
We Hear the Spirit Above Every Contradiction
We Hear the Spirit Above Every Contradiction declares that Christ in us leads us above the noise of visible contradiction, and we refuse to let natural impossibility govern our steps. We follow heavenly guidance, trust what Christ reveals above what sight reports, and walk in present union where clarity, boldness, and manifestation answer every conflicting voice now.
AH935
Chapter 1: We Refuse the Voice That Exalts Contradiction
Visible contradiction has no right to govern us where Christ dwells in us now. We do not call natural resistance final when the Spirit of Christ is present and speaking. Sickness does not outrank Christ. Delay does not instruct us. Lack does not define the outcome. Closed doors do not cancel heavenly direction. We do not let broken conditions preach louder than the indwelling Christ. “For with God nothing shall be impossible” (Luke 1:37, KJV). We hear that truth and refuse every report that demands surrender to appearance. What contradiction says is temporary noise. What Christ says is present authority, and that authority speaks in us now.
The lie of contradiction says that what we see is the highest truth available to us. That lie trains people to respect appearance more than revelation. It tells us to slow down, lower expectation, and accept visible resistance as wisdom. But Christ in us does not borrow truth from the natural order. Christ is truth before symptoms speak, before numbers rise, before doors open, and before evidence changes. We are not led by the weight of what stares back at us. “For we walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7, KJV). We do not deny facts exist, but we deny them the throne. Christ alone holds that place.
Contradiction also tries to sound practical, mature, and careful. It tells us that refusing visible limits is foolish and that expecting manifestation is extreme. But visible impossibility has always tried to present itself as wisdom against the word of Christ. We reject that tone and that frame. We are not reckless because we believe Christ. We are rightly ordered because we submit to the greater voice. The Spirit does not train us to bow before impossibility. The Spirit trains us to discern, receive, and move from union. We do not call restraint wisdom when restraint is actually unbelief hiding inside respectful language and cautious religious speech.
Where Christ lives, guidance is not confused by contradiction. The indwelling Spirit does not need perfect circumstances in order to lead us clearly. We do not need the natural picture to agree before we can obey. We do not need symptoms to decrease before we can speak healing. We do not need resources to multiply before we can move in provision. We do not need visible ease before we can follow the direction of Christ. Guidance comes from above, not from beneath. We are not students of contradiction. We are hearers of the Spirit. What heaven reveals carries more weight than what earth resists, because Christ in us is greater than the entire field of opposition.
We also refuse the lie that contradiction proves absence. Resistance does not mean Christ is distant. Difficulty does not mean guidance is gone. Hardness does not mean heaven fell silent. We do not measure presence by ease. We do not measure truth by speed. We do not measure Christ by the mood of the moment. Christ is present now, whether contradiction shouts or not. The Spirit remains clear, steady, and undivided in us. Because Christ is in us now, we are never left to interpret life as mere natural people. We do not face contradiction alone, and we do not answer it with human uncertainty. We answer it from living union.
The voice of contradiction always tries to force a decision. It wants us to either agree with sight or appear unreasonable. But faith is neither denial nor panic. Faith is agreement with Christ before sight yields. Faith hears the higher word and stands there without apology. We are not stubborn about ourselves. We are settled about Christ. We do not insist that our own strength can overcome resistance. We insist that Christ is already greater than what opposes manifestation. Therefore we do not retreat into observation. We stay in hearing. We stay in agreement. We stay in motion. Contradiction loses force when it is no longer treated as the source of interpretation.
This is how we begin: we expose the lie that contradiction can stop Christ in us. It cannot. What is visible is not ultimate. What resists us is not lord. What delays is not master. We hear the Spirit above every conflicting report, and we follow that voice with settled boldness. We refuse to be taught by impossibility. We refuse to be ruled by what looks closed, damaged, weak, or unfinished. Christ in us is present truth, present guidance, and present authority now. Therefore we do not exalt contradiction. We hear higher, believe higher, and walk higher because the Spirit of Christ speaks in us above every opposing voice.
Chapter 2: We Silence Every Lesser Voice
Religion often taught us to expect less than Christ while still using holy language. It gave contradiction a seat of honor and called that humility. It taught us to speak carefully around impossibility as though visible resistance deserved reverence. It warned us not to expect too much, not to say too much, and not to move too quickly. In that system, contradiction became the teacher and Christ became a distant possibility. We reject that order completely. Christ in us is not a reduced hope. Christ in us is present life, present guidance, and present authority. We do not honor fear by naming it wisdom, and we do not call unbelief maturity.
