Book cover

We Love Until Missing Things Reappear in Christ

We Love Until Missing Things Reappear in Christ declares that love is not passive but the active expression of Christ’s indwelling wholeness. We speak from union, not lack. We believe and receive before sight agrees. We command restoration where loss speaks. We walk as carriers of creative miracles, where what is missing answers the present life of Christ within us.

AI120

Chapter 1: Love Refuses the Finality of Loss

We do not accept the lie that what is missing has final authority over us. We do not bow to absence, damage, or visible loss as though Christ is limited by what we see. We carry Christ, and Christ is not partial, broken, or incomplete. Where loss speaks, we answer with wholeness. Where absence presents itself, we declare fullness. We do not call permanent what Christ has already overcome. We stand in love, and love refuses to agree with decay, removal, or destruction as final truth where Christ lives in us now.

We recognize that what appears missing to sight is not missing to Christ. Christ does not measure reality by visible condition but by His own fullness. We do not adjust our confession to match what is seen. We align with who Christ is in us. We are not trying to become whole; we carry wholeness now. Love does not tolerate agreement with loss because love flows from completeness. We do not negotiate with absence. We do not accept visible damage as truth. We declare that Christ in us answers every form of lack with present sufficiency.

We see that Scripture does not give authority to impossibility where Christ is present. “With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible” (Matthew 19:26, KJV). We are not separate from God, for Christ dwells in us. Therefore, what is impossible to natural sight does not define us. Love does not shrink back in the face of missing parts, broken structure, or damaged function. Love stands in union and speaks from completion. We do not wait for evidence before we believe. We believe because Christ is present in us now.

We refuse the suggestion that visible loss teaches us to lower expectation. We do not allow absence to train our thinking. We do not learn from brokenness; we answer it. Love does not adapt to lack. Love expresses Christ. Christ in us is not adjusting to damage but overcoming it. We do not speak in sympathy with what is missing. We speak in authority from what is present within us. We do not agree with limitation. We do not reinforce loss with our words. We release life because Christ is our life now.

We understand that love is not emotional agreement with suffering but the active expression of Christ’s nature. Love does not observe loss and remain silent. Love speaks restoration. Love commands wholeness. Love lays hold of what Christ has already accomplished and brings it into visible expression. We do not separate love from power. Love carries authority because Christ is love in us. We do not reduce love to comfort alone. We walk in love that restores, rebuilds, and reestablishes what was missing or destroyed.

We believe what Jesus said concerning receiving. “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 wait for change before we believe. We believe that we receive now. Love receives before sight agrees. Love stands in certainty before manifestation appears. We do not treat receiving as future. We receive in the present because Christ is present. We do not delay faith. We do not suspend belief. We act from union, not from visible confirmation.

We walk as those who carry the answer to what is missing. We do not approach loss as observers but as carriers of Christ’s life. Love moves toward what is broken with authority and clarity. We do not question whether restoration is possible. We declare that Christ in us is the answer now. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We stand, we speak, and we expect manifestation. We move in love that restores what is missing because Christ lives in us without lack or limitation.

Chapter 2: Love Rejects the Doctrine of Visible Finality

We reject every teaching that elevates visible loss above Christ’s indwelling life. We do not accept medical finality, historical damage, or expert limitation as greater than Christ in us. We refuse doctrines that teach us to expect less than wholeness. We do not allow fear, tradition, or natural conclusions to rewrite what Christ has finished. Love does not inherit reduced expectation. Love stands in truth. We do not repeat what loss has taught others. We speak from union. We refuse every voice that calls something final when Christ in us is present and complete.

We recognize that many have been trained to agree with what is seen rather than who Christ is in us. We do not follow that pattern. We do not accept that missing parts must remain missing. We do not accept that damage must define outcome. Love refuses to be discipled by limitation. We are not shaped by what appears permanent. We are shaped by Christ. We do not let visible conditions preach to us. We do not let fear establish boundaries. We stand in love that knows Christ has no limitation and expresses no lack.

We see that unbelief often hides behind cautious language and reduced expectation. We do not call doubt wisdom. We do not call fear maturity. We do not protect ourselves from disappointment by lowering what we believe. Love does not retreat from boldness. Love stands in certainty because Christ is certain. We do not accept language that makes restoration rare or unlikely. We do not describe creative miracles as exceptions. We declare that Christ in us is the present source of wholeness, and we align our expectation with Him.

