
We Stay Covered When the Impossible Shouts Loudest
We Stay Covered When the Impossible Shouts Loudest declares that Christ in us remains greater than pressure, threat, opposition, visible barriers, and impossible conditions. We do not let danger name reality. We live covered in Christ, established in holiness, and unmoved by what shouts against truth. We believe that we receive, we stand in union, and we walk as those whom impossibility cannot define.
AI136
Chapter 1: We Do Not Call Loud Conditions Lord
Impossible conditions do not rule where Christ dwells in us. Threatening circumstances do not become truth because they appear large, urgent, or aggressive. Visible barriers do not carry greater authority than the indwelling Christ. We reject the lie that pressure can overrule presence. We reject the lie that danger can rename what Christ has already completed. What surrounds us does not define what lives in us. What confronts us does not outrank the One who abides in us. We stay covered in holiness because Christ Himself is our life now, and His presence in us is not fragile, temporary, or uncertain before any impossible condition.
The impossible shouts through symptoms, reports, resistance, closed doors, violent opposition, and visible delay. Yet loudness is not lordship. Urgency is not authority. Repetition is not truth. We do not let contradiction educate us above Christ. We do not let hostile appearance preach a stronger sermon than union. The pressure around us may be real to sight, but it is not final to truth. Christ in us remains greater than what presses against us. Therefore we refuse to bow our words to what threatens us. We stay covered, not because circumstances are quiet, but because Christ in us remains unshaken while they shout and while they resist.
Jesus did not teach us to let outward pressure decide inward certainty. He taught us to speak, ask, believe, and stand. He said, “If ye have faith, and doubt not… it shall be done” (Matthew 21:21, KJV). That means impossibility is not the master voice. Faith does not ask permission from obstruction. Faith does not wait for visible easing before it stands. We do not measure Christ by the size of the mountain. We measure the mountain by the Christ who dwells in us. The barrier may appear fixed, but Christ in us is not answering to appearance. Therefore we do not surrender our confession to visible resistance.
We also reject the lie that lack, damage, or history can claim permanent rights over what Christ indwells. The past does not own us. The present obstacle does not interpret us. Threat does not define our future because Christ in us is not a future possibility. He is present now. We stay covered now. We remain holy now. We remain joined to the Victor now. That means impossibility does not meet empty humanity when it confronts us. It meets Christ expressed through us. We are not abandoned to natural limitation. We are not left to manage conditions by ourselves. Christ in us is the present answer standing where the contradiction appears.
Scripture does not train us to honor impossibility. Scripture trains us to honor Christ. “Greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world” (1 John 4:4, KJV). We do not reduce that truth when conditions intensify. We do not postpone that truth until danger subsides. Greater means greater when the threat is loud. Greater means greater when barriers are visible. Greater means greater when the problem looks fixed, repeated, or severe. Therefore we do not speak as though the world, the report, the circumstance, or the resistance carries higher rank than Christ. We stay aligned with what is greater, and we let that greater truth govern our speech and action.
Covering is not passive retreat. Holiness is not silent surrender before hostile conditions. Covering in Christ means we remain fully identified with Him while pressure tries to move us into fear, compromise, or agreement with defeat. Holiness keeps our speech clean from unbelief. Holiness keeps our judgment aligned with truth. Holiness refuses to echo what contradicts Christ. We do not call permanent what Christ confronts. We do not call impossible what Christ inhabits. We do not call blocked what Christ can open. We do not call finished what Christ can restore. Our covering is not weakness. Our covering is our settled union with the Holy One who remains greater in every confrontation.
So we begin here: the impossible is not lord, and the loudest condition is not final. Christ in us remains the governing truth. We stay covered when reports threaten, when obstacles rise, when doors resist, when bodies oppose, when systems harden, and when visible conditions shout for agreement. We answer those shouts with union, not surrender. We answer with holiness, not panic. We answer with Christ, not appearances. We do not give the final word to what stands against us. We give the final word to the One who dwells in us now. Therefore we stand covered, speak covered, ask covered, and move covered in Christ.
Chapter 2: We Refuse Reduced Expectation
Religion often taught us to lower expectation when pressure grew intense. Tradition often trained us to speak carefully around impossibility as though Christ in us might be strong in doctrine yet inactive in visible confrontation. Fear taught many to protect disappointment by expecting less. Unbelief dressed itself in modest language and called that wisdom. Reduced expectation became normal where bold reception should have stood. We refuse that pattern. We refuse the habit of honoring resistance more than indwelling life. We refuse the teaching that says Christ is present, yet impossible conditions should still be treated as though they are beyond answer. That contradiction does not come from truth, and we do not adopt it.
