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We Carry the Weight of Glory Into the Earth

We Carry the Weight of Glory Into the Earth declares that Christ’s strength rests on us now, and through that indwelling strength we bear heavenly order into visible places without collapse, retreat, or delay. We do not treat leadership as self-effort. We carry what Christ established. We stand under His government, move in His steadiness, and bring visible alignment into the earth through His ruling life in us.

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Chapter 1: We Refuse the Lie That Earth Is Too Heavy for Christ in Us

The lie says the weight in the earth is too great, the disorder too deep, the resistance too old, and the burden too wide for visible change to answer Christ through us. We refuse that lie. Christ in us is not strained by pressure, threatened by disorder, or silenced by entrenched resistance. We do not stand before the earth as weak carriers of private comfort. We stand as those upon whom His government rests in expression. “For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder” (Isaiah 9:6, KJV). His rule is not theoretical where He dwells. His rule answers through us now.

Visible conditions do not define what Christ can carry through us. Natural confusion does not set the terms of spiritual authority. We do not measure possibility by the size of the disorder, the age of the resistance, or the hardness of the place. We measure by Christ present in us now. Our shoulders do not represent natural endurance alone. They represent carried government, borne responsibility, and visible steadiness under the life of Christ. We are not trying to become stable enough to carry His glory. We carry because He is present. We do not wait for easier conditions. We bear heavenly strength into difficulty, and difficulty does not overrule the Christ who lives in us.

The impossible often presents itself as heaviness, pressure, and unmovable disorder. It tells us that collapse is wisdom, delay is maturity, and retreat is realism. We reject that language. Christ does not teach us to honor impossibility as though it possesses lawful rule. Where Christ dwells, pressure is not lord, confusion is not king, and visible resistance is not final authority. We do not bow to the spectacle of heaviness. We bear under grace what earth says cannot be borne. “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me” (Philippians 4:13, KJV). That word does not shrink before leadership, burden, conflict, or visible need. It stands in all places now.

We also reject the lie that leadership means human strain. Leadership in Christ is not anxious control, fleshly pushing, or self-made force. Leadership is the visible carrying of heavenly order through yielded agreement with what Christ already established. We do not manufacture rule. We express it. We do not invent strength. We manifest it. Because Christ lives in us, we are not abandoned to natural capacity when pressure rises. We do not become mere observers of broken systems, hard places, and disordered conditions. We bear into those places the strength of Another. Christ in us does not retreat from need. Christ in us answers it with present governing life.

The earth often appears slow, resistant, and set in contrary patterns. Yet appearance is not the throne. What we see in the natural is not the highest court. Heaven’s rule is higher than visible contradiction, and Christ’s indwelling life makes that rule active in us now. We do not need the ground to agree before we stand in truth. We stand because truth is already established in Christ. We do not surrender our confession to what looks heavy. We do not name impossible what Christ indwells. What stands before us as disorder must answer a greater order. What appears immovable must answer a greater government. We carry that government into the earth now.

We are not called to admire glory from a distance. We are called to bear it. Glory carried into the earth means that what is true in Christ is not kept in private inward language alone. It presses outward through our speaking, our standing, our ordering, our governing, and our refusal to yield to lesser conclusions. We do not separate worship from rule, or truth from manifestation. The Christ who dwells in us is not passive. His strength establishes. His wisdom orders. His government steadies. His presence makes us active carriers of heavenly substance in earthly places. We do not apologize for weight when Christ is the One carrying through us. We agree with His present rule.

So we begin here: the burden is not greater than Christ, the disorder is not older than truth, and the resistance is not stronger than indwelling glory. We refuse every lie that teaches us to interpret visible heaviness as final. We carry what heaven established. We stand as those under Christ’s strength, under Christ’s rule, and under Christ’s present government. We do not collapse under earth’s need. We bear into earth what heaven already declared. Our shoulders answer Christ’s strength now. Our leadership answers Christ’s life now. Our presence in the earth is not empty. We carry the weight of glory into visible order now.

