Book cover

We Are Built for More Than Survival

We Are Built for More Than Survival declares that Christ in us did not form us for endurance without manifestation. We do not exist merely to hold on, shrink back, or manage pressure. We live in Christ’s order, Christ’s structure, and Christ’s obedience now. What He built in us carries movement, authority, stability, and visible expression beyond survival.

AI009

Chapter 1: We Reject the Lie of Bare Survival

We reject the lie that survival is enough for those in whom Christ dwells. We do not measure life by whether we made it through another day. We do not call mere endurance victory when Christ in us is the pattern of manifestation, order, and visible government. Survival talks as though pressure defines the outcome, but Christ defines the outcome where He lives. We are not built as fragile structures that simply avoid collapse. We are built as Christ’s living house, established in strength, aligned in truth, and formed for expression beyond resistance, beyond pressure, and beyond the limits that fear tries to set upon us.

We refuse to let visible strain speak louder than Christ’s indwelling life. Lack does not name us. Delay does not organize us. Opposition does not frame our expectation. We do not bow to disorder in thought, speech, action, or outcome, because Christ in us is not disordered, hesitant, or broken. What is joined to Him does not live as scattered pieces trying to hold together. We live as a body fitly joined, inwardly governed, and rightly arranged for manifestation. The impossible does not become truth because it looks large. Christ remains truth in us, and His presence gives order where chaos once tried to settle and stay.

We reject the language that says we are only trying to make it. That language trains the mouth beneath our union and trains expectation beneath Christ. We are not a people built to drag ourselves from burden to burden while calling that faithfulness. We are built upon better substance. Jesus said, “The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly” (John 10:10, KJV). Abundant life is not survival language. Christ in us does not produce shrinking existence. Christ in us produces ordered life, strengthened action, and visible expression.

We do not separate obedience from manifestation, because Christ’s order in us is not passive. His structure carries movement. His bones do not symbolize stiffness without life, but form with strength, alignment with purpose, and support for action. We are not built merely to withstand impact. We are built to carry divine pattern into visible places. Where the old mindset expected little, Christ in us expects expression. Where fear tried to keep us managing damage, Christ in us establishes direction. Our obedience is not anxious effort to survive spiritual pressure. Our obedience is the settled movement of Christ’s own life in us, bringing order, speech, action, and endurance into full agreement with Him.

We reject the claim that impossibility has final authority over what Christ inhabits. Resistance may appear. Pressure may speak. Circumstances may look fixed. Yet none of these sits above Christ in us. We do not study the mountain to learn defeat. We stand in Christ and speak from what He finished. Jesus said, “The things which are impossible with men are possible with God” (Luke 18:27, KJV). Since Christ dwells in us now, we do not treat impossible conditions as ruling powers. We do not glorify limitation. We do not organize our lives around blockage. We live from Christ’s present order, and that order confronts resistance with truth.

We also reject inner survival habits that hide behind outward faith language. We will not speak bold words while privately agreeing with endurance without expression. We will not call preservation the highest goal when Christ lives in us for manifestation. Survival thinking keeps structure small, expectation low, and obedience reduced to maintenance. Christ does not maintain us as static ruins. Christ orders us as living expression. Therefore we let His structure correct our speech, our outlook, and our posture. We stop speaking as though our assignment is to remain barely standing. We stand as those already joined to the One who manifests life, authority, order, and visible outcome through us now.

We are built for more than survival because Christ in us is more than a comfort during pressure. He is present order. He is present life. He is present structure. He is present manifestation. Therefore we reject every lie that teaches us to settle for less than His formed expression through us. We refuse collapse language, delay language, and endurance-only language. We live as those divinely arranged for action, obedience, and visible fruit. Our bones are not built for retreat. Our structure is not built for hiding. Christ in us stands now, moves now, and manifests now, and we agree with His order above every lesser expectation.

Chapter 2: We Refuse the Religion of Minimal Expectation

We refuse the religion of minimal expectation that trained us to admire survival while distrusting manifestation. That system taught us to reduce obedience into maintenance, reduce faith into patience without reception, and reduce Christ’s indwelling life into inward comfort without outward effect. We reject that training completely. Christ in us does not create small expectation, cautious speech, or protected unbelief. Christ in us does not teach us to expect less than His presence can express. Religion often praises endurance while remaining suspicious of visible fruit, but we do not live under that ceiling. We live under Christ’s present reign, and His reign in us establishes a stronger expectation than religious caution ever permitted.