Fear also trains the ear badly. It conditions us to listen first to risk, outcome, memory, and failure. It tells us that what went wrong before should govern what we expect now. It uses past disappointment to create present hesitation. But the Spirit of Christ in us is not trained by prior contradiction. The Spirit is not intimidated by history, patterns, or repeated failure. We do not let yesterday’s resistance become today’s doctrine. We are not disciples of former outcomes. We are led by Christ now. The voice that tells us to lower our expectation is not protecting us. It is trying to keep us from hearing the bold clarity of heaven.
Tradition can sound stable while quietly resisting the present expression of Christ. It may speak of truth, yet still leave impossibility untouched and unchallenged. It may repeat Scripture while refusing the force of Scripture. That is why we do not merely repeat familiar phrases. We hear for living direction in union with Christ. The Spirit does not keep us trapped in formal agreement without manifestation. The Spirit leads us into believing reception, bold speech, and active obedience. We refuse every structure that praises Christ with words but denies His present expression through us. We do not accept a version of faith that explains away contradiction while leaving the impossible unchallenged and untouched.
Reduced expectation has damaged many ears. It has made people suspicious of clear guidance, cautious around bold faith, and hesitant to act where Christ is speaking. It has normalized delay until delay feels responsible. But Christ in us never teaches us to enthrone caution above obedience. We are not instructed to wait for contradiction to become smaller before truth becomes larger. Truth is already larger because Christ is already present. We do not need impossible things to soften before we can agree with heaven. We do not need visible permission before we can move. The Spirit guides from abundance, not from lack. Therefore we reject every mindset that trains us to expect less than Christ.
The lesser voice often sounds reasonable because it appeals to appearance. It points to symptoms, shortages, resistance, or closed outcomes and then asks us to be realistic. But realism without Christ is only agreement with the lower realm. We are not called to interpret reality from beneath. We are led from above. The Spirit does not ask us to become blind to facts. The Spirit teaches us not to become governed by them. Facts without Christ become tyrants. Facts under Christ become subjects. We are not anti-fact; we are anti-idolatry. We refuse to bow when contradiction demands the highest place in our hearing. Christ alone holds that place, and His voice orders our response now.
This is why we must silence every lesser voice. We do not negotiate with fear. We do not platform unbelief. We do not permit tradition to reduce what Christ made possible. We do not let delay-language disciple our mouths. We do not let disappointment tune our ears. The Spirit in us is not faint, confused, or uncertain. The guidance of Christ is clear, clean, and higher than every natural conflict. Therefore we become intentional about what we honor. Whatever we honor, we hear more clearly. Whatever we hear more clearly, we follow more easily. So we honor Christ above contradiction and refuse to give lesser voices the right to shape our direction.
We silence those voices by agreement with Christ, not by inward struggle. We do not wrestle our way into clarity. We receive clarity because Christ is in us now. We turn from lesser voices and settle again into the greater one. We refuse the language of reduction, delay, and defeat. We refuse every teaching that makes impossibility sound permanent. Christ in us remains the answer now. Therefore we hear above fear, above tradition, above memory, and above caution shaped by unbelief. We silence every lesser voice by exalting Christ where He already belongs. When He is honored rightly in our hearing, contradiction loses its power to instruct us and its claim to govern our next step.
Chapter 3: We Follow Christ Within Above What We See
Christ in us is the present answer to every contradiction we face. We do not stand before impossibility as abandoned people trying to reach help from a distance. We are joined to Christ now. His life is not near us only in idea. His life is in us in truth. Therefore guidance does not come from outside pressure, human calculation, or emotional urgency. Guidance comes from the indwelling Christ. We are not left to sort through contradiction as natural minds. We hear from within because Christ is present within. That changes how we interpret everything. We do not ask contradiction to explain our path. We follow the Spirit of Christ above what we see.
Union means we are never separate from the One who knows the end from the beginning. The Spirit does not arrive late to difficult situations. Christ in us is already present where contradiction appears strongest. Therefore we do not panic when appearance conflicts with promise. We do not become double-minded because resistance is loud. We remember who lives in us now. “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). That is not a distant idea. That is present reality. Glory is not postponed until contradiction approves it. Christ in us is already the answer, already the clarity, and already the authority by which we hear, speak, and move now.
