, and in unbelief and fear you repeat this, because God thinks you are in a position of authority, you have just authorized death and pain for you. You have given permission for demons to demonize you. If you say, “getting old means I get arthritis and feeble and fall,” then it will be true for you. You have chosen death. You have chosen unbelief and curses. God thinks you are a steward in authority over the earth, He thinks you are royalty, He thinks you are a priest, and so your words of unbelief have authorized your flesh to be sick, weak, and in pain.

Once you realize you are always in a position of authority and power, then the intelligent thing to do is use your words to confess the goodness of God over yourself, and use the Name of Jesus to get good things from God.

This is why Christianity started with Abraham, whose very name is a confession of faith in God: “I am the father of many nations” (Genesis 17:5). Christianity started with faith-filled words in God’s good promises of health, wealth, fame, and blessings. Both the Old and New Testaments say this: “We believed and so we have spoken” (2 Corinthians 4:13; Psalm 116:10). This is Christianity 101.

Satan knows this and so he has demonized the faithless into confessing death, and by confessing unbelief they are doing Satan’s job for him. They will say, “We are the worst of sinners,” and so they are (1 Timothy 1:15, but misused here). God thinks they are in a position of authority (even if it is only a mere shadow of the stewardship Adam once had), and so they authorize their souls and actions to be sinful and unrighteous. They say things like, “This sickness is sent by God to teach me something.” The ten spies of the Israel came back from spying on the Land and gave a truthful report about their observations saying, “we are small, and the people are giants, we can’t do this.” It was correct; however, God was angry because God’s promise contradicted their observations. They chose their observation over God’s promise. God made their words to be a self-fulling decree. Thus, God in His sovereignty makes unbelief a self-fulfilling prophecy of sickness, because God considers our words have weight

 Think about it. The faithless and traditionist mock the faith preachers for decreeing and prophesying. Yet, just like the 10 spies, they decree they are sick and are too weak to defeat stage 4 cancer, because that is what the doctor confessed. They prophesy about how old age makes them feeble and how arthritis bends their hands; they decree this because they already observe how their bodies hurt. They decree that they are small, but confess that sickness and old age are giants. They prophesy that sufferings from everyday troubles of life will eat away at their life, libido and happiness. And just like the Israelites who confessed their own smallness, defeat and sufferings, God made their decrees reality, and made their prophecies manifest. They speak against the faith teachers for decreeing, but their mouths pour out an onslaught of decrees and prophecies, but in the negative. And we see it come to pass. They see their confessions manifest, not because they have inherent power in words, but because the sovereign God thinks their decrees have authority and power. Their lives are a living testimony of the power of decrees and the reality of prophecy. Their doctrine is against decreeing, but their lives are a constant endorsement of it.

It does not matter if you do not want your self-deprecating statements, or observations about how your body feels, to be self-fulling prophecies, God in His sovereignty ensures your words authorizes them to be so. This is how God is using His sovereignty, so deal with it. Deal with it by speaking faith filled words in God’s blessings.    

Satan’s sneaky script flip—get the faithless yapping negativity, and poof, they’re self-sabotaging superstars; meanwhile, God’s like, “I glued the mic to your hand, it will amplify your words, so think carefully what you will say!”

There is a reason Jesus preached so much. Faith comes by hearing the word of truth (Romans 10:17). By hearing the truth, our hearts are filled with faith. When our hearts are filled with faith, we open our mouths and confess His blessings over our lives. In the Gospels, Jesus kept saying things like, “Ask what you want using my Name and get it” (John 16:23-24). And then, “What you SAY, if you believe, then you will get it.” And if you “SAY to this mountain it will move” (Mark 11:23).

Notice how many times Jesus says, “SAY.”

Mark 11:23-24: “Truly I tell you, if anyone SAYS to this mountain, ‘Go, throw yourself into the sea,’ and does not doubt in their heart but believes that what they SAY will happen, it will be done for them. Therefore I tell you, whatever you [SAY] for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.”