We reject the mindset that treats stability as the highest goal while ignoring divine purpose. Stability matters, but Christ does not stabilize us so we can remain inactive. He orders us so we can manifest Him rightly. Minimal expectation keeps structure rigid, not alive. It keeps obedience narrow, not fruitful. It keeps people managing decay instead of confronting impossibility in union with Christ. We do not keep our language small to protect ourselves from disappointment. We let Christ define what is normal where He dwells. We are not careful observers of limitation. We are participants in the life of Christ. Therefore our expectation rises to match the One who lives in us, not the tradition that tried to shrink us.

We refuse inherited phrases that sound humble but deny union. We reject sayings that tell us not to expect much, not to ask boldly, not to speak directly, and not to act as though Christ is truly present now. Those sayings pretend to honor God while keeping manifestation distant. Yet Christ is not distant. He dwells in us. Paul wrote, “Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us” (Ephesians 3:20, KJV). The power is not described as absent, delayed, or selective in presence. It works in us. Therefore we reject every modest theology that speaks beneath Christ’s actual indwelling reality.

We also refuse the fear that labels strong expectation as presumption. Fear prefers safe language because safe language protects old limits. Fear calls smallness wisdom and calls boldness danger. Yet Christ in us does not produce timid agreement with resistance. He orders us in truth. He teaches us to ask, receive, speak, and stand without apology for His presence. Minimal expectation is not maturity. It is often unbelief with polished words. We will not let the fear of being wrong train us to expect nothing visible. Christ in us is not wrong. His life in us is not exaggeration. His order does not collapse under scrutiny. Therefore we expect according to Christ, not according to guarded tradition.

We reject the false divide between obedience and manifestation as though obedience means only quiet submission while manifestation belongs to rare moments. Christ’s obedience in us is active, aligned, and expressive. His order does not end in private agreement. It moves into speech, action, and visible outcome. James wrote, “Even so faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being alone” (James 2:17, KJV). We do not use that truth to create striving. We use it to reject dead expectation. Living faith acts because Christ lives in us. Living faith speaks because Christ is present. We do not wait for permission from tradition to walk in what union with Christ already makes true.

We refuse the reduced expectation that only prepares us to endure problems well. Christ in us does more than help us cope with disorder. He brings divine order into disorder. He does more than help us tolerate the impossible. He confronts the impossible through us. Minimal expectation wants enough truth to stay upright, but never enough truth to move mountains. We reject that design. Our bones are not built merely to keep us standing under pressure. They are built to support movement, structure, and active obedience. Christ’s life in us is not a dim reserve for emergencies. Christ’s life in us is a present force of order that shapes how we ask, speak, act, and expect.

Therefore we refuse the religion of lesser outcomes. We do not lower our outlook to fit disappointment, fear, or custom. We do not protect unbelief by calling it balance. We do not call Christ’s indwelling presence precious while denying His manifest order through us. We are built for more than survival, and we are taught by more than tradition. Christ in us defines our expectation. His order forms our obedience. His presence authorizes our boldness. We reject every small framework that tried to train us beneath union. We expect life, movement, fruit, and manifestation because Christ is in us now, and His structure in us does not support lesser living.

Chapter 3: We Stand Ordered by Christ Within

We stand ordered by Christ within, not arranged by pressure, history, or outward strain. The structure we carry does not come from circumstance. It comes from union. Christ in us is not an added resource beside our natural frame. He is present life ordering our whole inward man. Therefore we do not face resistance as disconnected people trying to gather strength from outside ourselves. We stand as those in whom Christ lives now. His order is not theoretical. His order is living, active, and governing. What He forms in us is stronger than what pressure tries to deform. We live from inward alignment, not outward reaction, because Christ Himself is our living order.

We reject the idea that we must be arranged by visible demands. The world organizes itself around urgency, fear, and shortage, but Christ in us establishes another pattern. His life in us does not scatter under pressure. His truth does not bend before delay. His structure does not crumble because the situation looks large. We are not assembled by anxiety. We are joined together in Him. Paul wrote, “For in him we live, and move, and have our being” (Acts 17:28, KJV). That means our living, moving, and being are not self-generated attempts at order. Christ Himself is the environment of our true life. Therefore our structure begins in Him and remains governed by Him.