The indwelling Christ also frees us from the lie of human isolation. We are not facing visible impossibility with only memory, discipline, and analysis. We are one Spirit with Christ, and He is not confused by what confuses natural perception. He does not borrow guidance from the pressure of the moment. He remains whole, clear, steady, and undivided in us now. “He that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit” (1 Corinthians 6:17, KJV). Because that is true, we do not speak as though contradiction and Christ are competing equals. Christ is not trying to catch up to the problem. Christ is present before the problem speaks and greater while it speaks.
This union changes the way we hear. We do not listen for permission from the visible realm before we act. We listen for the guidance of Christ already alive in us. We do not need outward harmony before inward clarity can lead us. The Spirit does not require natural alignment before revealing truth. That is why contradiction cannot define direction. We may see pressure, but we hear peace. We may see resistance, but we hear clarity. We may see lack, but we hear provision. We may see closed paths, but we hear instruction. We are not pretending contradiction is absent. We are simply refusing to let it become our guide where Christ already dwells and leads.
Christ in us is not only comfort; He is present direction. He does not merely assure us while leaving us passive. He leads us into believing reception, faith-filled speech, and obedient action. The voice of the Spirit does not produce paralysis. It produces movement. When we hear Christ within, hesitation loses its dignity. Delay loses its appeal. Passive observation loses its disguise as wisdom. We become clear because Christ is clear. We become steady because Christ is steady. We are not drawing strength from ourselves. We are manifesting the One who dwells in us now. Therefore we can move while contradiction still stands visible, because we are not being led by the sight of contradiction.
To follow Christ within also means we reject externalized faith. We do not talk as though Christ is somewhere else deciding whether to intervene later. Christ is present now. His indwelling life is not a future option. It is our present reality. So when contradiction speaks, we do not send our hope outward. We turn inward to the Spirit of Christ and agree with Him. We do not become mystical, vague, or passive. We become direct, grounded, and bold. Union makes guidance immediate. It makes action possible. It makes obedience natural. We do not need to become more connected. We live from connection already established by the finished work of Christ now.
This is why we follow Christ within above what we see. Sight may report conflict, but Christ reveals truth. Appearance may forecast limitation, but Christ reveals what is present in union now. We do not give visible contradiction interpretive authority over our lives. We are not led from the outside inward. We are led from the inside outward because Christ lives in us now. Therefore we reject confusion, isolation, and delay. We hear from union, we speak from union, and we move from union. The One who leads us is already present, and His guidance remains greater than every conflicting report that tries to demand our agreement.
Chapter 4: We Receive Before Sight Agrees
Jesus taught us to believe that we receive before visible manifestation confirms what was received. Faith does not wait for sight to approve truth. Faith agrees with Christ first. That is why believing reception is essential when contradiction speaks loudly. If we wait for appearance to soften before we receive, then sight becomes lord over faith. We refuse that order. “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We hear that plainly. We do not receive after evidence appears. We believe that we receive while contradiction still argues, because Christ in us remains the greater reality now.
Believing reception destroys the lie that truth must be felt, earned, or seen first. We do not need a special sensation before we can agree with Christ. We do not need a perfect mood. We do not need visible improvement. We do not need natural reassurance. Faith receives because Christ is present, not because contradiction has become quiet. That means guidance stays clear even when sight resists it. We are not using faith to deny reality. We are receiving the higher reality of Christ above what natural evidence can report. We do not make feeling the gatekeeper of truth. We do not make appearance the authorizer of what Christ already finished and made present in us now.
This is where many people hesitate. They think receiving too early would be dishonest, presumptuous, or disconnected from reality. But Jesus did not teach us to wait until the natural realm was cooperative. He taught us to believe that we receive. That kind of faith honors Christ above contradiction. It does not worship the visible realm. It places greater weight on the word of Christ than on the report of circumstances. “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). Therefore we do not apologize for receiving before sight agrees. We call that obedience, not excess. We call that alignment, not presumption.
