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We Possess the Mind That Knows Nothing Is Missing to Christ

We Possess the Mind That Knows Nothing Is Missing to Christ declares that the indwelling Christ answers visible lack with present wholeness. We refuse the authority of absence and align with the mind of Christ that knows no deficiency. From this union, we believe, receive, speak, and act, seeing creative miracles manifest as restored structure, function, and completeness in the body now.

AI049

Chapter 1: The Mind That Refuses the Authority of Absence

We reject the lie that absence has authority where Christ dwells. We do not accept missing parts, damaged structure, or visible loss as final truth. We possess the mind of Christ, and that mind does not agree with lack. What appears absent to sight is not absent to Christ in us. We do not interpret the body through loss; we interpret it through Christ. We refuse conclusions based on injury, history, or condition. We stand in union, knowing that Christ present in us defines reality, not the visible state of the body or its report.

We do not allow the language of impossibility to shape our thinking. We do not say something cannot be restored, recreated, or made whole. We refuse every report that exalts limitation above Christ in us. The mind we possess knows completeness, not deficiency. We do not think from damage; we think from Christ. We do not reason from loss; we reason from union. The presence of Christ in us answers every condition. We remain anchored in Him, not in appearance, and we hold firm to His wholeness as present truth.

We acknowledge that what is impossible with man is not impossible where Christ dwells in us. We do not measure possibility by human limitation. We measure by Christ within. As it is written, “The things which are impossible with men are possible with God” (Luke 18:27, KJV). We do not place ourselves outside that reality. We are in Christ, and Christ is in us. Therefore, impossibility has no authority over us. We do not bow to it. We remain aligned with the truth that Christ in us answers what man cannot.

We do not accept that the body must remain as it appears. We do not accept permanence in damage or loss. We reject the conclusion that what is missing must remain missing. We carry the Creator within us. The One who formed all things dwells in us now. Therefore, we do not agree with absence. We agree with Christ. We see through His fullness, not through deficiency. We hold to His completeness as our reality, and we refuse to let visible lack define what is possible in us or through us.

We embrace that Christ in us is not partial, broken, or limited. He is whole now. Because He is in us, we do not operate from lack. We operate from fullness. As it is written, “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). We do not delay this truth. We do not postpone it. We recognize it as present reality. The glory we carry is not theoretical. It is active, present, and sufficient. It answers absence with fullness and restores what appears lost through the life of Christ in us.

We renew our thinking to align with Christ, not with appearance. We do not rehearse loss. We declare wholeness. We do not meditate on damage. We fix our mind on Christ. The mind we possess knows nothing is missing to Him. Therefore, we do not treat anything as permanently absent. We stand in the certainty that what Christ carries, we carry. What Christ is, we express. We reject divided thinking and remain established in the truth that we are complete in Him now.

We act from this mind. We do not remain passive. We do not wait for change to begin agreement. We agree first, because Christ is present now. We move in alignment with Him. We place our hands, we speak, and we declare wholeness where lack appears. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We act as those who know that nothing is missing to Christ, and therefore nothing is beyond restoration through Him in us now.

Chapter 2: The Lie of Finality in Visible Loss

We reject the lie that visible loss carries final authority over the body. We do not accept medical conclusions, historical damage, or natural limitation as the last word. We refuse the teaching that what is missing must remain missing. We recognize that fear, tradition, and reduced expectation have attempted to train our thinking to agree with absence. We do not submit to that training. We possess the mind of Christ, and that mind does not conclude finality where Christ is present. We stand in truth, not in learned limitation, and we refuse to call any condition irreversible.

We expose how expectation has been lowered by repeated observation of limitation. We do not build doctrine from what we have seen fail. We build from Christ in us. We refuse to allow repeated outcomes of lack to shape our belief. We do not inherit conclusions from past experiences. We do not adopt the language that says restoration does not happen. We reject the idea that creative miracles are rare or unreachable. We remain anchored in Christ, not in patterns of loss, and we uphold His indwelling life as our reference point for all expectation.

We reject fear that tells us to protect ourselves from disappointment by lowering expectation. We do not guard against faith. We do not reduce what we believe because of visible outcomes. We stand in bold agreement with Christ in us. As it is written, “Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not weaken this statement. We receive it as present truth. We do not filter it through experience. We align with it fully and without compromise.