We stand as those built from within by divine wisdom. Our bones speak of structure, support, and stable formation. In Christ, structure is not hard without life. It is living support for manifestation. We are not piles of ideas trying to hold faith together. We are a formed people, inwardly arranged by Christ’s own life. That inward arrangement changes how we speak, decide, endure, and act. We do not improvise identity under pressure. We stand in established union. We do not wait for outward ease before becoming ordered. Christ in us is order now. Therefore we agree with His arrangement above the noise, pull, and disorder of visible conditions.

We reject the old habit of thinking that strength comes from external reinforcement. Christ in us is not one influence among many. He is present source. The more clearly we agree with Him, the more plainly we stand. Our order is not the product of long strain. Our order is the fruit of present union. This does not make us passive. It makes us stable. We are not frantic because Christ is not frantic. We are not inwardly collapsing because Christ is not collapsing. We are not divided between survival and manifestation because Christ’s own life in us settles the issue. He forms us for movement, and that movement flows from inward government, not outward control.

We also reject the lie that obedience is merely restraint. Christ’s obedience in us is not empty refusal. It is active alignment with His present life. When His order fills us, our obedience becomes clear, direct, and fruitful. We do not obey as though trying to qualify for manifestation. We obey because manifestation belongs to Christ’s life in us already. Peter wrote that we have been made “partakers of the divine nature” (2 Peter 1:4, KJV). Since that is true, obedience in us is not foreign pressure against our nature. It is agreement with the life we now share in Christ. His structure within us supports holy action, steady speech, and visible response.

We stand ordered by Christ within, so we do not interpret ourselves by weakness. Weakness may speak, but it does not define structure. Pressure may strike, but it does not author identity. Christ in us remains the governing truth. Therefore we do not let survival language describe our life. We do not say we are barely holding on when Christ is ordering us from within. His life in us teaches endurance, but never as a substitute for manifestation. His structure teaches stability, but never as a substitute for movement. We are not inwardly empty people trying to perform divine tasks. We are filled, governed, and arranged by Christ Himself, and His order gives us direction now.

Therefore we stand. We stand ordered, not scattered. We stand formed, not improvised. We stand alive, not preserved in smallness. Christ in us is the answer to inward disorder, inward fear, inward hesitation, and inward collapse. Because He lives in us, our structure does not originate in personality, training, or natural stamina. Our true order is Christ expressed in us now. We agree with that order. We speak from that order. We act from that order. We are built for more than survival because Christ within us is present arrangement for present manifestation, and His life in us does not produce confusion, passivity, or retreat.

Chapter 4: We Receive Before Sight Agrees

We receive before sight agrees because Christ’s truth does not wait for appearance to become true. The survival mindset watches outward conditions for permission to believe, but we do not live that way. We live by Christ’s finished work and present indwelling life. What He has established does not become real when our eyes approve it. It is real because Christ is true. Therefore we do not delay reception until pressure loosens, symptoms move, provision appears, or resistance changes tone. We receive in faith because Christ is present now. Our structure remains ordered by Him while our eyes continue to learn what union already made true within us.

We reject the lie that visible agreement must come first. That lie always keeps manifestation outside our grasp because it makes sight the judge of truth. Yet sight does not reign over Christ. Christ reigns over sight. Therefore we do not ask as those uncertain of His presence, and we do not receive as though appearance must authorize faith. Jesus said, “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We take those words as present instruction. We believe that we receive. We do not wait to receive later. We receive now because Christ is present now, and His word is stronger than delay.

We also reject the false idea that reception is emotional intensity. We do not measure faith by sensation, atmosphere, or inner excitement. We measure by agreement with Christ. Survival thinking often looks for a sign strong enough to create confidence, but faith does not grow from signs. Faith grows from Christ’s word and Christ’s presence. Our receiving is not a performance. It is settled agreement. We do not strain to feel sure. We stand in Christ’s truth. His order in us brings calm authority to our asking and stable confidence to our receiving. Therefore we do not drift with changing feelings. We remain fixed in what Christ established, and we receive accordingly.