We remember what is written: “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever” (Hebrews 13:8, KJV). We do not separate His works from His present life in us. We do not treat restoration as something that belonged only to the past. Love does not confine Christ to history. We carry Him now. What He is remains unchanged. We do not accept that time reduces His expression. We do not say that creative miracles have ceased. We stand in the same Christ, and we express the same life that restores and makes whole.

We also receive the truth that Christ lives in us now. “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). We do not look outward for what already lives within us. We do not wait for Christ to arrive. He is present. Love operates from this union. We do not approach restoration as distant or uncertain. We speak from indwelling reality. We do not separate ourselves from the source of wholeness. We carry Him, and therefore we carry the answer to what appears missing or damaged.

We refuse every mindset that teaches us to tolerate visible lack. We do not normalize what Christ restores. We do not settle where Christ expresses fullness. Love does not accept partial when Christ is complete. We do not call adaptation victory when restoration is present in Christ. We do not settle for coping with loss. We release life into it. We speak to what is missing. We declare what Christ is. We do not reinforce limitation. We confront it with truth, and we remain aligned with wholeness.

We stand in love that refuses visible finality. We do not allow what is seen to determine what is true. We declare that Christ in us is the final word. We do not hesitate. We do not withdraw. We speak with authority because we are in union. We reject every conclusion that contradicts Christ. We walk forward in bold expectation. We love until what is missing answers the life of Christ in us, and we do not retreat from this position at any point.

Chapter 3: Love Knows the Creator Lives in Us Now

We know that the Creator lives in us now, and we do not treat creation as distant from His presence. We do not carry a partial Christ. We carry the One through whom all things were made. Love understands this reality and acts from it. We do not approach missing parts as though they are beyond reach. We do not separate creation from the Creator who dwells in us. We stand in union, knowing that what formed all things lives within us now and expresses wholeness without limitation.

We do not see ourselves as empty vessels waiting to be filled. We are filled. We are not trying to access Christ from afar. He is present in us. Love does not act from distance. Love acts from union. We do not ask if the Creator is willing to restore. We know His nature is whole. We do not question whether wholeness belongs here. We carry wholeness. We do not measure possibility by appearance. We measure everything by Christ in us, who is complete and unchanging in all fullness.

We understand that Christ in us is not symbolic. He is real, present, and active. We do not reduce His indwelling to concept. Love expresses Him as life. We do not treat restoration as imagination. We declare it as truth. We do not separate our words from His authority. We speak from Him. We do not attempt to generate results. We release what is already present. We do not create from effort. We express from union. The Creator in us is not inactive. He is present, and we move with Him.

We receive what is written: “All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made” (John 1:3, KJV). We do not separate ourselves from this truth. The One who made all things lives in us. Love recognizes that what created form can restore form. We do not accept that missing structure is beyond Him. We do not treat damage as resistant to His life. We declare that the same power that formed all things is present now, and we live from that reality without hesitation.

We also receive: “And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace” (John 1:16, KJV). We do not carry a portion. We receive fullness. Love does not operate from scarcity. We do not think in fragments. We think from completeness. We do not approach restoration as limited supply. We carry fullness. We do not question whether there is enough to restore. We know that Christ is sufficient. We act from abundance, not from lack, because His fullness is present in us now.

We do not separate identity from function. We are not trying to become what we already are in Christ. Love expresses identity. We do not wait for qualification. We stand in union. We do not approach restoration as outsiders. We act as those in whom Christ dwells. We do not hesitate to speak. We do not hesitate to act. We move as one with Him. We release life because life is in us. We express wholeness because wholeness lives in us now without interruption.

We walk in confidence that the Creator in us answers what is missing. We do not shrink back. We do not delay. We do not question His presence. We act from it. Love does not remain theoretical. Love expresses Christ. We speak to the body. We declare restoration. We call what is missing to appear in alignment with Christ. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We move forward in union, knowing that what created all things lives in us now.

Chapter 4: Love Receives Before Sight Agrees

We receive before sight agrees, and we do not reverse this order. We do not wait for visible change before we believe. We believe because Christ is present in us now. Love does not depend on evidence. Love rests in union. We do not treat manifestation as the starting point. We treat receiving as the starting point. We believe that we receive, and we stand in that truth without hesitation. We do not allow sight to instruct faith. Faith stands first, and sight follows what we have already received.

We understand that receiving is not future. It is present. We do not postpone what Christ has made available now. Love does not delay acceptance. We do not say we will receive later. We receive now. We do not question whether we have received because we do not see it yet. We believe because Christ is present. We do not measure receiving by sensation. We measure it by truth. We stand in what is already given, and we do not withdraw from that position at any point.

