
We Sit in Authority Over the Impossible
We Sit in Authority Over the Impossible establishes our reigning position in Christ where visible impossibility holds no authority. We refuse submission to lack, resistance, or limitation because Christ lives in us now. We believe that we receive, we speak from union, and we act from finished work. What appears impossible does not govern us; Christ in us governs all.
AH953
Chapter 1: The Throne Above Impossibility
We expose the lie that the impossible can stop Christ. We do not accept the report of limitation as final truth. We do not bow to visible resistance, lack, delay, or disorder. We sit in Christ, and Christ is not limited. What appears immovable to natural sight does not define reality where Christ dwells in us. We reject the idea that circumstances possess authority over us. We do not negotiate with impossibility. We reign above it because we are seated with Christ now, and His position is not beneath resistance but above all things.
We refuse the belief that visible conditions carry final authority. We do not measure truth by what we see, feel, or calculate. We measure truth by Christ in us. What appears broken does not outrank Christ. What appears delayed does not overrule Christ. What appears absent does not define Christ. We do not call something impossible when Christ indwells us. We live from a higher government. Our authority flows from union, not from evidence. Therefore, we do not wait for change to begin ruling. We rule because Christ is present now within us.
We dismantle the suggestion that lack has power. Lack does not possess authority where Christ lives. We do not submit to financial lack, bodily weakness, emotional resistance, or circumstantial delay. These do not define us. We are not governed by what is missing. We are governed by who is present. Christ in us is not partial, deficient, or delayed. Christ is complete now. Therefore, we do not speak from lack. We speak from fullness. We do not act from need. We act from union. What is seen does not set our expectation. Christ sets it.
We reject the idea that time controls manifestation. We do not accept delay as a superior force. Time does not govern Christ, and Christ lives in us. We do not postpone what Christ has already established. We do not say “later” where Christ says “now.” We believe what He has finished is active now. Therefore, we do not suspend authority while waiting for visible agreement. We exercise authority immediately. We act in present-tense dominion. We do not need time to authorize what Christ has already completed within us.
We stand on the words of Jesus concerning impossibility. “The things which are impossible with men are possible with God” (Luke 18:27, KJV). We do not interpret this as distant or external. God is not separate from us; Christ dwells in us now. Therefore, what is impossible with men is not impossible where Christ lives in us. We do not place impossibility above indwelling Christ. We align our thinking with His reality. We do not reduce His presence to fit our observation. We elevate our expectation to match His indwelling life.
We align with believing authority. “All things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not treat belief as passive agreement. We believe with conviction rooted in union. We believe that we receive. We do not wait for proof before believing. We believe because Christ is present. We do not need visible confirmation to authorize faith. Faith flows from who lives in us. Therefore, we do not hesitate in the face of impossibility. We remain established in believing reception and speak accordingly.
We live from the throne, not from the problem. We are seated with Christ, and our position defines our operation. We do not descend into impossibility to negotiate with it. We speak from above. We command from union. We act from authority. The impossible does not intimidate us because it does not outrank Christ. We do not adjust our confession to match resistance. We adjust the environment to match Christ. We remain fixed in authority, and we refuse to submit to anything that contradicts His indwelling life.
Chapter 2: The Lie of Limited Expectation
We expose how reduced expectation entered through religion, fear, and tradition. We reject teachings that present Christ as willing but not active, able but not present, powerful but not expressing now. We do not accept doctrines that lower expectation to match visible limitation. We do not agree with explanations that justify lack, delay, or failure as normal. These ideas contradict Christ in us. We do not inherit powerless interpretations. We stand in the fullness of Christ’s finished work and refuse to shrink expectation beneath His indwelling life.
We confront the habit of letting visible impossibility speak louder than Christ. We do not give the final word to diagnosis, circumstance, or history. We do not allow repeated outcomes to define what is possible. We do not permit experience to override truth. Christ in us is not subject to patterns or past results. We break agreement with expectation built on observation. We rebuild expectation on union. What Christ has established in us now speaks louder than what we have previously seen or not seen.