We reject the claim that receiving before sight is irresponsible or unrealistic. It is neither. It is obedience to Jesus. Faith does not deny that circumstances exist. Faith denies their right to govern truth. Faith does not ignore structure. Faith receives from Christ and then walks accordingly. We are built for more than survival, so we do not use cautious unbelief to preserve ourselves from bold trust. We receive what Christ authorizes because we are joined to Him. We do not make faith a backup thought after natural outcomes fail. Faith is our first agreement because Christ in us is our first reality. Therefore our receiving is immediate, not postponed by visible contradiction.

We also reject the habit of calling ourselves wise when we are only waiting for proof. Waiting for proof before receiving is not wisdom. It is sight governing faith. Paul wrote, “For we walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7, KJV). That is not vague religious language. It is direct order for life in Christ. Our walk is structured by faith. Our obedience is shaped by faith. Our expectation is stabilized by faith. Therefore we do not let the eyes set the boundaries of reception. We receive before sight agrees because our lives are ordered by Christ, not managed by visible evidence. Sight may learn later what faith already received from union.

We receive before sight agrees, and that changes how we endure contradiction. We do not fall into survival language while the visible world catches up. We do not speak as though nothing happened because we cannot yet measure outcome. We stay aligned with Christ’s truth. His structure in us prevents collapse into old speech. His order in us prevents retreat into mere endurance. We ask, receive, and continue standing as those who already belong to the One who finished the work. This is not pretending. This is agreement. Christ in us remains present while sight adjusts. Therefore our reception is not fragile. It is anchored in the One whose life in us never changes.

Therefore we receive now. We receive Christ’s order now. We receive His manifestation now. We receive His answer now. We do not train our mouths to wait for evidence before speaking truth. We do not train our hearts to suspend faith until pressure eases. We are built for more than survival, and receiving before sight agrees is part of that structure. Christ in us teaches us to believe first, speak rightly, stand firmly, and act from union. We do not call appearance lord. We call Christ Lord. Therefore we receive what He says now, and we continue walking in ordered obedience until sight answers what faith already embraced.

Chapter 5: We Speak From Divine Structure

We speak from divine structure, not from panic, reaction, or survival instinct. Christ in us does not produce loose speech, fearful speech, or speech that bends under pressure. His order forms our words. His life governs our declarations. Therefore we do not speak as those trying to convince ourselves that things may improve. We speak as those in whom Christ lives now. Our words do not rise from empty optimism. They rise from union. Because Christ is present, our speech carries His structure, His agreement, and His authority. We are not built merely to absorb pressure in silence. We are built to speak in alignment with Christ’s finished work and present indwelling life.

We reject speech that reinforces limitation. We do not name ourselves by weakness. We do not call disorder permanent. We do not magnify resistance until it sounds more established than Christ. Survival language always lowers the tone of the mouth to the level of the problem, but we refuse that pattern. Christ in us does not teach us to bow verbally before contradiction. He teaches us to speak from truth. Therefore our words do not trail behind appearance. Our words stand in Christ before appearance changes. The mouth that belongs to Christ’s living body is not trained for defeat. It is trained for agreement, blessing, command, and steady witness to what He established.

We also reject the belief that strong speech is fleshly when it simply agrees with Christ. Strong speech becomes fleshly only when it originates in self. Our speech does not originate in self. It flows from Christ in us. Jesus said, “The words that I speak unto you, they are spirit, and they are life” (John 6:63, KJV). Since Christ dwells in us, we do not separate speech from life. We do not speak as though truth were detached from utterance. Christ’s order forms both. Therefore when we ask, bless, command, and declare, we do so as those whose structure is already filled with His life. Our words are not decoration. Our words are aligned instruments.

We speak from divine structure when we bless rather than echo corruption. We speak from divine structure when we command rather than cower. We speak from divine structure when we declare Christ’s order into visible disorder. This is not noise. This is obedience. Christ in us does not keep the mouth inactive while resistance takes ground. He teaches the mouth to agree with heaven. He trains the bones, the frame, and the whole inward order to support right speech. Therefore our words are not casual. They are built into the structure of manifestation. We do not merely survive hard moments. We answer them with speech shaped by the One who lives within us.