Chapter 2: We Reject Weak Leadership and Delayed Agreement

Religion often taught us to speak of Christ’s power while expecting lesser outcomes in visible places. It treated strength as inward comfort without outward government. It praised truth in language yet surrendered order to delay, fear, and resistance. We reject that pattern. Christ did not enter us so we could describe His rule while excusing visible disorder as normal. We do not honor reduced expectation as wisdom. We do not call passive endurance maturity when Christ calls us to bear heavenly order into the earth. Weak leadership begins when visible conditions are given more authority than indwelling Christ. We reject every lesson that taught us to admire truth without carrying it into manifestation.

Fear also taught many to mistake caution for faithfulness. It said strong agreement was presumption, bold speech was imbalance, and present-tense authority was excess. Yet fear never established kingdom order anywhere. Fear does not strengthen shoulders. Fear does not form leadership. Fear does not carry glory into the earth. Fear studies resistance until resistance sounds lawful. But we are not led by fear-shaped conclusions. Christ in us does not borrow confidence from circumstances. Christ in us is confidence. Therefore we do not speak as though visible pressure sets boundaries for heavenly rule. We do not shrink our confession to fit the atmosphere. We agree with Christ without delay, apology, or retreat.

Tradition often lowered expectation by making leadership sound like management of decline rather than expression of heaven’s order. It trained many to maintain survival, preserve routine, and explain away weakness instead of bearing strength into the earth. We refuse that inheritance. We are not appointed to supervise disorder while calling it humility. We are not here to protect powerless language. Christ does not live in us to make us curators of limitation. He lives in us to reveal His government. “And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace” (John 1:16, KJV). Fulness does not teach reduction. Fulness does not authorize lack as the settled standard. Fulness carries heaven’s answer now.

Unbelief also worked through delay-language. It said that perhaps order may come later, strength may arise later, and manifestation may appear after enough time, struggle, or preparation. We reject that voice. Delay is often the polished language of unbelief pretending to be reverence. Christ is present now, not eventually. His strength is present now, not after the earth becomes easier to lead. We do not postpone agreement with what He already established. We do not place truth in a future waiting room until visible conditions become acceptable. Agreement belongs now. Strength belongs now. Government belongs now. We do not carry tomorrow’s promise. We carry today’s indwelling Christ into today’s visible disorder.

Weak leadership also appears when we separate spiritual truth from natural places. It says Christ rules inwardly, but systems, homes, bodies, cities, and structures must remain mostly untouched by that rule. We reject that divide. The earth is not outside the reach of the Christ who dwells in us. Leadership in Christ means His order answers through our presence in real conditions. We do not carry abstract doctrine. We carry governing life. “The kingdom of God is within you” (Luke 17:21, KJV). Because the kingdom is within us, it is not trapped there. What is within us moves outward through agreement, speech, order, courage, and manifested steadiness in the earth.

We also reject the idea that strength must look loud, fleshly, or controlling. Christ’s strength is not panic wearing religious language. It is settled government. It is heaven’s order borne without agitation. It is peace that does not surrender authority. It is clarity that does not bend under contradiction. Therefore we do not imitate human domination and call it leadership. We manifest Christ’s rule with firmness, steadiness, truth, and visible alignment. His strength in us is not frantic. His strength is weight-bearing, order-establishing, and earth-facing. We carry glory without confusion because the One in us is not confused. We lead from carried government, not from natural intensity.

So we reject every reduced lesson: weak leadership, delayed agreement, fear-shaped caution, and powerless tradition. We do not expect less than Christ because history expected less. We do not bow to lesser outcomes because religion made peace with them. We carry what Christ established. We agree with Him now. We refuse the lie that visible order must wait on another season, another sign, or another permission. Our shoulders are not made for retreat. Our leadership is not formed by compromise with disorder. Christ in us bears heaven’s strength now, and through that strength we carry the weight of glory into the earth without delay.

Chapter 3: We Bear Heaven’s Government Because Christ Lives in Us

We do not face the earth as isolated humans trying to produce spiritual results through natural determination. Christ lives in us now. That truth changes the entire ground of leadership, strength, and manifestation. We are not separate from the answer while staring at the problem. The answer indwells us. Heaven’s government is not far from us, outside us, or withheld from us. Christ in us is the present source of strength, order, wisdom, and authority. Therefore we do not approach visible disorder as strangers to rule. We bear heaven’s government because the King Himself lives in us. Leadership begins here: not with self-confidence, but with union reality active now.

