
We Kneel and Declare Health Without Retreat
We Kneel and Declare Health Without Retreat establishes that Christ in us heals now and that we minister wholeness from union, not delay. We refuse the authority of symptoms and visible conditions, and we receive before sight agrees. We speak, act, and stand in finished work, declaring health present and active as we kneel in worship and rise in authority.
AI098
Chapter 1: Knees That Refuse the Rule of Impossibility
We kneel, and we refuse the claim that the impossible governs outcomes where Christ dwells. We do not grant sickness, damage, or delay the authority to define what manifests in our bodies. We do not bow to symptoms as truth, because Christ in us is truth now. We stand in the knowing that what appears resistant does not possess final authority. We kneel in worship, but we do not kneel to impossibility. We declare that Christ in us is not limited by visible conditions, and we align our confession with His present life within us.
We expose the lie that sickness can remain because it looks established, long-standing, or medically confirmed. We reject the suggestion that duration gives power to disease. We do not measure truth by how long something has remained visible. We measure truth by who dwells in us. Christ in us does not grow stronger over time; He is complete now. Therefore, we do not accept gradual permission for healing. We receive from present fullness. We kneel in worship as those who already carry the answer, not those waiting for one to arrive.
We declare that we do not approach healing as uncertain or conditional. We do not speak as those hoping for intervention. We speak as those in whom Christ already lives. We do not ask whether healing is possible; we declare that impossibility has no authority here. We refuse internal agreement with limitation. We do not rehearse symptoms as truth. We rehearse Christ as truth. Our knees touch the ground in worship, but our confession rises in authority, declaring that health is present because Christ is present within us now.
We align with the words of Jesus, who removes impossibility from the equation of faith. “The things which are impossible with men are possible with God” (Luke 18:27, KJV). We do not treat this as distant theology. We receive it as present reality within us. Christ in us is not limited by what is impossible to man. Therefore, we do not evaluate our condition through human limitation. We evaluate through indwelling life. We kneel, not as those beneath impossibility, but as those in whom divine possibility is active and present.
We reject the idea that we must first see change before we declare change. We do not wait for symptoms to adjust before we speak truth. We speak because Christ is present, not because conditions have shifted. We do not grant appearance the right to lead our confession. We lead with Christ. Our knees express worship, but our words express authority. We declare health as present reality, not future hope. We refuse retreat into silence or doubt. We remain fixed in what Christ is in us now.
We stand in agreement with the declaration, “I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me” (Philippians 4:13, KJV). We do not interpret this as general encouragement; we receive it as present empowerment. Christ strengthens us now, and His life in us is not hindered by bodily conditions. Therefore, we do not concede to weakness as final. We do not submit to disease as ruling. We kneel in worship, but we rise in authority, declaring that strength and health flow from Christ within us now.
We refuse retreat. We do not move backward into doubt, delay, or passive waiting. We do not adjust our expectation downward to match what we see. We adjust what we see to match who Christ is in us. We remain steady in confession, bold in declaration, and firm in union. Our knees mark our worship, but our lives mark our authority. We declare that health is not withheld, not delayed, and not distant. Health is present because Christ is present, and we do not retreat from that truth.
Chapter 2: Knees That Reject Lesser Expectations
We kneel, and we reject every teaching that lowers expectation beneath Christ in us. We do not accept traditions that train us to expect partial healing, delayed answers, or uncertain outcomes. We refuse doctrines that honor symptoms more than indwelling life. We do not speak as those hoping for improvement; we speak as those who carry fullness now. Our knees bow in worship, but our minds do not bow to reduced expectation. We declare that Christ in us is not diminished by religious language, and we align with His present power, not inherited limitation.
We expose how fear and tradition taught us to interpret sickness as normal and healing as rare. We refuse that pattern. We do not call common what Christ removes. We do not normalize what He has already overcome. We reject the idea that faith must shrink to match visible resistance. We do not allow past outcomes to define present expectation. Christ in us is not governed by history. Therefore, we break agreement with every mindset that expects less than wholeness and we declare that full health is our present inheritance in Him.
We reject the teaching that places God at a distance, as if we must persuade Him to act. We do not approach healing as negotiation. We do not plead for what Christ already is in us. We do not separate ourselves from Him in language or expectation. We speak from union, not distance. We kneel in worship as those already joined, not those reaching outward. We declare that Christ in us is the answer now, and we do not accept any system that trains us to wait for what already indwells us.
