Book cover

We Are Built for the Return of Wholeness

We Are Built for the Return of Wholeness declares that Christ in us restores structure, bone, teeth, organs, and all that appears lost or damaged. We reject visible limitation and receive present wholeness through union with Him. We speak, act, and command from finished work, knowing the Creator lives in us and manifests restoration beyond natural boundaries.

AI193

Chapter 1: The Lie of Structural Finality Is Broken

We reject the lie that visible damage has final authority where Christ dwells in us. We refuse the conclusion that missing parts, broken bones, damaged organs, or absent teeth define reality. We do not agree with what sight reports when it contradicts Christ in us. We do not call permanent what Christ has not declared permanent. We stand in the truth that what appears incomplete does not rule over the indwelling fullness of Christ. We are not governed by loss, injury, or absence. We are governed by Christ, who is present in us now as wholeness.

We expose the claim that structure cannot return once it is lost. We deny the teaching that bone cannot be rebuilt, that teeth cannot be restored, that organs cannot function again, or that missing parts cannot appear. We do not bow to the authority of diagnosis, history, or visible condition. We do not accept limitation as truth. We do not submit to finality where Christ lives. The Creator dwells in us, and we are not separated from His power. We are not outside of His ability. We carry His life, and His life does not lack structure, completeness, or wholeness.

We declare that Christ in us is not limited by what we see. We do not measure possibility by appearance. We do not evaluate truth by damage. We do not reduce Christ to the level of visible conditions. We live from union, not observation. We live from indwelling, not from evidence. Christ is present now, and He is whole. Christ is not missing parts. Christ is not broken. Christ is not reduced. We are joined to Him, and His wholeness is not theoretical. His wholeness is present within us now.

We stand on what is written: “With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible” (Matthew 19:26, KJV). We do not redefine what is possible based on human limitation. We do not shrink truth to match natural outcomes. We expand our expectation to match Christ in us. We do not say that restoration is rare. We do not say that recreation is unusual. We say that Christ in us is the standard, and nothing that is impossible with man stops what is present in Him within us.

We also stand on what is written: “All things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not treat belief as weak agreement. We believe from union. We believe from Christ in us. We do not separate believing from His indwelling presence. We believe that what is missing answers Him. We believe that what is broken yields to Him. We believe that what has been lost is not hidden from Him. Our believing is not empty. Our believing is filled with Christ Himself.

We reject every voice that says we must accept incompleteness. We reject every agreement with loss. We reject every internal surrender to damage. We do not partner with absence. We do not confess lack as truth. We do not repeat limitation as identity. We declare that we are built for wholeness because Christ is in us. We do not become whole by effort. We express wholeness because Christ is present. We do not wait to become complete. We live as those in whom completeness dwells now.

We stand in authority over the lie of finality. We do not let visible structure dictate invisible truth. We do not let history define present reality. We do not let loss rewrite identity. We are not shaped by what is missing. We are shaped by Christ in us. We declare that wholeness is not distant. Wholeness is present. Wholeness is not delayed. Wholeness is now. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We call forth wholeness because Christ is within us as the answer.

Chapter 2: The Training of Limitation Must Be Rejected

We confront the training that taught us to accept less than Christ. We reject every voice that trained us to expect partial outcomes, managed damage, or permanent loss. We do not agree with teachings that elevate medical finality above Christ in us. We do not accept conclusions that say structure cannot return. We do not allow fear to shape our expectation. We do not let tradition reduce the scope of what Christ manifests through us. We stand against every system that normalizes incompleteness where Christ lives in us as fullness.

We reject the pattern that teaches us to honor diagnosis as final truth. We do not despise knowledge, but we do not submit to it as authority over Christ. We do not let reports define limits. We do not accept timelines that contradict present wholeness. We do not repeat outcomes that deny restoration. We do not adjust our expectation downward to match visible patterns. We rise to the level of Christ in us. We do not allow what has been seen before to limit what Christ reveals now through us.

We expose fear as a false teacher that reduces expectation. We do not allow fear to tell us what cannot happen. We do not let fear shape how we speak about our bodies. We do not let fear dictate what we ask or receive. We do not allow fear to interpret visible conditions. We reject fear as authority. We stand in Christ, and fear does not govern us. We do not confess limitation because of fear. We confess Christ because He dwells in us now as wholeness and completeness.