Lastly, we are instructed to always be praying, praying in tongues, rejoicing, and praising God (1 Thessalonians 5:16-18; Ephesians 6:18; 1 Corinthians 14:2). God knows that He sees us in authority and so commands us to continually be saying faith-filled words about His goodness, salvation, and blessings over us. Our faith, our words, and confessions need to catch up to our identity in Christ, to our high position of already sitting in the heavenly places in Christ (Ephesians 2:6), and to our position as always being a royal priest. Our words have power and authority because God is sovereign, and because He loves us. Jesus enjoys seeing the people He died for use His Name to say and command good things for themselves.

Just as speaking sickness opens a foothold for you to be demonized (Ephesians 4:27), speaking in tongues is a foothold for the powers of God to flood into your life.

Your words are like spiritual WiFi passwords: Mutter curses and invite demonic hackers; confess faith and unlock God’s unlimited data plan of miracles.

You Will Not Die But Live

A few years before COVID hit, Vincent Cheung had begun to publish more materials on faith. I therefore began to rethink and refocus on such topics. However, it was not until COVID that I fundamentally changed my lifestyle to seek God in a more devotional manner and with greater faith. God had warned me a few years prior, in a divine trance, that I was not internalizing the scripture in faith and inner strength, as I ought. Even after this, I was still somewhat blind to what that meant.

When COVID forced most of us homebound, I found myself stuck in my house. I remember I took the second COVID booster treatment. (I won’t linger on this other than to say, if you have faith, it doesn’t matter what you do. As long as you are not willfully testing God, in good conscience, you are free to do what you want—hey, faith isn’t a straitjacket, it’s freedom with a divine safety net.) However, I began to feel like I was half dead for a few weeks or months. At one point, I was standing in my living room, and I felt so bad I halfway passed out; I went blind, my veins and heart felt cold and slow, and I could barely breathe. Time slowed down. I felt like I had one foot in the grave.

I couldn’t even speak, but in my mind, I cried out to God to help me. I remembered there were dreams I had and prophecies about me that needed to be fulfilled. I immediately felt just enough strength flow into me that I pulled myself onto the chair, and I heard the Holy Spirit say, “You will not die, I will help you, I will restore you and strengthen you.”

At the time, I did not have health insurance, so going to the doctor wasn’t an option; but that was for the best. I had a better physician, after all—who needs co-pays when you’ve got the Creator on speed dial? The word spoken to me by the Spirit took the edge off any fear or worry I had. I felt bad for months afterward, but I slowly got better.

It was after that I changed my life every day to seek God in a more devotional way. I remember downloading the Joseph Prince app for my phone and starting my first devotional. I then signed up for Kenneth Copeland’s email daily devotional. I remember talking to myself, saying, “I can’t believe I am reading these guys!” The doctrine of God’s sovereignty is so easy, and you shouldn’t boast about knowing it as if it were a difficult thing to do. It is a doctrine no one can take from me. I say this to say, reading the faith teachers has zero chance of harming my understanding of God’s sovereignty. And this is exactly the issue. I knew God’s sovereignty, but I was not living in the joy and peace of the Spirit, and was not in the place where my prayers were answered as a common thing. I needed to grow in these areas. The Pentecostals and charismatics were too weak. The faith teachers were the only ones who did not qualify Jesus’ statements about faith.

When I was in my teenage years, I remember praying in tongues, and during this time I read and believed in the sovereignty of God (Romans 9) without anyone teaching me these doctrines. I was reminded I was at my best when the Spirit filled me with power. The faith teachers also reminded me how important praying in tongues is. And so I began to pray in tongues often. I began to speak out loud the promises of God over my life as faith confessions and declarations. I began to sing and praise God more and more. I renewed my commitment to go over my lists of promise verses, over and over. I began to listen to faith preachers preach on the topics of faith and miracles.

Within months, I saw a qualitative difference in my life. Before this, I would often go to sleep with stress and fears keeping me up. But now, all that negative stuff lifted off my mind, and I was sleeping like a baby—snoring optional, peace mandatory. When I prayed, I began to see more of my prayers answered. I noticed fewer doubts intruding in.