We reject the system that separates Christ from present manifestation. We do not accept teachings that delay wholeness or push restoration into distance. We do not accept the idea that Christ is present but inactive. We recognize that such teaching contradicts His indwelling life. We do not reduce Christ to potential. We know Him as present and active within us. We refuse to separate His presence from His expression. We remain established in the truth that Christ in us is fully able and fully present to restore what appears missing now.

We acknowledge that tradition has often honored limitation while speaking of Christ. We refuse this contradiction. We do not confess Christ while agreeing with lack. We do not speak of His power while accepting absence as normal. We align our words with truth. As it is written, “Having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof” (2 Timothy 3:5, KJV). We do not live in that form. We live in the reality of Christ’s power in us. We reject empty acknowledgment and stand in active agreement with His life.

We renew expectation according to Christ, not according to what has been commonly accepted. We do not accept reduced outcomes as normal. We do not call absence acceptable. We elevate our expectation to match the One who dwells in us. We see restoration as consistent with His nature. We do not treat creative miracles as exceptions. We treat them as expressions of Christ’s wholeness. We remain steady in this expectation, not fluctuating with reports, but grounded in the unchanging presence of Christ in us.

We stand firm against every voice that declares finality in loss. We do not yield to fear, tradition, or visible evidence. We remain rooted in Christ. We declare that what is missing is not beyond restoration. We refuse visible finality and uphold Christ’s completeness as present truth. We move forward in bold agreement, knowing that the mind we possess does not accept absence. We walk in the certainty that Christ in us answers every condition, and we remain established in that truth without compromise.

Chapter 3: Christ in Us as Present Wholeness

We declare that Christ in us is the present answer to every form of lack. We do not look outside ourselves for what Christ has already supplied within. We are not separated from the solution. We carry Him. The One who formed the body dwells in us now. Therefore, we do not approach absence as those searching for help. We stand as those who contain the answer. We do not relate to Christ as distant. We know Him as present within us, expressing His wholeness through us now.

We recognize that Christ in us is not partial. He is complete. He is not lacking any function, structure, or life. Because He dwells in us, we do not carry deficiency. We carry completeness. We do not divide ourselves from His nature. We are joined to Him. We think from this union. We speak from this union. We act from this union. We do not separate identity from manifestation. We remain established in the truth that Christ in us is fully present and fully sufficient for every restoration.

We acknowledge that we do not face the body as mere human beings. We do not operate from natural limitation. We operate from union with Christ. As it is written, “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me” (Philippians 4:13, KJV). We do not reduce this to internal encouragement. We recognize it as functional reality. We are strengthened by Christ within us, and that strength is sufficient for what appears impossible. We do not shrink back from restoration. We move forward in union.

We affirm that Christ in us is the Creator, not a witness to lack. He does not observe absence without answer. He expresses wholeness. Therefore, we do not stand passive before missing parts or damaged structure. We recognize that the life within us answers what appears broken. We do not wait for external permission. We act from internal reality. The Creator in us is not inactive. He is present, and His presence carries the authority and ability to restore, recreate, and make whole.

We receive that we are joined to the One who calls things into being. We do not speak as those uncertain of outcome. We speak from union with Christ. As it is written, “God… calleth those things which be not as though they were” (Romans 4:17, KJV). We do not treat this as distant theology. We recognize it as present function through Christ in us. We align our speech with His nature. We declare what is true in Him, even when it is not yet visible to sight.

We reject separation in thought, word, and action. We do not say Christ is present while acting as if we are alone. We remain aware of union. We do not divide spiritual truth from physical reality. We bring the reality of Christ into visible expression. We do not separate belief from manifestation. We hold them together through union. We remain established in the truth that Christ in us is the answer now, not later, not distant, and not conditional.

We move in confidence because Christ in us is not uncertain. We do not hesitate before what appears impossible. We do not withdraw from visible lack. We advance in union. We carry the assurance that nothing is missing to Christ, and therefore nothing is beyond restoration. We stand in this truth, we speak from it, and we act through it. We walk as those who know that Christ in us is present wholeness, and we remain established in that reality in all situations.

Chapter 4: We Believe and Receive Before Sight

We establish that believing and receiving do not wait for visible agreement. We do not look for evidence before we receive. We believe because Christ is present in us. We do not allow sight to govern faith. We govern sight through faith. We do not delay agreement until the body changes. We agree now. We receive now. We stand in the certainty that what Christ carries is already true. We do not move from doubt to belief. We remain in belief because Christ is in us now.

We reject the lie that manifestation must be seen before it is real. We do not measure truth by appearance. We measure by Christ. We do not treat absence as proof against restoration. We treat Christ in us as proof of wholeness. As it is written, “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 rearrange this order. We believe first. We receive first. Then manifestation follows.