Reduced expectation does not always sound rebellious. Sometimes it sounds careful, measured, respectable, and religious. It says Christ is able, but it does not speak as though Christ is present now. It says prayer matters, but it does not expect manifestation. It says truth is real, but it lets visible contradiction write the louder conclusion. In that system, impossible conditions are treated as normal rulers over daily life, and Christ is spoken of as a distant comfort rather than present victory. We reject that framing. Christ in us is not a religious phrase meant only to comfort us while defeat remains untouched. Christ in us is living union, present authority, and active answer now.
Fear also taught many to protect themselves from disappointment by calling expectation dangerous. Yet Jesus never taught us to lower our expectation to match visible conditions. He said, “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). Reduced expectation directly resists that command. It wants prayer without reception. It wants belief without boldness. It wants words without possession. We refuse that weakened pattern. We do not honor Christ by expecting less from His indwelling life. We honor Him by receiving what He says. We do not call restraint faith when it is actually unbelief hiding behind religious caution.
Many learned to speak of impossible situations as though time, resistance, history, or severity gave them special authority. The longer a condition remained, the more untouchable it seemed. The more visible a barrier became, the more people excused themselves from active faith. The harsher the threat sounded, the more expectation shrank. This is not the mind of Christ. Duration does not create dominion. Severity does not create sovereignty. Repetition does not create truth. Christ in us does not become smaller because a contradiction stayed visible for a long time. Therefore we refuse to reduce our expectation according to history. We live from union, not from accumulated evidence against manifestation.
Reduced expectation also entered through false humility. It pretended holiness meant avoiding bold reception. It pretended reverence meant refusing confident speech. It treated strong expectation as presumption when Jesus treated believing reception as obedience. Scripture says, “According to your faith be it unto you” (Matthew 9:29, KJV). That does not teach us to shrink back from expectation. It teaches us that faith receives what Christ says. We are not honoring God by speaking beneath what He revealed. We are not safer when we expect less. We are simply agreeing with the lesser voice. We refuse to make caution our theology when Christ has already given us a stronger word to stand in.
We also reject the church habit of speaking about Christ’s works mostly in the past while treating present manifestation as rare, strange, or unlikely. That habit trains people to admire testimony without expecting living continuation. It praises Jesus for what He did while muting what He still expresses through His body now. We refuse that split. Christ in us is not history without present expression. Christ in us is not memory without manifestation. The same Lord who revealed dominion over sickness, demons, provision, death, and resistance still dwells in us now. Therefore we do not lower our expectation to fit the mood of religion. We let Christ define our expectancy because He is alive in us now.
So we refuse reduced expectation in every form. We refuse fear dressed as wisdom. We refuse tradition dressed as balance. We refuse unbelief dressed as humility. We refuse prayer without reception, confession without possession, and doctrine without manifestation. We stay covered in holiness by keeping our expectation aligned with Christ Himself. We do not expect less because conditions look impossible. We expect according to the One who dwells in us. We do not let the loud condition teach us caution against truth. We let Christ teach us boldness in truth. Therefore we ask, receive, stand, and speak as those who refuse every lesser expectation.
Chapter 3: We Stand Covered in Christ Now
We do not face impossible conditions as isolated people trying to persuade heaven to come near. We stand covered in Christ now. Union is not a future event, and covering is not an emotional state. Christ dwells in us now, and that changes the entire ground from which we confront resistance. The impossible does not meet separation when it comes against us. It meets indwelling life. It meets the Holy One present in His body. Therefore we do not begin with distance, lack, or helplessness. We begin with Christ. We begin with union. We begin with the settled truth that His presence in us is the present answer standing inside the very place where contradiction tries to rule.
Christ in us means we are not confronting threat from the outside. We are not sending words toward a distant solution. We are speaking from shared life. We are asking from union. We are standing from inside the victory Christ already finished. This is why impossible conditions must never be treated as though they have exclusive access to the visible world. Christ in us has already entered that same world. His presence is not abstract. His life in us is active. His holiness in us is not decorative. It is governing truth. Therefore we do not speak as abandoned people pleading for coverage. We speak as those already covered, already joined, already inhabited by the life that overrules contradiction.