Receiving before sight agrees also protects us from double-mindedness. If we try to receive only after appearance changes, we will always be measuring faith by what contradiction allows. That produces unstable speech, unstable expectation, and unstable action. But when we receive because Christ is present now, we become settled. We stop asking contradiction for permission to believe. We stop asking visible resistance to validate our prayers. We stop shifting with every report. We become anchored in Christ. Reception turns the heart toward settled agreement. It strengthens hearing, steadies speech, and positions us to act from union instead of from reaction. That is why receiving matters before manifestation becomes visible.
Believing reception is not passive. It does not sit still in vague hope. It receives and then stands, speaks, blesses, commands, and acts from what has been received. Faith does not merely wish. Faith receives. Faith does not merely admire promise. Faith takes hold of what Christ reveals as present truth now. Therefore we do not pray as those who are uncertain whether Christ is with us. We receive because Christ is in us. We do not speak as those trying to persuade a distant heaven. We speak as those in union with Christ already. Receiving changes the tone of our words because it changes the posture of our hearts from hesitation to settled agreement.
This is especially important when contradiction is still visible after we have received. We must not return to sight for reinterpretation. We do not receive from Christ and then let contradiction tell us what our reception meant. We stay in agreement. We remain settled. We refuse to move backward into analysis shaped by unbelief. The visible realm does not get the final commentary on what Christ has spoken. We do not abandon faith because sight remains noisy for a moment. We remain where Christ placed us. We receive, we agree, and we stay there. That settled posture keeps our ears clean and keeps our speech aligned with heaven rather than with visible resistance.
So we receive before sight agrees. We do not wait for contradiction to become friendly before truth becomes usable. We believe that we receive because Jesus said so, and His word remains higher than appearance. We refuse to let the visible realm train our faith into hesitation. Christ in us is present now, and that is enough for believing reception. Therefore we stand in agreement before evidence changes, before feeling shifts, and before the natural picture yields. We receive from Christ first, and from that place we keep hearing, keep speaking, and keep moving. Sight is not our lord. Christ is, and His present truth governs us now.
Chapter 5: We Speak From Guidance and Stand in Authority
Guidance in Christ never ends in silent agreement alone. What we hear from the Spirit becomes what we say, bless, command, and enforce in His name. We do not hear merely to admire truth. We hear in order to act from union. Because Christ dwells in us now, our words are not attempts to create authority. Our words express authority already present in Christ. Therefore we ask in faith, we speak with clarity, and we stand without retreat before contradiction. “And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive” (Matthew 21:22, KJV). Asking is not weak when it flows from union. It is faith speaking with settled agreement.
We also speak because contradiction does not yield to passive observation. Mountains do not move because we stare at them. Disorder does not bow because we quietly respect it. Jesus taught us to address what resists the reign of God. “Whosoever shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; and shall not doubt in his heart... he shall have whatsoever he saith” (Mark 11:23, KJV). We hear that plainly. Therefore we do not let contradiction sit unchallenged in our speech. We bless what must answer Christ. We command what resists Him. We stand where Christ stands, because Christ in us is present authority now.
Authority-filled speech is not volume, personality, or technique. It is agreement with Christ expressed through us. We do not need dramatic performance to speak with force. We need union, clarity, and faith. The Spirit does not lead us into theatrical language. The Spirit leads us into direct speech rooted in finished work. Therefore when contradiction appears, we do not speak from panic, and we do not speak from self-effort. We speak from hearing. We speak from Christ within. We say what heaven says about sickness, lack, resistance, and delay. That kind of speech does not beg contradiction to change. It addresses contradiction from the higher ground of Christ’s present indwelling life.
Asking, speaking, and standing belong together. We ask in faith because Christ is present. We speak because Christ is present. We stand because Christ is present. None of these actions are separate from union. None of them are attempts to become ready. We are ready because Christ lives in us now. Therefore our asking is not uncertain, our speech is not timid, and our standing is not fragile. We do not ask as though heaven is distant. We do not speak as though Christ might not back His own life in us. We do not stand as though contradiction has equal power. We act from Christ’s reign already alive and active within us now.
Standing in authority also means refusing retreat in the mind. We do not speak one thing and inwardly submit to another. We do not bless with our mouths and then enthrone contradiction in our thoughts. We stay in agreement with Christ. We stay aligned with what we heard from the Spirit. That alignment gives strength to our words and steadiness to our actions. We do not need to manufacture certainty. We remain in the certainty of Christ already present in us now. Therefore we do not wobble when contradiction pushes back. Resistance does not mean authority is absent. Resistance becomes the place where authority is expressed, because Christ remains greater there than the opposition we face.