We do not wait for sensation, emotion, or physical confirmation before we receive. We do not require feeling to validate truth. We stand in the finished work of Christ. We receive because He is present. We do not attempt to earn manifestation. We do not prepare ourselves into readiness. We are ready because Christ is in us. We receive what He supplies now, without delay and without condition. We remain steady in this reception, not moved by what we feel or do not feel.

We reject every teaching that makes faith dependent on visible change. We do not say we will believe when we see. We believe now. We do not say we will receive when it appears. We receive now. We remain aligned with Christ, not with evidence. We do not fluctuate between belief and doubt. We remain established in receiving. We hold firm to what is true in Christ, regardless of what is visible, and we refuse to surrender that position under pressure.

We acknowledge that faith operates from union, not from distance. We do not reach toward Christ as if He is far. We receive from Him within us. As it is written, “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 it as established in Christ. We receive what is unseen because Christ in us makes it present reality before it becomes visible form.

We remain consistent in believing and receiving. We do not start in faith and shift into doubt. We do not begin in agreement and move into hesitation. We stay established in what we have received. We do not reopen the question of possibility. We have already answered it in Christ. We do not revisit the lie of absence. We remain in the truth of wholeness. We hold this position with clarity and stability, knowing that Christ in us defines reality.

We act from what we have received. We do not wait for confirmation to move. We move because we believe. We speak because we receive. We lay hands, we declare, and we command from the position of already receiving in Christ. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We walk in alignment with what we have received, and we remain steadfast in that position until visible manifestation aligns with the truth we already hold in Christ.

Chapter 5: We Speak to the Body from Union

We speak to the body from union with Christ, not from observation of lack. We do not describe conditions; we address them. We do not rehearse damage; we command restoration. We stand as those joined to Christ, and we speak accordingly. Our words do not originate from fear or uncertainty. Our words flow from Christ in us. We do not ask whether restoration is possible. We declare what is true in Christ. We do not negotiate with absence. We confront it with the authority of the indwelling Christ and declare wholeness where lack appears.

We do not separate speaking from believing. We speak because we believe and have received. We do not speak as those hoping for change. We speak as those aligned with Christ. Our words carry agreement with His completeness. As it is written, “And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive” (Matthew 21:22, KJV). We do not treat speaking as optional. We recognize it as expression of faith. We release what we believe through our words, and we remain established in that declaration.

We speak directly to structure, function, and form. We do not generalize. We address bone, tissue, nerve, blood, teeth, and organs with clarity. We command alignment with Christ. We do not plead with the body. We instruct it according to the truth we carry. We do not hesitate or soften our words. We speak with precision and authority. We declare restoration where there is damage. We call forth wholeness where there is absence. We remain firm in our speech, knowing that Christ in us authorizes what we say.

We lay hands and speak from union, not from effort. We do not attempt to produce power. We express Christ. We do not strive to make something happen. We release what is already present in Him. As it is written, “They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:18, KJV). We do not treat this as symbolic. We act on it. We place our hands, we speak, and we remain established in what Christ in us carries into the body now.

We refuse passive agreement with visible conditions. We do not stand silent before absence. We speak. We command. We declare. We do not wait for change to begin speaking. We speak to bring alignment. We do not measure our words by what we see. We measure them by Christ in us. We remain consistent in this expression, not wavering, not retreating, and not adjusting our words to match appearance. We align appearance to Christ through what we say and do.

We bless the body according to Christ’s completeness. We do not curse it with agreement to lack. We do not label it as permanently damaged or deficient. We speak life. We declare wholeness. We call restoration into every part. We remain aligned with Christ’s nature in our words. We do not contradict Him through negative speech. We remain disciplined in agreement, speaking only what reflects the truth of Christ in us and His present wholeness.

We act as those authorized to speak. We do not wait for permission. We do not delay expression. We speak now. We command now. We declare now. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We address the body with clarity and authority, knowing that Christ in us answers every condition. We remain established in this function, speaking from union and seeing restoration align with the truth we declare through Christ in us now.

Chapter 6: Creative Miracles Manifest Through Us

We declare that creative miracles are not distant acts but present expressions of Christ in us. We do not treat restoration as rare. We recognize it as consistent with His nature. We do not stand amazed as observers. We stand as participants in Christ. We do not separate His works from our union with Him. We acknowledge that what He does, He does through us. We remain established in this truth, knowing that the same Christ who restores dwells in us now and expresses His wholeness through us.