We align with the words of Jesus, who exposes unbelief as the barrier, not impossibility. “All things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We receive this as present instruction. We do not dilute belief with hesitation or mixture. We do not redefine belief as hope or desire. We believe that Christ in us is active now. Therefore, we reject lesser expectations and we hold firmly to what He has already made available within us through His finished work.
We reject delay-language that postpones manifestation into an undefined future. We do not say “later” where Christ says “now.” We do not wait for conditions to align before we receive. We receive because Christ is present. Our knees express surrender to Him, not surrender to delay. We do not build expectation on time; we build it on truth. We declare that what Christ has accomplished is active now, and we refuse to accept any timeline that contradicts His present indwelling life.
We stand in the understanding that Christ’s work is complete and not awaiting improvement. “By whose stripes ye were healed” (1 Peter 2:24, KJV). We receive this as finished reality, not future promise. We do not reinterpret this through symptoms. We interpret symptoms through this truth. We do not lower Scripture to match experience. We raise expectation to match Christ. We kneel in worship, and we declare that healing is not pending. Healing is established, and we stand in agreement with what is already done.
We refuse every lesser voice. We do not accept mixture. We do not blend truth with doubt. We remain fixed in Christ alone. Our knees mark devotion, but our declaration marks authority. We reject every reduced expectation and we stand in full agreement with Christ in us. We declare that health is not partial, not uncertain, and not delayed. Health is present, because Christ is present, and we do not accept anything less than what He is within us now.
Chapter 3: Knees That Reveal Christ Within
We kneel, and we reveal that Christ in us is the present answer to every condition called impossible. We do not approach healing as external intervention. We do not look outward for what already dwells within us. Christ in us is not distant, not inactive, and not awaiting permission. We declare that the answer is present now because He is present now. Our knees express worship, but our lives express manifestation. We do not separate identity from outcome. We reveal Christ within us as the source of health, life, and wholeness now.
We declare that we do not face sickness as isolated human beings. We do not stand alone before conditions. Christ in us removes separation. We do not engage symptoms from weakness; we engage from union. We do not speak as those trying to access power. We speak as those in whom power already resides. We kneel in worship as those joined to Christ, and we rise in authority as those who carry His life. Therefore, we do not approach healing as uncertain. We approach it as the expression of who lives in us now.
We reject the lie that we must increase something before Christ becomes effective in us. We do not wait to become ready. We do not measure readiness by feeling, effort, or time. Christ in us is complete now. Therefore, we do not add to Him. We do not enhance Him. We do not delay because of ourselves. We receive because of Him. Our knees bow in worship, but our confession stands in finished work. We declare that Christ in us is fully active, fully present, and fully sufficient now.
We align with the declaration of Scripture: “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). We receive this as present reality, not distant promise. Glory is not withheld from us; it is within us. We do not wait for Christ to arrive. We acknowledge that He indwells us now. Therefore, we do not search for answers outside. We release what is within. We kneel in worship, and we declare that what Christ is in us becomes visible through us now.
We stand in agreement with Jesus, who said, “He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also” (John 14:12, KJV). We do not reduce this to theory. We receive it as present function. We do not distance ourselves from His works. We express them through union. Christ in us continues His works now. Therefore, we do not question whether healing flows. We declare that it flows because He is present within us now.
We refuse hidden Christianity. We do not conceal Christ within as a private truth. We reveal Him as visible life. We do not separate worship from manifestation. What we honor inwardly, we release outwardly. Our knees express devotion, but our actions express authority. We do not delay expression. We move in agreement with who He is in us now. We declare that Christ within us is seen, known, and manifested through healing and wholeness now.
We remain established in union. We do not drift into separation language or thinking. We do not speak as though Christ is outside us. We remain fixed in indwelling truth. Our knees anchor us in worship, and our lives extend that truth into action. We declare that Christ in us is not hidden, not inactive, and not distant. He is present, active, and expressed now. Therefore, we reveal Him through health, strength, and wholeness in our bodies without delay.
Chapter 4: Knees That Receive Before Sight
We kneel, and we receive before sight agrees. We do not wait for visible change to authorize belief. We believe because Christ is present now. We do not use appearance as confirmation of truth. We use truth to define appearance. Our knees bow in worship, but our faith stands in certainty. We declare that reception happens in the unseen before manifestation appears in the seen. Therefore, we receive health now, not after evidence, but because Christ in us is already the evidence.