Because Christ lives in us, our shoulders become more than symbols of endurance. They become places of carried government. We are not merely holding up under pressure; we are bearing heaven’s order into the earth. Pressure does not define us. Christ does. Burden does not interpret us. Union does. We do not ask natural conditions for permission to stand in what is already true. Christ in us means we stand from established truth into unstable places. “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). Glory is not a distant concept in that word. Glory is Christ present within, pressing outward through us into visible expression and answer now.

Union also means that strength is not borrowed from self-effort. We are not generating capacity from our own reserves. We do not lead by pushing the soul harder or straining the flesh more. Christ Himself is our strength in manifestation. Therefore our confidence is not in personality, temperament, training, or natural resilience. Our confidence rests in the indwelling Christ who never weakens, never hesitates, and never yields His government to earthly contradiction. We do not collapse when conditions intensify, because the One carrying through us is not subject to collapse. The shoulders of union do not carry alone. Christ bears through us what heaven established.

This truth destroys the idea that the earth is left to govern itself while we wait for relief. Christ in us is heaven’s active answer in the midst of visible need. We are not spectators of disorder. We are carriers of rule. We do not observe from a distance while asking why nothing changes. We stand in union and move from it. “For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure” (Philippians 2:13, KJV). That work in us is not passive. It is active willing and active doing. Christ does not only place desire within us. Christ works through us into expression, order, and visible action now.

Because Christ lives in us, government is not harshness. It is holy order expressed through peace, truth, and strength. We do not need fleshly force to prove spiritual authority. Christ’s rule in us is already weighty, already clear, already sufficient. That is why we can stand quietly and still carry dominion. The indwelling Christ is not nervous about the earth. He is not unsure how to answer contradiction. He is not learning how to bear weight. Therefore we do not interpret hard places through anxiety. We interpret them through union. The harder the place appears, the more clearly we refuse to call it superior to the Christ who lives in us now.

Union with Christ also means that visible order is not foreign to spiritual life. Christ’s inward presence moves toward outward answer. We do not divide the secret place from the visible place. What Christ establishes within us is designed to answer outwardly through our words, our actions, our steadiness, and our rule. The life within does not remain buried beneath confession alone. It manifests. That is why we do not settle for internal agreement without outward bearing. Heaven’s government carried in us must meet visible places. It must answer confusion, heaviness, resistance, and lack. We bear not ideas only, but the ruling life of Christ made active in the earth through us.

So we settle this now: Christ lives in us, and therefore the answer is present. We do not search outside union for what heaven already supplied within. We do not reduce leadership to human burden-bearing. We do not reduce strength to personality. We bear heaven’s government because Christ Himself dwells in us now. Our shoulders answer His strength. Our leadership answers His order. Our presence answers His reign. We are not waiting to become carriers of glory. We are carriers because Christ is here. We do not stand apart from government. We embody its expression in the earth because the King lives and rules through us now.

Chapter 4: We Receive Before Visible Order Appears

We do not wait for visible order to appear before we agree with Christ. We receive before sight confirms, before conditions soften, and before the earth rearranges itself into visible alignment. Jesus did not teach us to believe after manifestation. He taught us to receive in faith while manifestation is still unseen. Therefore we do not let appearance govern reception. We do not let disorder instruct belief. We receive because Christ is present now. The weight of glory we carry is not activated by sight. It is received in agreement with what Christ already established. Visible order answers faith; faith does not wait for visible order to authorize truth.

This destroys the lie that strength must be felt first. We do not need emotion to certify union. We do not need atmosphere to verify authority. We do not need visible improvement to justify believing reception. Christ is our basis, not sensation. Therefore we receive His strength now whether pressure looks unchanged or not. We receive His government now whether conditions appear settled or not. We receive His order now whether the earth yet reflects it or not. Faith does not borrow its certainty from feelings, signs, or natural momentum. Faith receives because Christ is true. What He established in finished work does not wait for appearance to become valid.

Jesus made this plain: “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 reverse that order. We do not believe after we have. We believe that we receive, and manifestation follows. This governs how we carry glory into the earth. We do not look at resistance and say the burden remains too heavy. We look at Christ and receive His strength now. We do not study visible disorder until faith weakens. We stand in receiving faith until visible conditions answer the truth already embraced in union. Reception is present tense because Christ is present tense.