Scripture says, “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). That is not weak language. It does not describe a distant possibility. It declares indwelling certainty. Glory is not located away from Christ’s presence in us. The answer is not located outside union. When threatening circumstances shout, we answer from this reality: Christ is here. Christ is in us. Christ is not waiting to arrive. Christ is not withheld until appearance improves. Therefore we stay covered, because our covering is not self-produced steadiness. Our covering is Christ Himself. We remain holy because the Holy One lives in us. We remain confident because union is stronger than opposition and stronger than visible barriers.
Standing covered in Christ also destroys the lie that we are merely human when impossibility appears. We are human indeed, but we are not empty humanity. We are not facing contradiction with human resource alone. We are vessels of indwelling life. We are joined to the One through whom all things were made. Therefore we do not describe ourselves as exposed, unsupported, or naturally trapped. Christ in us forbids that conclusion. We do not deny the appearance of resistance, but we deny its right to define us. We do not deny the existence of barriers, but we deny their right to outrank union. Christ in us is not a side truth. Christ in us is the center from which all right judgment proceeds.
Jesus said, “I am the vine, ye are the branches” (John 15:5, KJV). Branches do not generate life apart from the vine, and branches are not separate from the life they express. That means our stance before impossibility is not independent striving. Our stance is abiding expression. We do not need to invent authority. We abide in the One who is authority. We do not need to manufacture holiness. We abide in the Holy One. We do not need to create covering by effort. We remain in the covering already established through union with Christ. Therefore our words, actions, and reception all flow from shared life, not from anxious self-effort before a threatening condition.
Because Christ is in us now, impossible situations are never asked to respond to us alone. They are confronted by Christ expressed through us. That means we do not bow to visible finality. We do not grant supremacy to hostile reports. We do not wait for a safer moment to remember who dwells in us. We stand covered now. We stand joined now. We stand holy now. We stand inhabited now. This present union is why our faith is not denial, our speech is not fantasy, and our expectation is not hype. Christ in us is the solid reason we stand. He is the present answer. He is the greater life. He is the indwelling truth confronting the loudest contradiction.
So this chapter settles the ground beneath our feet: we stand covered in Christ now. We do not stand at a distance from Him, and we do not face impossible conditions without Him. His indwelling life is our starting place, our authority, our holiness, and our answer. Threat does not undo union. Pressure does not thin out His presence. Visible barriers do not weaken the Christ who dwells in us. Therefore we remain fixed in this truth. We stand from union, not from reaction. We speak from indwelling life, not from panic. We move from Christ in us, not from fear around us. This is our covering, and this is where we remain.
Chapter 4: We Receive Before Sight Agrees
Believing reception stands at the center of how we walk in the impossible. Jesus did not tell us to wait for sight to approve truth before we receive. He taught us to receive in faith while contradiction is still visible. That means manifestation is not the first proof of truth. Christ is. Union is. His word is. Therefore we do not delay reception until circumstances calm down. We do not postpone agreement until barriers move. We receive because Christ in us is present now. We receive because His finished work is greater than appearance. We stay covered when the impossible shouts because we do not let sight decide when faith is allowed to possess what Christ says.
Jesus said plainly, “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). That order matters. We believe that we receive before visible completion appears. We do not invert His order to fit human comfort. We do not say we will believe once we can measure change. We believe because Christ is true before sight adjusts. Reception is not pretending. Reception is agreement with the superior word. Reception is the inward possession of what Christ has spoken. Therefore we reject the lie that faith begins after manifestation. Faith receives while the contradiction still speaks. That is why impossible shouting does not stop us from receiving what Christ says.
Sight has a place, but it does not hold the throne. Reports may speak. Symptoms may remain visible for a time. Barriers may still appear large in the moment of asking. Yet none of these things authorizes or cancels truth. We are not governed by appearances. Scripture says, “For we walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7, KJV). That does not call us to ignore the world. It calls us to judge the world from a greater reality. Faith receives before sight celebrates. Faith possesses before the crowd acknowledges. Faith stands before circumstances echo what Christ has already declared. We stay covered by refusing to let visible agreement become the first condition for inward reception.