We reject the lie that feeling must confirm reception. We do not require sensation to validate truth. We do not depend on emotion, improvement, or physical shift to believe. We believe because Christ is present. We receive because He indwells us now. Our knees express surrender to Him, not dependence on feelings. We declare that faith receives without waiting for confirmation. We do not delay reception. We receive fully, immediately, and without hesitation because Christ in us is already complete.
We align with the words 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 instruction. We believe that we receive now. We do not postpone belief until after manifestation. We receive in prayer, and we stand in that reception. Our knees mark the place of agreement, and our confession carries that agreement forward. We declare that we have received because Christ is present within us now.
We reject the idea that faith must grow before it becomes effective. We do not measure faith by size. We measure it by object. Christ in us is the object, and He is complete. Therefore, we do not wait for faith to mature. We act in present belief. We receive now because He is now. Our knees bow in worship, but our faith stands in certainty. We declare that reception is immediate because Christ is immediate within us.
We stand in agreement with Scripture: “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). We receive this as present function. Faith is now. Evidence is now. Substance is now. We do not postpone these realities. We do not wait for sight to produce them. We walk in them before sight aligns. Our knees express devotion, but our faith expresses possession. We declare that what is unseen is already established within us now.
We refuse to revisit what we have received. We do not return to doubt. We do not reconsider truth because of symptoms. We remain fixed in reception. We do not oscillate between belief and unbelief. We stand steady. Our knees anchor us in worship, and our confession anchors us in truth. We declare that what we receive in Christ remains established, regardless of what appears or attempts to contradict it.
We remain firm. We do not retreat into uncertainty. We do not negotiate with appearance. We do not surrender reception. Our knees remain in worship, and our faith remains in possession. We declare that we have received health now because Christ is present now. We do not wait to have. We have because we have received. Therefore, we stand in what is already ours in Christ, and we do not move from that position.
Chapter 5: Knees That Speak and Command Health
We kneel, and we speak from union with Christ, not from uncertainty. We do not speak as those trying to create outcome; we speak as those releasing what is already present within us. Christ in us is not silent, and we do not remain silent where He speaks. Our words carry agreement with His finished work. We do not ask as those unsure; we ask in alignment with what is established. Our knees express worship, and our mouths express authority. We declare that health is present, and we release that truth through speaking, commanding, and standing.
We reject passive language that waits for change before speaking. We do not wait to see before we declare. We declare because Christ is present now. We do not echo symptoms; we override them with truth. We do not give disease a voice through repetition. We give Christ a voice through agreement. Our knees bow in honor, but our words rise in authority. We declare health over our bodies now, not as a request for possibility, but as a declaration of present reality flowing from Christ within us.
We align with the instruction of Jesus: “Whosoever shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea… he shall have whatsoever he saith” (Mark 11:23, KJV). We receive this as present function. We do not remain silent before resistance. We speak directly. We address what opposes wholeness, and we command it to yield. We do not speak with hesitation. We speak with clarity, authority, and agreement with Christ in us now.
We declare that our words are not empty. Our words carry the life of Christ within us. We do not separate speaking from believing. We speak because we believe, and we believe because Christ is present. Our knees express surrender, but our words express dominion. We do not speak conditionally. We speak with certainty. We command health into alignment with Christ’s indwelling life. We do not plead with sickness. We speak over it, and we declare that it yields now.
We stand in agreement with Scripture: “Death and life are in the power of the tongue” (Proverbs 18:21, KJV). We receive this as present responsibility. We do not speak death over our bodies. We speak life. We do not rehearse decline. We declare strength. We do not repeat diagnosis as identity. We declare Christ as identity. Our knees bow in worship, but our tongues release life. We declare that health is spoken, established, and active through agreement with Christ now.
We act as those authorized to lay hands, bless, and command. We do not separate action from union. We lay hands as those in whom Christ dwells. We speak to the body as those carrying His authority. We do not hesitate. We do not delay. We command wholeness, alignment, and restoration now. Our knees express reverence, but our hands express authority. We release what Christ is within us, and we declare that health manifests through our agreement and action now.
We refuse silence, passivity, or retreat. We do not step back from authority. We remain steady in speaking, commanding, and declaring. Our knees remain in worship, and our words remain in agreement. We declare that health is not requested as distant possibility. Health is commanded as present reality because Christ is present within us now. We speak, and we stand in what we speak, knowing that Christ in us confirms what we declare.