We reject delay-language that postpones manifestation. We do not say “in time” where Christ has already finished the work. We do not teach waiting as a condition for receiving. We do not accept spiritual maturity as a requirement for manifestation. Christ is not gradually becoming present; Christ is present now. We do not move toward authority; we function from authority. Therefore, we do not reduce expectation to process. We remain fixed in present-tense reality and expect expression now.
We expose fear as a voice that lowers expectation. Fear suggests that impossibility is safer to accept than to confront. Fear tells us to avoid boldness, to remain cautious, and to expect less. We reject fear’s instruction. Christ in us is not timid. We do not protect ourselves from disappointment by lowering expectation. We stand in truth and speak from union. We do not measure risk; we exercise authority. Fear does not guide our response. Christ defines our posture, and His presence establishes confidence.
We align with the words of Jesus concerning believing. “Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We do not alter this instruction. We do not delay believing until after seeing. We believe that we receive at the moment of asking. We do not weaken this command with explanation. We receive because Christ in us authorizes receiving now.
We affirm that expectation flows from union, not from environment. “If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you” (John 15:7, KJV). We do not interpret abiding as distance. We abide because Christ lives in us now. Therefore, we ask from union, not from separation. We do not request as outsiders. We speak as those joined with Christ. Expectation rises from this reality, and we remain aligned with it.
We establish a new standard of expectation that refuses limitation. We do not settle for explanations that excuse impossibility. We do not tolerate teaching that reduces Christ’s present activity. We expect according to who lives in us. We believe according to His indwelling life. We speak according to His authority. Therefore, we refuse to expect less than Christ. We remain positioned in fullness, and we reject every voice that attempts to redefine what is possible where Christ lives in us.
Chapter 3: Christ Within as Present Dominion
We reveal Christ in us as the present answer to every impossible condition. We do not face resistance alone or as natural people. We are joined to Christ now. His life is our life, and His authority is our authority. We do not approach impossibility as observers. We approach from union. Christ in us is not symbolic. Christ in us is active, present, and governing. Therefore, we do not look outside for help. We recognize that the answer already lives within us.
We establish that Christ in us is not limited by what appears before us. He is not restricted by damage, lack, or resistance. He is not subject to natural law. Christ in us remains unchanged and complete. Therefore, we do not measure our response by what we see. We respond from who is present. The indwelling Christ does not adjust to impossibility. Impossibility must yield to Him. We remain anchored in this truth and refuse to think from limitation.
We affirm that union removes separation. We are not asking Christ to come near; He is already present. We are not attempting to bring power from heaven; Christ in us is the power. We do not act as if authority is distant. Authority resides within us now. Therefore, we do not hesitate in action. We do not delay in response. We function from the reality that Christ lives in us, and we move accordingly.
We align with the declaration of Scripture. “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). We do not treat this as future promise. We treat it as present reality. Christ in us is the expectation of visible expression. We do not separate hope from manifestation. We recognize that what is within us is designed to be revealed. Therefore, we do not contain Christ. We allow His life to be expressed through us now.
We affirm our position with Christ. “And hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus” (Ephesians 2:6, KJV). We do not consider this symbolic language. We are seated with Christ now. Our position is above all opposing conditions. Therefore, we do not respond from beneath pressure. We respond from above it. We act from seated authority, not from striving effort.
We establish that dominion flows from union. We do not attempt to produce authority. Authority is inherent in Christ, and Christ lives in us. Therefore, we do not try to become powerful. We recognize that we are joined to power. We do not struggle to overcome. We release what is already established within us. Dominion is not achieved; it is expressed. We remain fixed in this understanding and act from it consistently.
We walk in present dominion over every form of impossibility. We do not negotiate with resistance. We do not retreat before limitation. We advance with the authority of Christ in us. Our response is not shaped by difficulty but by union. Therefore, we move in confidence, speak with authority, and act with clarity. Christ in us governs every situation, and we remain aligned with His present dominion in all things.