Religious thinking often taught people to wait for a sign, a feeling, a release, or a visible shift before speaking with certainty. Yet Jesus did not connect believing reception to emotional confirmation. He connected it to prayer and faith. We reject every system that makes feelings the gatekeeper of truth. We reject every habit that waits for atmosphere to improve before receiving. Christ in us is not validated by sensation. Christ in us is reality whether or not the flesh feels dramatic change in the first moment. Therefore we receive because He is present. We receive because His word stands. We receive because sight does not have the authority to delay the possession of what faith lays hold of now.
Believing reception also guards us from double speech. When we ask in faith, we do not then speak as though nothing was received. We do not pray one way and confess another. We do not ask according to Christ and then narrate according to fear. Reception gives our mouth a new alignment. We begin to speak from possession, not from uncertainty. We begin to stand from union, not from wavering. This does not mean we deny what is visible. It means we deny visibility the right to define what has been received in Christ. We remain covered in holiness by keeping our speech joined to the truth we have received instead of surrendering again to the language of contradiction.
Impossible conditions often shout loudest right after prayer, as if intensity could reverse reception. Yet pressure after asking does not mean nothing was received. It only means contradiction is still trying to speak. We do not hand truth back because the obstacle stayed visible for a moment. We do not surrender our agreement because manifestation has not yet reached full visibility. We remain with Christ’s order. We ask. We believe that we receive. We stand. We speak. We act from union. That is how covered people walk. We do not let noise decide doctrine. We do not let delay write theology. We let Jesus determine the sequence, and His sequence keeps faith active before sight agrees.
So we receive before sight agrees. We receive before the mountain moves. We receive before the report changes. We receive before the barrier opens. We receive before the condition yields. This is not reckless speech. This is obedience to Christ. He told us how to pray, how to believe, and how to stand. Therefore we do not wait for the impossible to grow quiet before we possess truth. We possess truth while it still shouts. We remain covered while it still resists. We stand holy while it still contradicts. We believe that we receive because Christ in us is present now, and His presence outranks every condition that has not yet aligned.
Chapter 5: We Speak From Covered Authority
Because we are covered in Christ, we do not ask, speak, bless, command, or stand as uncertain people. Our authority does not rise from volume, personality, or effort. Our authority rises from union with Christ. He lives in us now, and His indwelling life gives substance to our asking and force to our speech. Therefore we do not speak as though impossible conditions deserve negotiation. We speak as those in whom Christ dwells. We stay holy in our speech by refusing mixture, panic, and surrender-language. Covering guards our mouth from unbelief. Covering keeps our words aligned with Christ’s finished work instead of with the loud claims of threatening appearance.
Authority-filled asking is not begging from distance. It is believing prayer from union. We do not pray as though Christ is absent and must be convinced to care. We pray because Christ is present and His life is active in us now. Therefore our asking is direct, clean, and full of reception. We ask in faith because Jesus already taught us to believe that we receive. We do not ask while secretly agreeing with impossibility. We ask from the conviction that Christ in us remains greater than the thing confronting us. Covered prayer does not collapse into fear. It stays aligned with truth, receives what Christ says, and refuses to let threatening conditions rewrite what prayer has already received.
Jesus taught us that faith does not remain silent before obstruction. He said, “Whosoever shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed… and shall not doubt in his heart… he shall have whatsoever he saith” (Mark 11:23, KJV). Therefore we do not only ask; we also speak. We speak to mountains because Christ in us is not passive. We speak to barriers because union carries authority. We bless what has been cursed by contradiction. We command what resists truth to yield before Christ. We do not use our mouths to repeat defeat. We use our mouths as instruments of holy agreement. Our covering keeps our speech from echoing fear and trains us to declare what Christ in us makes true now.
Speaking from covered authority also means we do not separate holiness from manifestation. Holiness is not withdrawal from confrontation. Holiness is clean agreement with Christ in the middle of confrontation. We stay covered by refusing corrupt speech, compromised expectation, and fearful narration. We do not call strong what Christ can overturn. We do not call final what Christ can reverse. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. The covered mouth stays joined to the Holy One. That is why our words carry clarity instead of mixture. We bless instead of curse. We declare instead of collapse. We stand instead of scatter. The holy life in Christ and the authoritative mouth in Christ move together.
The apostles also spoke from this union-shaped authority. Scripture says, “In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk” (Acts 3:6, KJV). That is not distant religion. That is active expression of Christ through His body. The power was never presented as spectacle or personal greatness. It was Christ expressed through those who knew His name and acted from His authority. So we do the same. We do not wait for impossible conditions to become polite before we speak. We lay hands. We bless. We command. We ask. We stand. We act in the name of Jesus because His indwelling life is the source of all true authority expressed through us.