This kind of authority is practical. We ask for healing and expect healing. We speak to what resists wholeness and expect response. We address lack from the abundance of Christ. We bless situations, homes, bodies, and paths with confidence in His present rule. We do not stand aside waiting for contradiction to educate us further. We stand in Christ and bring the education of heaven into the earth through our speech. The Spirit does not train us to remain silent where Christ is speaking. He trains us to speak in line with what we hear. Guidance becomes expression, and expression becomes manifestation where Christ is honored and enacted.
So we speak from guidance and stand in authority. We ask in faith, we say what Christ says, and we remain where Christ placed us. We do not let contradiction tell us that silence is humility or that passivity is maturity. We hear the Spirit, and from that hearing we act. We bless, command, declare, and stand because Christ in us is not powerless. His presence is not theoretical. His authority is not postponed. Therefore our words carry the force of union, and our actions follow that same agreement. We do not shrink back before the impossible. We speak from Christ within and watch contradiction answer the reign of God now.
Chapter 6: We Watch Contradiction Yield to Christ
Jesus never treated contradiction as a final authority. He spoke to storms, sickness, lack, darkness, and death as things subject to the reign of God. He did not adjust truth downward to match resistance. He brought heaven’s order into visible conflict and expected response. That same Christ dwells in us now. Therefore we do not study contradiction as though it holds the last word. We watch it yield to Christ. “And these signs shall follow them that believe; In my name shall they cast out devils... they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:17–18, KJV). Believing is not passive admiration. Believing moves with Christ and expects visible answer.
The book of Acts also shows that the name of Jesus is not a memory but present authority expressed through those joined to Him. The apostles did not merely discuss Christ’s power. They acted in His name and watched visible contradiction yield. “Then Peter said, Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk” (Acts 3:6, KJV). That is clear and direct. He did not negotiate with the condition. He did not lower expectation to honor visible limitation. He spoke from what Christ had made present. We learn from that pattern and refuse every theology that makes contradiction sound more stable than Christ.
This does not turn manifestation into spectacle. We are not chasing moments to impress people. We are expressing Christ. Signs matter because Christ is present, not because drama is valuable. Contradiction yields when Christ is honored, believed, spoken, and enacted through us. Therefore we do not hunger for excitement. We hunger for agreement. We do not build our confidence on unusual stories. We build on union with Christ now. Because He is present in us, impossible situations are no longer closed systems. They are places where His reign may appear. We do not glorify the contradiction by making it famous. We glorify Christ by expecting His life to answer it visibly.
We also understand that manifestation is not separate from guidance. We do not force outcomes through human intensity. We hear the Spirit and act in union. That is why contradiction yields not merely to volume, but to Christ expressed through believing people. We do not imitate formulas. We live from union. Sometimes we ask, sometimes we speak, sometimes we lay hands, sometimes we command directly, but in every case Christ is the source. The indwelling Spirit remains the one who leads, and we remain the ones who act from that living guidance. Manifestation is not independent power. It is Christ in us answering what resists His will with visible effect.
As we watch contradiction yield, our expectation becomes cleaner. We stop treating healing, deliverance, provision, and restoration as rare interruptions. We treat them as expressions of Christ’s present life. We do not worship rarity. We honor union. Christ in us is not occasional. Therefore manifestation need not be treated as foreign to normal Christian life. The impossible does not become ordinary because it is small. It becomes answerable because Christ is great. That changes how we move. We do not act timidly, and we do not speak hesitantly. We begin to expect visible answers because the One who indwells us is the same One who walked the earth overcoming every contradiction He confronted.
Watching contradiction yield also strengthens hearing. Every visible answer trains our ears further away from fear and deeper into agreement. But even before manifestation appears, we are already aligned with Christ. We do not need results to create truth. Still, visible answers do reveal the reign of God and expose the weakness of contradiction’s claim. They teach us again that Christ was never the lesser voice in the room. Therefore we do not step back into caution after seeing Him answer. We become bolder, clearer, and more settled. We watch contradiction yield and learn afresh that what opposes Christ cannot finally stand where His life is believed and expressed through us now.