We hold firmly to what Jesus said: “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 adjust His words to fit visible delay. We receive as instructed. Love believes immediately. We do not create conditions for belief. We believe because Christ speaks. We do not require confirmation. We stand in receiving, knowing that manifestation follows what we have already embraced in faith.

We also stand in this truth: “For we walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7, KJV). We do not reverse this order. We do not walk by sight and then believe. We believe and walk. Love does not submit to what is seen. Love governs what is seen. We do not allow visible lack to define reality. We define reality by Christ in us. We do not hesitate when sight disagrees. We remain steady in faith, knowing that what we have received is true now.

We do not treat receiving as passive. We actively stand in what we believe. Love holds position. We do not drift into doubt. We do not revisit whether we have received. We remain established. We do not allow time to weaken our stance. We do not allow absence of evidence to shift our confession. We stand firm. We speak consistently. We align fully with what we have received, and we do not move from that position regardless of what appears unchanged.

We align our words with our receiving. We do not speak as though we are still waiting. We speak as those who have received. Love speaks from possession. We do not contradict our belief with our language. We declare wholeness. We declare restoration. We declare that what is missing is answered in Christ. We do not speak in uncertainty. We speak in authority. Our words reflect our faith, and our faith reflects Christ in us now.

We continue in this position without interruption. We do not step in and out of belief. We remain. Love abides. We do not fluctuate based on what we see. We stay rooted in what we have received. We act, we speak, and we stand in alignment with Christ. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We walk forward knowing that what we have received is true, and manifestation answers what we already hold in faith.

Chapter 5: Love Speaks and Commands Wholeness

We speak to the body from union with Christ, and we do not speak as observers of loss. We speak as carriers of wholeness. Love does not remain silent in the presence of damage. We address bone, tissue, nerve, blood, and structure with authority. We do not ask what is missing to remain. We command restoration. We do not hesitate in our words. We speak clearly, directly, and with certainty. Christ in us is not passive, and we do not act passively. We release life because life is present in us now without limitation.

We lay hands with understanding, not ritual. We do not perform actions without conviction. Love moves with clarity. We know that Christ in us answers what we touch. We do not separate contact from power. We do not question whether our words carry authority. We speak because Christ speaks in us. We do not attempt to persuade the body. We command it. We declare alignment with wholeness. We do not negotiate with disorder. We speak as those who carry the answer now in Christ.

We follow what is written: “And these signs shall follow them that believe; In my name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues” (Mark 16:17, KJV). We do not separate believing from speaking. Love expresses faith through words. We do not remain silent and call it faith. We speak. We do not treat authority as optional. We exercise it. We do not wait for special moments. We act now. We release words that align with Christ, and we expect response because Christ is present in us.

We also stand in this truth: “They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:18, KJV). We do not treat this as distant or symbolic. We act on it. Love lays hands with expectation. We do not question recovery. We declare it. We do not delay action. We move in obedience. We do not separate instruction from execution. We do what Christ has said. We lay hands, we speak, and we expect restoration because Christ in us is the source of wholeness now.

We speak directly to what is missing. We call structure to appear. We call function to be restored. We command nerves to respond, tissue to regenerate, and bones to align. Love does not generalize. Love speaks specifically. We do not avoid precision. We address what is present with clarity. We do not speak in vague hope. We speak in direct authority. We declare that what is absent answers Christ. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We speak until alignment is expressed.

We remain consistent in our speaking. We do not speak once and retreat. Love continues. We do not allow contradiction in our words. We do not alternate between belief and doubt. We remain aligned. We speak again, and we stand firm. We do not measure effectiveness by immediate appearance. We remain in truth. We do not weaken our voice. We continue in authority, knowing that Christ in us is unchanged and our words remain aligned with His life.

We walk in active expression. We do not separate confession from action. Love moves. We speak, we lay hands, we command, and we stand. We do not delay obedience. We do not wait for perfect conditions. We act now. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We release life into the body, and we expect wholeness to manifest because Christ in us is present, complete, and actively expressed through us without limitation.

Chapter 6: Love Witnesses Restoration Made Visible

We witness restoration as the natural expression of Christ in us, and we do not treat it as rare or distant. We do not stand surprised when wholeness appears. Love expects manifestation. We do not approach creative miracles as extraordinary interruptions. We recognize them as the expression of Christ’s life. We see limbs restored, structure rebuilt, and function returned. We do not call these events unusual. We call them consistent with Christ. We do not elevate loss above His life. We witness restoration because Christ is present in us now.