We must also refuse the lie that silence is safer than command when contradiction appears intense. Silence can become agreement with fear when Christ has already given us truth to declare. Covered authority does not mean careless words. It means obedient words. We speak where Jesus taught us to speak. We ask where He taught us to ask. We stand where He taught us to stand. We do not let impossible conditions train our mouths into passivity. We let Christ train our mouths into agreement. The threatening circumstance may still be visible, but we do not owe it verbal surrender. We owe Christ open agreement. Therefore our speech becomes a holy instrument through which union addresses contradiction.
So we speak from covered authority. We ask in faith. We speak to the mountain. We bless what needs Christ’s order. We command what resists wholeness to yield. We lay hands as those in whom Christ dwells now. We refuse compromised language, fearful prayer, and passive surrender before visible barriers. Our covering is not silence before the impossible. Our covering is holy alignment while confronting it. Christ in us remains greater than every threatening circumstance, visible barrier, and impossible condition. Therefore our words do not come from panic. They come from union. They come from holiness. They come from Christ expressed through us now.
Chapter 6: We Watch the Impossible Yield
Jesus never presented the impossible as a fixed kingdom that could not be confronted. He revealed the opposite. Again and again, contradiction yielded before Him. Sickness yielded. Demons yielded. Lack yielded. Death yielded. Storms yielded. Distance yielded. Resistance yielded. He did not honor visible impossibility as a permanent throne. He confronted it as something beneath the authority of God. Because Christ dwells in us now, those works are not locked away as unreachable history. They reveal the character of the Christ who still lives in His body. Therefore we watch the impossible yield, not because we worship outcomes, but because Christ in us remains greater than every condition that resists truth.
When Jesus stood before what looked impossible, He did not submit His words to appearance. He spoke to fevers, storms, demons, death, blindness, barrenness, and lack with authority. The visible state never taught Him what was possible. He taught the visible state what must yield before God. This remains essential for us. We do not let the contradiction become our teacher. We let Christ remain our teacher. Therefore we do not call impossible what He confronts. We do not call untouchable what He can answer. We do not call permanent what He can overturn. Our expectation is not built on fantasy. It is built on the revealed pattern of Jesus confronting impossibility until it yielded.
Jesus also declared, “The works that I do shall he do also” (John 14:12, KJV). We do not shrink that word until it becomes ceremonial. We receive it as living instruction. Christ in us is not less alive than Christ before us. His indwelling life is the source of present manifestation now. Therefore we do not admire His works only as past proof. We receive them as present revelation of how impossible things answer Him. Healings were not accidents. Deliverances were not symbols only. Provision was not an exception to truth. Raising the dead was not a lesson in limitation. These works revealed the dominion of Christ over visible contradiction, and that same Christ abides in us now.
The book of Acts continues this pattern. Impossible things yielded when the name of Jesus was spoken and acted upon. Threats did not stop witness. Prison did not stop praise. Weakness did not stop manifestation. Lack did not stop provision. Bodies answered. Spirits answered. Systems answered. Doors answered. Opposition answered. Scripture says, “Then Peter said, Silver and gold have I none… In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk” (Acts 3:6, KJV). That miracle was not theater. It was Christ expressed through His body. We see there that impossible-looking conditions are not final when Christ’s authority is spoken and acted upon through those who belong to Him.
Watching the impossible yield also corrects false doctrine about holiness. Holiness is not separation from confrontation. Holiness is agreement with Christ in the confrontation. The covered life is not fragile before intense resistance. The covered life stands clear, speaks cleanly, asks boldly, and acts from union while contradiction is still visible. That is why manifestation does not oppose holiness. Manifestation reveals the Holy One expressed through His people. When impossible conditions yield, Christ is glorified. His indwelling life is made visible. His presence is not proved by noise or spectacle, but by truth made manifest against what resisted it. Therefore we do not separate holy living from bold action. In Christ they belong together.
We must also let these testimonies train our practice. We are not reading them as distant wonders with no present demand on our obedience. We are receiving them as instruction to walk in the same union-shaped boldness. If Christ lives in us, then impossible conditions do not receive automatic exemption from confrontation. We ask. We believe that we receive. We speak. We command. We lay hands. We stand. We do not reduce these works to inspiration without imitation. We let them call us into action. The same Jesus who revealed dominion over contradiction now lives in us. Therefore the impossible must be treated as something that can yield before Christ expressed through us.