We also reject the lie that receiving must be earned by greater readiness, longer striving, or improved spiritual performance. Christ’s strength is not a reward for attainment. It is the present expression of union. We do not receive after becoming worthy enough to carry government. We receive because Christ is already worthy and already dwells in us. That truth removes delay from faith. We do not postpone reception while trying to qualify for what union already established. The earth does not need our achievement. The earth needs Christ’s strength carried through us now. Therefore we receive without delay, without self-measurement, and without surrender to natural evidence.

Believing reception also changes how we stand in hard places. We do not enter visible contradiction hoping to discover whether Christ is enough. We enter already receiving His sufficiency. We do not approach disorder as undecided people. We approach as those who have embraced heaven’s answer in advance of sight. “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). Faith is not empty optimism. Faith is substance. Faith is evidence. Therefore we do not call unseen truth unreal. What faith receives is already substantial because Christ is already present and already active in us now.

This means we carry glory with settled certainty. We are not experimenting with truth. We are agreeing with it. We are not negotiating with visible resistance to see whether reception was justified. We receive because Christ justifies reception. What heaven established does not wait on earthly permission. Therefore we do not call ourselves realistic when we speak only from what we see. We call that contradiction. True agreement speaks from Christ first. It receives from Christ first. It stands in Christ first. Then the earth answers. Visible order is not the author of our confidence. Visible order is the fruit that follows confidence rooted in union and received before sight agrees.

So we receive now. We receive Christ’s strength now. We receive carried government now. We receive visible order answering heavenly rule now. We do not wait for the earth to calm down before we believe. We do not wait for proof before agreement. We do not wait for feeling before reception. Christ is enough now, and because He is enough now, we receive now. Our shoulders do not carry hesitation. They carry glory. Our leadership does not operate from visible confirmation. It operates from received truth. We believe that we receive, and therefore we carry the weight of glory into the earth with settled authority now.

Chapter 5: We Speak Strength and Establish Order in the Earth

Because Christ lives in us, we do not carry glory silently into disorder. We speak. We ask. We bless. We command. We stand. Leadership in Christ is not mute agreement hidden beneath inward conviction. It is heaven’s order expressed through words that align with the King who lives in us. We do not speak from strain, panic, or natural frustration. We speak from union. We do not use our mouths to echo earth’s confusion back into the atmosphere. We use our mouths to declare what Christ established. Our words are not attempts to create truth. Our words agree with truth and release heaven’s order into visible places now.

This means we do not merely describe hard places. We address them. We do not merely analyze pressure. We answer it. We do not merely observe disorder and name it accurately. We confront it with a higher rule. Christ’s strength in us moves through our asking and our speaking. “And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive” (Matthew 21:22, KJV). Therefore we ask in faith, not in uncertainty. We ask from finished work, not from distance. We ask because the One in us is present and active now. Then we speak in agreement with what we received, refusing to let contradiction become the loudest voice in the place.

We also bless. Blessing is not soft language without government. Blessing is spoken agreement with Christ’s order over people, places, situations, and visible conditions. We bless the work before us. We bless the atmosphere around us. We bless the structures entrusted to us. We bless what heaven intends to make visible in the earth. Blessing does not deny contradiction. Blessing overrules it through higher agreement. We do not bless from sentiment. We bless from government. Christ in us carries rule, and that rule moves through our mouths with steadiness. Therefore we do not let cursing, complaint, and delay-language occupy the place where glory must be carried into visible answer now.

We also command. Command does not mean fleshly dominance. It means authoritative agreement with Christ spoken into visible contradiction. We command confusion to yield. We command disorder to align. We command resistance to bow. We command hard places to answer heaven’s rule. Jesus said, “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 do not treat that as distant language for another people. We carry that authority now because Christ dwells in us now. Therefore mountains do not receive our admiration. They receive our command.

Standing is also part of speaking strength. We do not speak once and then collapse into the old report. We stand in what we have spoken because we stand in Christ. We do not let delay retrain our mouths into lesser conclusions. We do not let resistance tutor us into silence. We speak, and we remain in agreement. We bless, and we remain in agreement. We command, and we remain in agreement. Standing is not passive waiting. Standing is active refusal to surrender truth to contradiction. The shoulders that carry glory do not drop their confession when the earth appears slow to answer. They hold what Christ established until visible order yields to heavenly rule.