Before, my inner man was so weak, and all I knew was my own experience. When I prayed, I was filled with doubts and stress, and now with hindsight I recognize I was often being demonically harassed with force attacks (like how Vincent described it in “On Spiritual Attacks”). Satan was making me feel condemned, with a sense of dread and no way of escape. Godly fear can make you feel dread, but it will also show you the way out with hope, and the Holy Spirit saying “yes” to the promises of God applied to you.

When you read the Bible, you realize you should feel nothing but joy and peace and confidence when you ask God for something. Anything less than this, and there is something wrong or weak in your inner man—frankly, it’s like trying to run a marathon on spiritual spaghetti legs.

Over the following years, some of these old weaknesses or demons have tried to come back, but since I am stronger in my inner man, and I know how to take my authority in Jesus, I command them to leave, and they run with their tails stuck between their legs. See my essay, “Power is what will Finally Deliver You.” I do not claim to be perfect, nor am I to the point I want to be in power and faith, but having a stronger inner man (which is mostly measured by faith) has made a decisive difference in my life.

And it will do the same for you.

I am here to remind you, All is not lost. Renew your mind in faith and confidence in God’s good promises. Make your inner man strong. Know how much God loves you and has given to you. And when you pray, you will have what you ask, you have see what you confess, and you will process what you command in Jesus name.

You Cannot Earn Healing

Your sins or imperfect righteous actions don’t stop you from being healed. This statement needs some qualifications. For example, I hesitate to mention exceptions because people tend to fixate on them, but Paul says in 1 Corinthians that their gross disrespect for the Lord’s Supper was causing some to get sick and even death. Paul urges them to stop this and be healed. Thus, certain extreme levels of sin can bring sickness, and you need to stop sinning. However, even in this context, faith can still bring healing, even if you don’t stop sinning—but if you persist in sin, the sickness is likely to return, and the cycle repeats.

Take for example the man Jesus healed at the pool of Bethesda. Jesus said for him to stop sinning or something worse may happen. Thus, sin was the cause of his sickness, or the reason it did not leave. However, Jesus did not ask the man to repent or ask him to stop sinning before getting healed. No. Jesus only asked, “do you want to be healed?” He healed him for only wanting to be healed. No other qualifier was needed.  For true and permanent health, you need both to stop sinning and to have faith for healing. This is what true resisting the devil means. It is both to stop sinning (if applicable) and command him to leave, or command the sickness to leave. Ta

However, this is an exception. When you read the Gospels, Jesus heals every single person who approaches Him for healing. The only ones He couldn’t heal—or rather, the only ones who could stop God from healing—were those with unbelief. Think about the hundreds, if not thousands, of people lined up for healing. We read of large crowds, and all were healed. These were everyday people with sins like adultery, greed, lust, anger, envy, murder, laziness, and more. Yet, Jesus never stopped them and said, “You must repent first,” or “You must stop this sin first, then I’ll heal you.” Jesus never made them pay or earn their healing through effort, better self-righteousness, or money. Despite their sins and wickedness, Jesus healed them all—every single one.

Healing’s not a paycheck you earn—it’s a free gift from Jesus’ atonement, no sin-slaying resume required. Sure, Paul flagged gross sin like Lord’s Supper disrespect as a sickness trigger, but faith can still zap it, though sinning again might reboot the curse. In the Gospels, Jesus healed everyone—sinners, slackers, all—without a repentance pop quiz. Unbelief’s the only kryptonite

Jesus says, “If you’ve seen Me, you’ve seen the Father.” This unqualified access to healing, without earning it through self-improvement, repentance, or greater holiness, reflects the Father’s heart. Think about this the next time you ask the Father to do something in Jesus’ Name.

Through Jesus Christ, I’ve given up on myself. My old sinful record, which the Father held against me in His mind, was removed and nailed to the cross. That’s not me anymore. In the old testament sacrifice, the priest examined the unblemished lamb, not person who did the sin. That was the whole point of an exchange. When the Father considers me, He examines the righteous Jesus Christ, and consider me in Him. The Father sees me in Jesus, as part of Jesus. Does Jesus have sin? Neither do I. Does the Father consider Jesus to have a sinful record? Neither does He consider me to have one. In the Father’s mind, Jesus is perfect righteousness, and so am I. This is my new reality—there’s no other reality for me.