We understand that what appears impossible yields to Christ without struggle. We do not see resistance as stronger than His presence. Love does not magnify difficulty. We magnify Christ. We do not describe restoration as hard. We declare it as natural to Him. We do not treat missing parts as barriers. We speak to them, and we see response. We do not retreat when change is not immediate. We remain in faith, and we continue in alignment until manifestation appears in full expression.

We remember what is written: “All things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not separate ourselves from believing. We believe now. Love holds this truth without compromise. We do not call certain conditions beyond reach. We do not categorize loss into levels of difficulty. We do not adjust expectation based on severity. We remain aligned with Christ. We believe, and we stand, knowing that what is impossible with man does not limit what Christ expresses in us now.

We also receive: “Jesus said unto him, If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not treat this as repetition without meaning. We see emphasis. Love remains established in believing. We do not drift into uncertainty. We do not reduce what is possible. We remain fixed in truth. We do not allow time or appearance to weaken our stance. We stand in belief, and we witness manifestation because we remain aligned with Christ in us.

We see restoration take form as bones strengthen, tissue fills, and function returns. We do not describe these outcomes as unusual. Love recognizes them as expressions of wholeness. We do not speak with hesitation when we see change. We declare it. We do not question what is happening. We affirm it. We do not attribute it to chance. We recognize Christ. We see that what was missing answers His life. We witness visible restoration, and we remain aligned with this truth without deviation.

We continue in expectation even as manifestation unfolds. We do not stop at partial expression. Love does not settle. We press forward in authority. We do not accept incomplete when Christ is complete. We speak again, we stand again, and we remain aligned until fullness is visible. We do not retreat into observation. We remain in participation. We do not allow progress to replace completion. We continue until what is missing is fully restored and aligned with Christ in us.

We walk as witnesses who also act. We do not separate seeing from doing. Love expresses continuously. We do not become passive because we have seen restoration. We continue to release life. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We stand in union, speak in authority, and expect manifestation wherever we go. We carry this reality, and we see it expressed as what was missing answers the present life of Christ in us.

Chapter 7: Love Sends Us to Restore What Is Missing

We move now in full authority, and we do not hesitate. We ask in faith, and we believe that we receive. We do not delay. Love sends us forward. We do not wait for permission. We walk as Christ. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We go to what is missing, and we speak. We do not observe loss. We confront it with truth. We do not retreat. We advance in union. We act because Christ is present in us now, and we release His life without limitation.

We speak to the body directly. We command wholeness. We declare restoration to bone, tissue, nerve, blood, teeth, organs, and structure. We do not speak vaguely. Love speaks clearly. We call missing parts to answer Christ. We do not accept visible finality. We refuse it. We do not negotiate with damage. We command alignment. We do not step back. We remain present and active. We speak as those who carry Christ, and we expect response because His life is in us now.

We stand on what is written: “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We ask, and we believe. Love receives now. We do not postpone this. We act immediately. We do not separate prayer from authority. We speak, and we expect manifestation. We do not allow doubt to interrupt. We remain in belief. We walk forward in what we have received, and we release it wherever we go.

We also hold: “Verily I say unto you, If ye have faith, and doubt not… it shall be done” (Matthew 21:21, KJV). We do not entertain doubt. Love stands firm. We do not waver. We remain established. We do not weaken our words. We speak with clarity and authority. We do not step back when challenged. We remain aligned. We declare what Christ is, and we expect what Christ expresses to appear. We do not shift. We remain in faith, and we move forward without hesitation.

We lay hands. We speak. We command. We do not delay action. Love moves. We do not wait for ideal conditions. We act now. We release life into every situation. We do not measure readiness. We move in union. We do not question whether Christ will respond. He is present. We express Him. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We move with boldness, knowing that what we release is aligned with His life now.

We continue until what is missing is restored. We do not stop at resistance. Love persists. We do not retreat when change is not immediate. We remain in truth. We do not weaken our position. We stand, we speak, and we act again. We remain aligned with Christ. We do not accept partial. We press into fullness. We do not call incomplete what Christ has made whole. We continue until manifestation is visible and established in full expression.

We go as those sent. We do not remain in place. Love advances. We carry Christ into every situation. We speak to the body. We command wholeness. We declare restoration. We call missing parts to answer Christ. We refuse visible finality. We speak to bone, tissue, nerve, blood, teeth, organs, and structure. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We walk as Christ, and we release His life everywhere we go.