So we watch the impossible yield. We watch barriers move. We watch demons leave. We watch bodies answer. We watch lack submit. We watch doors open. We watch restoration appear. We do not stare at contradiction as though it were sacred. We confront it through Christ. We do not let threatening circumstances preach permanence. We let the works of Jesus teach us expectation. The pattern remains clear: Christ meets resistance, and resistance yields. Christ is revealed, and contradiction loses dominion. Christ is expressed, and impossible conditions answer. Therefore we remain covered, holy, bold, and active as those who expect the impossible to yield before the indwelling life of Christ.
Chapter 7: We Go Covered and Commanding
Now we go as those who are covered in Christ and commissioned in Christ. We do not leave this book with ideas only. We leave with direction. We ask in faith. We believe that we receive. We walk as Christ. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We do not wait for threatening circumstances to quiet down before we obey. We move while Christ is present, because He is present now. We do not postpone holy action. We do not postpone authoritative speech. We do not postpone laying hands, preaching the Kingdom, confronting darkness, or addressing visible barriers. The commissioning begins here, in present union, under present covering, with present obedience now.
Let our mouths now agree with Christ more than with reports. Let our hands now move in obedience more than in hesitation. Let our feet now carry the Kingdom where fear once tried to stop us. Jesus said, “All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth” (Matthew 28:18, KJV). We do not treat that as a distant statement. The One who holds all power dwells in us now. Therefore we go covered and commanding. We do not go exposed. We do not go unsure. We do not go empty. We go in union with the reigning Christ, and our obedience is the visible expression of His life in us.
Ask in faith. Believe that you receive. Speak to the mountain. Refuse the dictatorship of visible conditions. Heal the sick. Lay hands. Cast out demons. Raise the dead. Preach the Kingdom. Declare that Christ in us remains greater than threatening circumstances, visible barriers, and impossible conditions. These are not lines for admiration only. These are present commands for those in whom Christ dwells now. We do not reduce them to theory because contradiction appears large. We do not excuse ourselves from obedience because obstacles shout loudly. We go covered, and our covering is not passivity. Our covering is holy union releasing Christ’s authority into the places where impossibility has demanded agreement.
Jesus said, “These signs shall follow them that believe” (Mark 16:17, KJV). We receive that word as instruction for the present tense. Believing does not hide. Believing moves. Believing lays hold. Believing speaks. Believing refuses to let impossible conditions remain unchallenged where Christ is present. Therefore we do not wait for a special class of people to manifest Christ. We do not wait for a safer generation. We do not wait for a clearer hour. We believe now. We receive now. We speak now. We act now. The signs that follow believing are not trophies of human greatness. They are witnesses that Christ is alive and active in His people now.
Let this commissioning cleanse our language and strengthen our practice. We do not say the barrier is too large. We say Christ in us remains greater. We do not say the threat decides reality. We say Christ decides reality. We do not say the condition is final. We say Christ confronts it. We do not say the mountain owns the field. We speak to the mountain. We do not say darkness deserves time to rule. We preach the Kingdom into its face. We do not say sickness must be respected as permanent. We lay hands in the name of Jesus. We do not say impossibility is safer than obedience. We command from union with Christ.
Let us now walk as those fully covered in holiness. Let us keep our speech clean from fear and our expectation clean from compromise. Let us keep our asking joined to reception and our reception joined to action. Let us go into homes, streets, churches, hospitals, nations, and hidden places with this settled truth: Christ in us is not stopped by what threatens us. Therefore we refuse retreat where Christ commands action. We refuse silence where Christ commands speech. We refuse passive theology where Christ commands bold obedience. We go covered and commanding because the Holy One lives in us, and His life in us remains greater than every form of visible contradiction.
So go now. Ask in faith. Believe that you receive. Walk as Christ. Do not call impossible what Christ indwells. Speak to the mountain. Preach the Kingdom. Heal the sick. Lay hands. Cast out demons. Raise the dead. Stay covered in holiness while you confront contradiction. Stay joined to Christ while you bless, command, and act. Stay unmoved by threatening circumstances, visible barriers, and impossible conditions. Christ in us remains greater now. Therefore we go now. We go covered. We go bold. We go speaking. We go acting. We go manifesting Christ in the places where the impossible shouted, and we do not let it keep the final word.