Chapter 4: Receiving Before Seeing
We establish that believing reception precedes visible manifestation. We do not wait for sight to confirm truth. We believe because Christ has spoken. We receive because Christ is present. We do not delay reception until conditions change. We receive in the moment of asking. Faith does not follow sight; sight follows faith. Therefore, we do not adjust our belief based on what appears. We remain fixed in receiving, and we allow manifestation to follow our established faith.
We reject the lie that we must feel something before we receive. We do not depend on sensation, emotion, or physical evidence. These do not authorize truth. Christ authorizes truth. Therefore, we do not look inward for confirmation. We look to Christ in us. We believe without requiring proof. We receive without visible agreement. Our confidence is not built on feeling but on the indwelling Christ who defines reality.
We align with the instruction of Jesus. “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We do not reinterpret this command. We believe that we receive at the moment of prayer. We do not postpone belief. We do not separate asking from receiving. We receive because Christ in us authorizes immediate faith.
We reject the idea that manifestation must be earned. We do not work to qualify for what Christ has already finished. We do not attempt to become worthy through effort. Christ’s finished work is our basis. Therefore, we receive freely. We do not add conditions to what Christ has completed. We accept what is given through union, and we remain established in that reception.
We affirm that faith holds position before sight changes. “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). We do not treat unseen as unreal. We recognize that faith establishes reality before visibility. Therefore, we do not abandon our position when sight delays. We remain fixed in what we have received.
We maintain our confession in alignment with reception. We do not speak according to contradiction. We speak according to what we have received. Our words do not follow appearance; they follow faith. Therefore, we do not reverse our confession when challenged. We remain steady, declaring truth from union. Our speech reinforces our reception and establishes consistency in authority.
We walk as those who have already received. We act in agreement with what is established within us. We do not wait for permission from sight. We move because Christ in us has authorized action. Therefore, we live in visible alignment with invisible reception. We remain confident, steady, and active. Manifestation follows our consistent position of believing reception, and we do not depart from it.
Chapter 5: Speaking From the Throne
We exercise authority through asking, speaking, commanding, and standing in Christ. We do not speak as those seeking permission. We speak as those seated with Christ. Our words carry authority because Christ lives in us. Therefore, we do not speak in uncertainty. We speak with clarity and command. We do not ask as those unsure of outcome. We ask in faith, knowing that we receive. Our voice is not passive. Our voice enforces what Christ has already established within us.
We align our speaking with the instruction of Jesus. “And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive” (Matthew 21:22, KJV). We do not separate asking from believing. We ask with conviction rooted in union. We do not weaken our request with doubt. We do not speak as if Christ is distant. Christ in us authorizes our asking now. Therefore, we speak with certainty, expecting manifestation to follow our believing reception.
We command situations from authority, not from reaction. “And Jesus answered and said unto them, Have faith in God… whosoever shall say unto this mountain… it shall be done” (Mark 11:22–23, KJV). We do not speak to mountains as observers. We speak as those joined to Christ. We command resistance to move. We declare alignment with truth. We do not negotiate with obstacles. We address them directly with authority rooted in union.
We refuse passive language that agrees with impossibility. We do not describe problems without confronting them. We do not reinforce limitation through repeated confession of lack. Our words do not mirror difficulty. Our words establish dominion. Therefore, we speak life, restoration, and alignment with Christ. We remain consistent in speech, and we do not allow contradiction to shape our confession.
We stand in what we have spoken. We do not retreat after declaration. We do not reverse our words when challenged. We remain established in authority. Our speaking is not momentary; it is sustained. Therefore, we hold our position with confidence. We do not waver between truth and appearance. We remain aligned with Christ in us, and we continue to speak from that fixed reality.
We bless and declare from union. We do not limit our words to reaction against problems. We release blessing, alignment, and order. We speak into situations with intentional authority. We declare what Christ has established, and we expect it to manifest. Our words are not empty. They carry the authority of Christ in us. Therefore, we speak with purpose and clarity in every situation.