We also reject the lie that speech matters only after manifestation begins. Speech matters before sight changes because faith speaks from union first. Scripture says, “We having the same spirit of faith, according as it is written, I believed, and therefore have I spoken” (2 Corinthians 4:13, KJV). We keep that order. We believe, and therefore we speak. We do not wait until outward evidence becomes easy to describe. We speak because Christ is true now. We speak because Christ is present now. We speak because His order in us does not permit silent surrender to the impossible. Our words are not attempts to create truth. Our words confess and apply the truth Christ already established.

We speak from divine structure when we address bodies, minds, homes, situations, and resistance with Christ’s agreement. We do not speak from fear of sounding bold. We do not shrink our confession to protect ourselves from disappointment. Christ in us is not embarrassed by His own authority. Therefore we do not use the mouth as a place of retreat. We use it as a place of alignment. Our bones support our posture, and our posture supports our speech. Christ’s order in us joins all three. We are formed to stand upright, speak upright, and act upright. Survival only wants enough speech to cope. Christ’s structure in us speaks for manifestation and visible answer.

Therefore we open our mouths with divine order. We ask in faith. We bless with purpose. We command with agreement. We declare with clarity. We refuse every word that trains us beneath union or beneath Christ’s finished work. We are built for more than survival, so our speech must sound like more than endurance. Our words must carry structure, obedience, and present authority. Christ in us speaks life, order, and manifestation now. We agree with Him. We speak with Him. We do not echo the impossible as though it rules us. We speak from divine structure because Christ lives in us now, and His order forms our words into action.

Chapter 6: We Watch the Impossible Yield to Christ

We watch the impossible yield to Christ because the impossible is not superior to the One who dwells in us. What looks fixed to sight is not fixed before Christ. What looks final to reason is not final before Christ. We do not glorify resistance by calling it unmovable. We do not speak of contradiction as though it has authority to remain where Christ is present. We live in union with the One who overrules the limits of man. Therefore we expect the impossible to yield, not because we are independent forces, but because Christ is present in us now. His order does not admire barriers. His life confronts them and brings them beneath truth.

We reject the habit of talking about impossibility as though it deserves reverence. Many speak of great problems with more certainty than they speak of Christ’s present indwelling life. We do not do that. We honor Christ, not the obstacle. Jesus said, “If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We receive those words as active truth, not distant theory. Christ in us does not teach us to negotiate with impossibility. He teaches us to believe, receive, speak, and stand. Therefore we watch situations yield because we remain aligned with Christ rather than trained by the appearance of the problem.

We watch the impossible yield in healing, deliverance, provision, restoration, and open doors because Christ’s life is not divided by categories of difficulty. He is not strong in one kind of answer and hesitant in another. He is whole. Therefore we do not label one resistance manageable and another untouchable. We do not create classes of impossibility as though some are beneath Christ and others are above Him. Christ in us remains the same across all outward forms of contradiction. His order holds. His truth stands. His life moves. Therefore we keep our expectation full. We do not call hard things honorable. We call Christ present, and we expect His life to answer visibly.

We also watch the impossible yield through ordinary obedience. Not every answer looks dramatic at first, but every true answer flows from Christ. A body strengthens. A mind clears. A door opens. A provision appears. A resistance breaks. A long-standing delay stops dictating the future. We do not despise these outcomes because they reveal Christ’s order moving through life. Survival thinking only notices whether collapse was avoided. We watch for more than that. We watch for Christ’s manifestation. We watch for movement where stagnation ruled. We watch for life where burden tried to stay. We watch the impossible yield because we are trained to look for Christ’s action, not merely our own preservation.

We reject the lie that manifestation belongs only to rare people or rare moments. Christ in us is not rare. His indwelling life is present now. The pattern of Scripture is not that Christ admires impossibility from afar. Scripture says, “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever” (Hebrews 13:8, KJV). Therefore we do not separate the Christ who acted then from the Christ who lives in us now. We do not live as spectators of former works. We live as His body now. What He is has not diminished. What He indwells has not been left empty. Therefore we expect the impossible to yield because Christ remains Himself in us.

We watch the impossible yield, and this strengthens our obedience without turning us into spectators of results alone. We do not chase outcomes as though manifestation were spectacle. We remain centered in Christ. Yet because we remain centered in Christ, we do not dismiss visible answers either. His life is not invisible only. His order touches bodies, situations, homes, minds, resources, and paths. Therefore we stand where contradiction appears and refuse to grant it finality. We ask in faith. We believe that we receive. We speak in union. We lay hands. We bless. We command. We stay aligned with Christ until the visible world answers the truth He already established.