This is how leadership manifests in the earth. We do not govern by noise, pressure, and reaction. We govern by settled agreement with Christ spoken into visible places. His strength gives weight to our words. His rule gives shape to our commands. His presence gives substance to our blessing. Therefore our mouths are not disconnected from our shoulders. What we carry, we speak. What we bear, we declare. What we receive, we release. The earth does not need more descriptions of its disorder. It needs heaven’s order carried and spoken by those in whom Christ lives now. We are those people, and our words must answer the glory we carry.

So we ask in faith, bless with authority, command with clarity, and stand without retreat. We do not call visible contradiction final. We do not let our mouths serve the pressure we were sent to answer. We speak strength. We establish order. We release agreement into hard places. Christ in us does not speak doubt into the earth. Christ in us speaks rule into the earth. Therefore our leadership is vocal, our agreement is active, and our confession is weight-bearing. We carry the weight of glory into visible places, and through that carried glory we speak heaven’s order until the earth answers Christ’s present rule now.

Chapter 6: We Watch Hard Places Yield to Christ’s Rule

We do not carry glory as theory. We carry it toward visible answer. Christ’s strength in us is not abstract, and His rule is not symbolic. Hard places yield to Him. What looks entrenched is not beyond Him. What appears fixed is not superior to Him. Therefore we expect answer where Christ is carried in faith, agreement, and authority. We do not glorify resistance by speaking of it as though it owns permanence. We glorify Christ by expecting manifestation. The earth is not left to itself when Christ is present in us. The government we carry presses toward visible order, and visible order has lawful reason to appear where Christ’s rule is borne into the place now.

Jesus did not teach us to admire impossibility from afar. He moved in authority until visible conditions answered the kingdom. Blindness yielded. storms yielded. hunger yielded. death yielded. We do not separate His life from ours as though union provides comfort without continuation. “He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also” (John 14:12, KJV). We do not reduce that word to inspiration without expression. Christ in us remains Christ in manifestation. Therefore hard places are not exempt from answer. His works do not become myths in our mouths. His works remain the natural outflow of His present indwelling life through us now.

This expectation also shapes how we see leadership. We do not lead merely to maintain order at a natural level. We lead to reveal Christ’s rule in visible places. We expect homes to answer. We expect bodies to answer. We expect atmospheres to answer. We expect systems to answer. We expect confused situations to come under greater clarity. We expect burdened places to come under greater strength. We expect scattered conditions to come under greater alignment. These expectations are not human optimism. They are union-based conclusions. Christ lives in us now, and because He lives in us now, we do not call the visible realm exempt from His manifested government.

We also learn from those who acted in His name. In Scripture, the impossible did not remain unmoved when men stood in divine authority. The lame walked. prisons opened. provision appeared. the dead were raised. We do not read those things as museum pieces. We read them as witnesses of how Christ answers through yielded vessels in the earth. “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever” (Hebrews 13:8, KJV). If He is the same, then His indwelling life is not reduced, retired, or restrained in us. Therefore we do not honor present contradiction more than abiding continuity. The same Christ still yields visible answers through His body now.

Yielding does not always begin with spectacle. Sometimes it begins with alignment, settled peace, restored clarity, or ordered movement where confusion ruled. Sometimes it appears in immediate healing, immediate deliverance, immediate provision, or immediate reversal. We do not dictate the form in order to protect unbelief. We simply refuse to deny answer because the place looked hard beforehand. Christ’s rule is not measured by how severe the contradiction appeared when we arrived. Christ’s rule is measured by Christ Himself. Therefore we do not stand in awe of difficulty. We stand in agreement with the One before whom all difficulty must yield. That is how glory is carried into the earth.

We also refuse disappointment-driven theology. When people saw resistance, some built doctrines to explain why expectation should shrink. We refuse that route. We do not use delay to lower Christ. We do not use contradiction to rewrite union. We do not use hard cases to train our mouths into caution. We remain in the truth: Christ rules, Christ dwells in us, Christ manifests, and hard places yield. That is not exaggeration. That is agreement. The shoulders that carry glory do not grow timid because the earth looked stubborn. They grow firmer in truth. They keep bearing. They keep speaking. They keep acting until visible places answer heaven’s carried rule now.