We recognize that Scripture reveals restoration beyond natural limitation. We do not limit what Christ in us expresses. As it is written, “Then touched he their eyes, saying, According to your faith be it unto you” (Matthew 9:29, KJV). We do not reduce this to past events. We receive it as present pattern. We remain aligned with Christ, knowing that what He did is consistent with who He is. We do not treat restoration as finished history. We treat it as present reality through Christ in us.

We acknowledge that what appears impossible yields to Christ. We do not stand in awe of limitation. We stand in agreement with Him. As it is written, “Jesus said unto them… with God all things are possible” (Matthew 19:26, KJV). We do not place ourselves outside this truth. We are in Christ, and Christ is in us. Therefore, we do not accept boundaries set by appearance. We remain aligned with possibility as defined by Him, not by visible condition or natural limitation.

We declare restoration where there has been loss. We speak to limbs, organs, and structures with authority. We do not accept absence. We call forth wholeness. We declare that what is missing answers Christ. We do not question how restoration occurs. We remain focused on who is present. The Creator in us does not require explanation. He expresses wholeness. We remain aligned with His nature and speak accordingly, seeing restoration align with the truth we declare.

We do not treat creative miracles as spectacle. We do not seek attention or reaction. We remain grounded in Christ. We express His life without exaggeration or performance. We do not pursue signs for their own sake. We pursue alignment with Christ. As we remain in Him, His works manifest. We do not separate identity from expression. We remain established in union, and from that union, restoration flows naturally and consistently as Christ is expressed through us.

We remain steady when manifestation unfolds. We do not react with uncertainty. We remain grounded in what we know is true. We do not question what we have declared. We continue in alignment with Christ. We do not interrupt faith with doubt. We remain consistent in speaking, believing, and acting. We allow manifestation to align with the truth we carry, without shifting position or weakening agreement. We remain firm in Christ and in what He expresses through us.

We walk forward in confidence that nothing is missing to Christ. We do not accept partial restoration as final. We remain aligned with complete wholeness. We do not retreat. We continue in agreement until visible reality aligns with Christ. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We stand in the certainty that creative miracles manifest through us as expressions of Christ in us now, and we remain established in that truth without compromise.

Chapter 7: We Walk as the Expression of Complete Christ

We rise in full activation, knowing that Christ in us defines what is possible now. We do not delay. We do not hesitate. We move in alignment with Him. We ask in faith, we believe that we receive, and we walk in what we have received. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We stand as the expression of His completeness. We do not wait for permission. We act from union. We move with clarity, boldness, and certainty that Christ in us answers every form of lack now.

We speak to the body with authority. We command wholeness. We declare restoration. We do not negotiate with absence. We call missing parts to answer Christ. We speak to bone, tissue, nerve, blood, teeth, organs, and structure. We do not soften our command. We do not question our authority. We remain aligned with Christ in us. We speak from that union, knowing that what we declare reflects His present wholeness and answers every condition before us now.

We lay hands and release what Christ in us carries. We do not wait for sensation. We do not wait for confirmation. We act because we believe. We remain aligned with the word of Christ. As it is written, “They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:18, KJV). We do not delay this action. We move now. We place our hands, we speak, and we remain established in what we have received, allowing manifestation to align with truth.

We believe without wavering. We receive without hesitation. We stand without retreat. As it is written, “Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire… believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We do not reverse this order. We believe now. We receive now. We act now. We remain fixed in this position, not moved by sight, not shaken by delay, and not influenced by appearance. We stand in Christ and move from Him.

We refuse visible finality. We do not accept that what is missing must remain missing. We speak life into every condition. We declare wholeness into every structure. We command restoration into every part. We remain aligned with Christ and His completeness. We do not withdraw. We do not reduce expectation. We stand in full agreement with Him and express that agreement through our words and actions without compromise.

We walk as Christ in the earth. We do not separate identity from action. We live what we declare. We move in alignment with who we are in Him. We do not shrink back from visible impossibility. We advance in union. We carry His presence into every situation. We express His wholeness through our lives. We remain consistent in this walk, not shifting, not retreating, and not adjusting to appearance. We remain established in Christ and in His expression through us.

We go forward in full commission. We ask in faith. We believe that we receive. We speak to the body. We command wholeness. We declare restoration. We call missing parts to answer Christ. We refuse visible finality. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We walk as the expression of complete Christ now, and we remain established in this reality as we act, speak, and reveal His wholeness through us.