We act in agreement with what we speak. We do not separate words from action. Our actions reflect our authority. We move forward as those who have commanded and received. Therefore, we do not hesitate. We align movement with declaration. We walk as those seated with Christ, speaking from the throne, and enforcing His authority over every form of impossibility.
Chapter 6: Impossible Things Yield to Authority
We establish that impossible conditions yield through Christ and through those who act in His name. We do not view impossibility as permanent. We view it as subject to Christ. Therefore, we expect change when we speak and act from union. We do not accept resistance as final. We apply authority, and we remain steady until alignment appears. Christ in us governs every condition, and we act with expectation of visible response.
We align with the works of Jesus. “The works that I do shall he do also; and greater works than these shall he do” (John 14:12, KJV). We do not treat this as symbolic. We accept it as instruction. We do what He does because He lives in us. We do not lower this standard to match experience. We elevate experience to match Christ. Therefore, we act with boldness and clarity in every situation.
We affirm that healing, deliverance, and restoration respond to authority. “In my name shall they cast out devils… they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:17–18, KJV). We do not question this instruction. We apply it. We lay hands, we speak, and we expect response. We do not hesitate because of visible contradiction. We act because Christ in us authorizes action now.
We refuse to interpret lack of immediate change as failure. We remain established in authority. We do not withdraw because of resistance. We continue to speak, stand, and act. Our position does not shift based on timing. Therefore, we remain fixed in truth, expecting manifestation to align with our consistent authority.
We demonstrate dominion through continued action. We do not limit authority to words alone. We move, we engage, and we apply what Christ has established. Our actions reflect our belief. Therefore, we do not remain passive. We actively enforce alignment in every situation, expecting impossibility to yield to Christ in us.
We maintain clarity that Christ is the source. We do not present authority as independent power. We operate from union. Christ in us expresses His life through us. Therefore, we remain grounded, focused, and aligned. We act as vessels of His authority, not as separate agents.
We walk in consistent expectation of visible change. We do not accept stagnation. We do not normalize limitation. We expect manifestation because Christ is present. Therefore, we remain active, speaking, acting, and standing. Impossible things yield because they do not outrank Christ, and Christ lives in us now.
Chapter 7: Commissioned to Rule Over the Impossible
We step into full activation as those seated with Christ. We do not hesitate. We do not retreat. We act. We ask in faith, and we believe that we receive. We do not separate asking from receiving. We do not delay belief. We move in present-tense authority. Christ in us governs our response, and we align with Him fully. Therefore, we act with boldness and clarity in every situation.
We speak to the mountain. We do not observe it. We command it. We declare alignment with Christ, and we expect movement. We do not negotiate with resistance. We do not tolerate contradiction. We speak with authority, and we remain established in what we declare. Therefore, we expect visible change as we enforce what Christ has established.
We preach the Kingdom through action. We do not limit our expression to words. We demonstrate authority. We heal the sick, we cast out demons, and we release restoration. We do not question our position. We function from it. Christ in us expresses His life through us, and we allow that expression without hesitation.
We lay hands and release wholeness. We do not wait for confirmation. We act because Christ is present. We speak life into bodies, situations, and circumstances. We command alignment with truth. Therefore, we expect response. We remain steady, knowing that Christ in us authorizes every action we take.
We refuse to call anything impossible that Christ indwells. We do not agree with limitation. We do not speak defeat. We remain aligned with truth. Therefore, we maintain authority in every situation. We do not shift our position. We stand firm, enforcing what Christ has established within us.
We walk as Christ in the earth. We do not represent Him from distance. We express Him from union. Our actions reveal His presence. Therefore, we move with clarity, speak with authority, and act with purpose. We do not hesitate. We remain consistent in our expression of Christ in us.
We are commissioned now. We go, we speak, we act, and we enforce the authority of Christ over every form of impossibility. We do not delay. We do not withdraw. We move forward in full alignment with who we are in Him. Christ in us governs all, and we walk in that reality without compromise.