So we watch contradiction yield to Christ. We see the pattern in Jesus, we see it in Acts, and we live from that same indwelling life now. We do not reduce expectation, and we do not excuse resistance as permanent. We hear the Spirit, act in faith, speak in authority, and look for visible answer because Christ is present. Healing, deliverance, provision, and restoration are not strangers to union. They are expressions of the One who lives in us. Therefore we do not make peace with contradiction. We watch it bow, retreat, and yield as the reign of Christ is manifested through our believing speech and action now.
Chapter 7: We Move at the Sound of Heaven Now
Now we move. We do not remain at the edge of contradiction discussing possibility while Christ in us is present reality. This is the hour for activation, not hesitation. Ask in faith. Believe that you receive. Hear the Spirit above every lesser report and refuse to call impossible what Christ indwells. We do not wait for the mountain to look movable before we speak to it. We do not wait for the sick to appear improved before we lay hands on them. We do not wait for darkness to become polite before we cast it out. Christ in us is present now. Therefore we move now, speak now, act now, and reveal His reign now.
Speak to the mountain. Do not admire its size or repeat its history as though repetition were wisdom. Address it in faith. Command what resists Christ to yield to Christ. Preach the Kingdom as present reality, not distant hope. Heal the sick because Christ is life in us now. Lay hands because union is real now. Cast out demons because the authority of Christ is present now. Raise the dead because death is not lord where Christ reigns. These are not exaggerations for another generation. These are commands that still stand where Christ still lives in His people. Therefore we reject delay and answer heaven’s instruction with bold, obedient action.
Do not call impossible what Christ indwells. Do not label final what Christ has entered. Do not let contradiction rename the boundaries of your obedience. You are not sent into the earth with empty slogans. Christ Himself dwells in you now. That means your hearing is not powerless, your words are not empty, and your actions are not independent. Walk as Christ in the earth because Christ is alive in you now. Refuse every voice that reduces your role to observation. You are not here merely to describe the conflict. You are here to manifest the reign of the One who overcame it and now lives in you by His Spirit.
Ask in faith with no apology. Believe that you receive with no retreat. Speak with no agreement toward contradiction. Do not give visible resistance the right to tutor your mouth. Let the Spirit tutor your mouth. Speak healing. Speak deliverance. Speak provision. Speak restoration. Speak peace over what is agitated. Speak order into what is disordered. Speak freedom where bondage tries to stay. Speak life where death announces itself. This is not positive language detached from truth. This is Christ-centered authority flowing from union now. Therefore your words do not arise from wishful thinking. They arise from the indwelling Christ whose reign is already present and already greater.
Lay hands on the sick and expect Christ to answer. Cast out demons and expect darkness to retreat. Speak to what is immovable and expect it to move. Bless homes, paths, families, and gatherings with the confidence that Christ is present in you now. Do not wait for emotional certainty. Do not wait for visible permission. Do not wait for contradiction to become less offensive. Move at the sound of heaven now. The Spirit does not train you to become a spectator of finished work. The Spirit trains you to express it. Therefore obey quickly, speak clearly, and stand firmly. Let action reveal what your ears have already received from the living Christ within.
Raise the dead where death tries to boast. Proclaim the Kingdom where hopelessness pretends to rule. Walk into places of resistance carrying the peace, force, and clarity of Christ in you now. Do not shrink your language to fit the comfort of unbelief. Do not soften the command because contradiction sounds confident. The confidence of contradiction is false. The reign of Christ is true. Therefore be direct. Be settled. Be fearless in faith. Not because you are strong in yourself, but because Christ in you is present strength, present guidance, and present authority now. Let the earth hear that reign through your voice, your hands, your steps, and your obedience.
So this is the commissioning: Ask in faith. Believe that you receive. Walk as Christ. Do not call impossible what Christ indwells. Speak to the mountain. Preach the Kingdom. Heal the sick. Lay hands. Cast out demons. Raise the dead. Hear above contradiction, and move from what you hear. You are not waiting to become ready. Christ in you is readiness now. You are not waiting for authority. Christ in you is authority now. You are not waiting for the Spirit to arrive. The Spirit speaks in you now. Therefore go as one who hears heaven clearly and reveals heaven boldly, because the voice above every contradiction lives and speaks within you now.