Therefore we watch the impossible yield to Christ. We do not bow before what looks immovable. We do not settle for survival when Christ lives in us for manifestation. We do not let the size of the resistance rewrite our expectation. Christ in us is greater. Christ in us is present. Christ in us is active. We are built for more than survival, and our lives are not designed to merely endure contradiction while calling that fullness. We live to witness Christ’s order confronting the impossible. We live to see His life answer what men call unanswerable. We watch the impossible yield because Christ is in us now, and we agree with Him.

Chapter 7: We Move as Christ’s Built and Sent People

We move as Christ’s built and sent people now. We do not remain in survival posture. We do not keep our structure folded inward as though Christ formed us only for private stability. We are built, ordered, and sent. Therefore this is our activation. We ask in faith. We believe that we receive. We walk as Christ. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We refuse to speak beneath His presence. We refuse to think beneath His order. We refuse to live beneath His finished work. Christ in us is not waiting to become enough. Christ in us is present now, and we move in agreement with His life without apology or delay.

We ask in faith now. We do not ask as doubters rehearsing weakness. We ask as those joined to Christ. We ask from union, not from distance. We ask from presence, not from absence. What Jesus commanded concerning believing reception governs us now. Therefore we do not pray timid prayers that protect unbelief. We believe that we receive. We receive before sight agrees. We receive before the old language calms down. We receive before contradiction changes tone. Christ in us authorizes that reception. Therefore we open our mouths in faith and let our prayers align with the structure He formed within us. We do not survive prayer. We move through prayer into manifestation.

We speak to the mountain now. We do not study it for permission. We do not name it master. We do not allow it to set the scale of our vocabulary. Christ in us is greater than the obstacle before us. Therefore we speak with bold agreement. We command disorder to bow. We command resistance to yield. We command what opposes Christ’s order to leave its place. This is not self-exaltation. This is obedience flowing from union. We do not call our words empty when Christ is the One filling us. The mouth, the bones, the whole structure stand together in this hour. We speak from Christ’s presence, and we expect movement where mountains once stood.

We heal the sick now. We lay hands now. We cast out demons now. We raise the dead now. We do not postpone the works of Christ into memory or theory. Christ lives in us now, and His life in us is not inactive. Therefore we move toward need with divine order. We do not ask whether survival is enough. We know it is not. We know Christ formed us for manifestation. We refuse fear, religious caution, and reduced expectation. We lay hands with faith. We speak with authority. We command with peace. We do not create power. We express the Christ who is already present. Therefore we move directly, cleanly, and boldly in His name and life.

We preach the Kingdom now. We do not preach a weak gospel adjusted to visible limits. We preach Christ present, Christ reigning, Christ indwelling, Christ manifesting. We declare that union is real, that finished work is real, and that Christ’s order is stronger than survival-minded religion. We do not preach endurance without expression. We preach life, obedience, authority, and manifestation through Christ in us. Therefore we go into homes, streets, gatherings, and hard places with one settled confession: Christ is here in us now. The impossible does not stop Him. The mountain does not define Him. The need does not intimidate Him. We move as built and sent people because Christ sends through His living body.

We also refuse retreat in the moment of activation. We do not stop at understanding. We do not stop at agreement alone. We do not stop at private comfort. We step forward. We ask in faith. We believe that we receive. We walk as Christ. We speak to the mountain. We heal the sick. We lay hands. We cast out demons. We raise the dead. We refuse every thought that tells us to settle for less than Christ’s own life expressed through us now. We are built for more than survival. Therefore we do not preserve ourselves from bold obedience. We give ourselves to Christ’s present action because His order in us was formed for exactly this.

So let us go now as Christ’s built and sent people. Let us stand upright in His structure. Let us open our mouths in His agreement. Let us move our hands in His compassion. Let us refuse visible finality. Let us refuse delay language. Let us refuse powerless expectation. Let us ask in faith and believe that we receive. Let us walk as Christ and not call impossible what Christ indwells. Let us preach the Kingdom, heal the sick, cast out demons, raise the dead, and speak to the mountain until the visible world answers the Lord who lives in us now. Christ is present. Christ is enough. Christ moves through us now.