Chapter 6: Knees That Witness the Yielding of the Impossible
We kneel, and we witness the impossible yield where Christ is present. We do not speak theory; we stand in manifestation. We do not separate Jesus from present action. What He does, we express through union. Our knees bow in worship, but our lives reveal authority. We do not call resistance permanent. We call it subject to Christ. We declare that what appears fixed yields to the life of Christ within us now, and we remain in agreement with that truth as it becomes visible.
We align with the works of Jesus, who healed without delay and without submission to visible limitation. “And Jesus went about… healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the people” (Matthew 4:23, KJV). We receive this as present expression. We do not separate His works from us. Christ in us continues these works now. Therefore, we do not accept sickness as remaining. We declare that it yields because He is present within us now.
We reject the claim that certain conditions are exempt from yielding. We do not categorize sickness as harder or easier. We do not rank impossibilities. We do not assign levels of difficulty to what Christ has already overcome. Our knees bow in worship, but our understanding stands in completeness. We declare that every condition yields equally before Christ in us. We do not grant exception to disease, damage, or delay. We remain fixed in the authority of His indwelling life.
We stand in agreement with the early expressions of Christ’s work through those who walked in His name. “They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:18, KJV). We receive this as present function. We do not reduce this to history. We walk in it now. We lay hands, we speak, and we witness change. Our knees express devotion, but our actions express continuation. We declare that recovery is not distant. It is present where Christ is expressed now.
We do not require perfect conditions to witness manifestation. We do not wait for environments to align. We do not delay because of surrounding factors. Christ in us is sufficient now. Therefore, we act in present authority. Our knees bow in worship, but our steps move in action. We declare that the impossible yields in every setting because Christ in us is not limited by environment, condition, or circumstance.
We remain steady as manifestation appears. We do not shift our confession mid-process. We do not retreat if appearance attempts resistance. We stand in what we have declared. Our knees anchor us in worship, and our confession anchors us in truth. We declare that yielding continues because Christ is constant. We do not measure progress by sight. We remain fixed in truth until sight aligns fully with what Christ is in us now.
We witness and we continue. We do not stop at initial change. We remain in agreement until full manifestation is evident. Our knees remain in worship, and our authority remains active. We declare that the impossible does not stand. It yields, it gives way, and it aligns with Christ in us. We stand as witnesses of His life expressed now, and we do not retreat from what we see manifest through union with Him.
Chapter 7: Knees That Rise and Commission Healing
We kneel, and we rise in commission. We do not remain stationary in worship alone. We move in authority. We go as those sent, not as those waiting. Christ in us is active now, and we carry His life into every place we stand. Our knees mark devotion, but our steps mark assignment. We declare that we are sent to speak, to act, and to release healing now. We do not hesitate. We do not delay. We move as Christ moves within us now.
We ask in faith, and we believe that we receive. We do not separate asking from possession. We receive immediately, and we walk in what we receive. We do not revisit doubt. We do not reconsider truth. Our knees anchor us in worship, but our faith anchors us in certainty. We declare that what we ask in alignment with Christ is already ours, and we move forward in that reality without hesitation or retreat.
We speak to the mountain. We do not ignore resistance. We address it directly. We command sickness to yield, and we declare health in its place. We do not negotiate with symptoms. We do not tolerate contradiction. Our words carry the authority of Christ within us. Our knees express surrender, but our voices express dominion. We declare that every opposing condition moves because Christ in us speaks now.
We heal the sick. We lay hands with confidence, not uncertainty. We do not question whether Christ will act. We know He is present. We release what He is within us. We command wholeness, alignment, and restoration. We do not wait for permission. Our knees bow in worship, but our hands move in authority. We declare that healing flows now because Christ flows through us now.
We cast out what opposes life. We do not tolerate what resists Christ. We speak, and it yields. We act, and it departs. We do not retreat from authority. We do not step back into silence. Our knees remain grounded in worship, but our authority remains active. We declare that everything opposed to Christ’s life in us must yield now, and we stand in that declaration without compromise.
We raise what appears lifeless. We do not accept finality where Christ is present. We speak life, and we act in agreement with Him. We do not bow to death, decay, or absence. Our knees bow only to Christ, not to conditions. We declare that life flows now because Christ is life within us. We act boldly, knowing that what is impossible yields to Him.
We go without retreat. We do not turn back into lesser expectation. We do not return to silence or doubt. Our knees remain in worship, and our lives remain in commission. We declare that Christ in us heals now, and we carry that truth into every place we stand. We move, we speak, we act, and we remain in authority. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We go, and we manifest His life now.