So we watch hard places yield. We watch pressure bow. We watch confusion lose ground. We watch visible contradiction answer Christ’s indwelling strength. We do not treat manifestation as foreign to leadership. Manifestation is leadership when Christ’s rule becomes visible in the earth through us. We were not made to carry glory privately and leave the world unchanged. We were made to bear heaven’s strength into visible places until those places answer heavenly rule. Therefore we expect answer, we stay in agreement, and we do not call hard what Christ cannot move. Hard places yield because Christ lives and rules through us now.

Chapter 7: We Go Forth Carrying Glory Without Retreat

Now we go forth in full activation. We do not admire this truth and leave it unused. We carry it into the earth. Ask in faith. Believe that we receive. Walk as Christ. Do not call impossible what Christ indwells. The weight of glory is not too much for us because Christ bears it through us. Therefore we refuse retreat, hesitation, and lowered speech. We are not sent into the earth to study burden. We are sent to carry government. We are not sent to echo disorder. We are sent to establish order. Christ lives in us now, and because He lives in us now, we move as carriers of heaven’s strength into visible places without apology.

So ask. Ask in full agreement with finished work. Ask without delay-language. Ask without inner surrender to contradiction. “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). Receive now. Do not postpone reception until the earth calms down. Do not ask as though Christ were far away. Ask as those in whom Christ is present now. Then stand in what we received. We do not beg for strength as though union were uncertain. We receive strength because Christ is here, and we carry that received strength into the very places that once tried to intimidate us.

Speak to the mountain. Do not name it permanent. Do not call it wise to leave contradiction untouched. Speak to the body. Speak to the home. Speak to the structure. Speak to the burden. Speak to the locked place. Speak to the hard place. Speak from union, not from strain. Speak from carried government, not from natural frustration. We do not use our words to rehearse resistance. We use our words to reveal rule. “For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds” (2 Corinthians 10:4, KJV). Therefore we do not enter battle with fleshly methods. We enter carrying Christ’s authority now.

Preach the Kingdom. Heal the sick. Lay hands. Cast out demons. Raise the dead. Do not act as though these commands belong to a distant age while Christ lives in us now. His life in us is present command, present equipment, and present authority. We do not wait to become worthy enough to move. We move because Christ is already worthy and already present. We do not excuse the earth from answer. We bring answer. We do not treat darkness as settled. We confront it. We do not treat disorder as normal. We overthrow it. The shoulders of Christ’s body are not decorative. They are bearing places of manifested government now.

Carry glory into the room. Carry glory into the street. Carry glory into the gathering. Carry glory into the field. Carry glory into the hard conversation. Carry glory into the pressured assignment. Carry glory into the broken condition. We do not divide sacred truth from natural places. The earth is the place we were sent. Therefore we go into visible conditions with invisible certainty that becomes visible through faith-filled action. Our leadership is not reserved for ideal settings. It is for resistance. It is for burden. It is for contradiction. Christ in us is not overwhelmed by where we are sent. Christ in us answers where we are sent now.

Refuse visible finality. Refuse the permanence of pressure. Refuse the worship of appearances. Refuse the language of lesser expectation. Refuse passive theology dressed as maturity. Refuse every argument that says the earth must stay as it is because it looks too heavy to change. We do not surrender to the sight of things. We answer the sight of things. We do not inherit the earth’s conclusions. We bring heaven’s rule into them. This is our commission now: ask in faith, receive in faith, speak with authority, act from union, and carry the weight of glory until visible order answers Christ’s indwelling strength in the earth.

So go forth now. Carry glory without retreat. Bear Christ’s strength into natural places. Establish order. Speak clearly. Stand firmly. Command boldly. Move immediately. Do not call impossible what Christ indwells. Do not call heavy what Christ cannot bear. Do not call resistant what Christ cannot rule. We are the body through whom He manifests strength, government, steadiness, and visible order now. Therefore we go as carriers of heaven’s rule in the earth. We ask in faith. We believe that we receive. We walk as Christ. We carry the weight of glory into the earth now.