Thus, I don’t need to earn more righteousness to be healed or receive a blessing from God any more than Jesus does. If you try to earn healing by your performance, you haven’t given up on yourself; you haven’t received Jesus’ righteousness. Your old man is still alive, and your new man is dead. A Christian is the opposite: the old man is dead, and we have a new man identified with Jesus. My sins, in relation to me, are as far as the east is from the west, yet many Christians speak of their sins as if they can still see them. Quit acting like they’re still photobombing your spiritual selfie. This is delusional nonsense because it’s impossible to see the east from the west.

Just as with every blessing provided by Jesus’ atonement, healing isn’t earned but freely received by grace through faith. There’s no other way. But why would you want another way? This is the good way—God’s way.

Tell It What You Want

“What I do have I give you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk.”
(Acts 3:6)

 “Jesus Christ heals you. Get up and roll up your mat.”
(Acts 9:34)

“Stand up on your feet!”
(Acts 14:10)


Truly I tell you, if you have faith and do not doubt, not only can you do what was done to the fig tree, but also you can say to this mountain, ‘Go, throw yourself into the sea,’ and it will be done. 22 If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer.”
(Matt. 21:21)

The fig tree was a real fig tree, and it dried up when Jesus spoke to it. Jesus didn’t ask God; He spoke to the tree, and it died. It wasn’t a spiritual fig tree. Thus, the category is material or physical. When facing mountains in the material world, Jesus didn’t ask God for help but spoke directly to the problem. He then instructs the disciples to do the same: to speak to the mountain or problem and command it in faith, knowing God’s power will back their words. Jesus didn’t tell the disciples to inform God of their problem or mountain or to present a sad sob story about how bad it is. Rather, He said to speak to the problem and tell it what you want it to do.

After the baptism of the Spirit in the opening salvo of the Book of Acts, the disciples did just that. In Acts 3, Peter didn’t tell God how awful it must be for the cripple to suffer so long and beg God to find it in His will to heal the man. No. Peter spoke to the mountain or problem—sickness. He said, “What I have, I give.” It’s not what God has or what God gives. Peter declared the power to heal is what he has and what he gives. He then said, “In Jesus’ Name, walk.” He spoke to the mountain and told it what he wanted: “Walk.” This is exactly what Jesus instructed.

In Acts 9, Peter says, “Jesus heals you, get up.” Peter doesn’t tell God about the mountain of sickness; rather, he tells the sickness what he wants: “Get up.” Peter obeys Jesus’ instructions for interacting with material mountains and problems. In faith, tell them what you want them to do, whether it’s killing a tree, casting it into the sea, healing the sick, or telling a fish to bring you money.

In Acts 14, Paul looks at the mountain of sickness and speaks to it like Peter, saying, “Stand up on your feet!”

These commands are both spoken to the mountain and serve as instructions for the person to act on faith. Because they believe they are healed, then they need  to do something they couldn’t do before. This is integrated into speaking to the mountain of sickness. It’s a powerful way to administer healing.

God gave Moses the Staff of God. When they were backed against the sea, God told Moses to stop monologuing about His help and use the Staff of God to divide the sea. Thus, it was not God who divided the sea in the most direct sense, but Moses divided the sea, using God’s power. However, what we have is greater than the Staff of God. We have the name of Jesus Christ engraved on our tongues. We are part of Jesus and so we use His Name as our own.


Jesus didn’t whine to God about fig trees or mountains—He told them what to do, and they obeyed. In Acts, Peter and Paul channel that vibe, bossing sickness around like pros: “Walk!” “Get up!” “Stand!” No sob stories, just faith-fueled commands backed by Jesus’ name. Speak to your problem, not about it—whether it’s a tree, a mountain, or a coinless fish, tell it who’s boss and watch God’s power roll.