We also reject religious language that delays manifestation. We do not say that restoration belongs only to another time. We do not say that creative miracles are rare exceptions. We do not say that we must accept lack while waiting for change. We do not agree with teachings that separate us from present wholeness. We do not speak as those outside of Christ’s finished work. We speak as those in whom Christ dwells. We do not reduce expectation to protect comfort. We elevate expectation to align with Christ in us.

We stand on what is written: “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever” (Hebrews 13:8, KJV). We do not divide His works across time. We do not say He restores then but not now. We do not treat His power as historical. We do not reduce His nature. We receive Him as present and active within us. We do not place His works behind us. We do not move His ability into the past. We receive Him as the same now, expressing wholeness through us.

We also stand on what is written: “If thou canst believe, all things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not limit belief to small outcomes. We do not restrict possibility to what seems reasonable. We believe from union with Christ. We believe that what has been declared impossible answers His presence in us. We believe that missing structure responds to Him. Our belief is not wishful. Our belief is anchored in Christ who lives in us now as the fullness of all things.

We reject reduced expectation and rise into truth. We do not speak as those trained by limitation. We speak as those indwelt by Christ. We do not carry forward what we were taught if it contradicts Him. We do not preserve traditions that deny wholeness. We walk in renewed understanding. We declare that Christ in us restores structure, bone, organs, and teeth. We reject limitation as a teacher. We receive Christ as our only reference for what is possible, and we live from Him now.

Chapter 3: The Indwelling Christ Is Present Wholeness

We declare that Christ in us is the present answer to every form of structural loss. We do not look outside for completion. We do not search for wholeness as something distant. We do not treat restoration as external to us. Christ dwells in us now, and He is complete. Christ is not lacking any part. Christ is not diminished. Christ is not broken. We are joined to Him, and His life within us carries the reality of wholeness that is not waiting to begin. It is present now.

We do not face damage as separate from Christ. We do not approach loss as those without help. We do not stand alone before broken structure. We stand in union. Christ in us is not observing lack. Christ in us is the answer to lack. We do not divide ourselves from Him. We do not speak as if He is far. We do not act as if we must reach Him. We are in Him, and He is in us. His presence defines our reality, not visible conditions.

We declare that the Creator dwells in us now. We do not carry a distant power. We carry the One through whom all things were made. We do not reduce His presence to inward comfort. We recognize His presence as creative authority. What is missing to sight is not missing to Him. What is damaged to sight is not beyond Him. We do not measure His ability by what we see. We measure everything by who He is within us now as fullness and life.

We stand on what is written: “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). We do not treat this as symbolic. We do not treat this as distant promise. We receive this as present reality. Christ in us is not partial. Christ in us is fullness. We do not carry fragments. We carry wholeness. We do not speak of lack as identity. We speak of Christ as our life. His indwelling presence is not inactive. His indwelling presence expresses itself through us now.

We also stand on what is written: “In him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are complete in him” (Colossians 2:9–10, KJV). We do not separate ourselves from this completeness. We do not say we are becoming complete. We declare that we are complete in Him now. We do not accept deficiency as truth. We do not confess incompleteness. We stand in what is finished. We are joined to fullness, and fullness is present within us as Christ Himself.

We do not wait for wholeness to arrive. We live from wholeness already present. We do not postpone manifestation to a later time. We recognize that Christ in us is active now. We do not call absence normal. We call Christ normal. We do not adjust to lack. We release what is within us. We do not hold back expectation. We let Christ in us define what we see. We declare that His life in us answers every form of loss without delay.

We stand as those who carry present wholeness. We do not speak from deficiency. We speak from union. We do not act as those waiting for help. We act as those in whom Christ dwells. We do not shrink back from impossible conditions. We confront them with Christ in us. We declare that bones respond, organs respond, teeth respond, and structure responds to Him within us. We are not empty. We are filled with Christ, and His wholeness is present now.

Chapter 4: We Receive Before Structure Appears

We receive what Christ has made present before visible structure confirms it. We do not wait for sight to authorize truth. We do not delay belief until change appears. We do not require evidence before we receive. We receive because Christ is in us now. We do not build our faith on what we see. We build our faith on who He is within us. We do not call something real only when it appears. We call it real because Christ in us is truth now.

We reject the lie that manifestation must be seen before it is received. We do not say we will believe when structure returns. We believe now. We do not postpone receiving until bone forms or organs function. We receive now. We do not let delay define truth. We let Christ define truth. We do not wait for the body to agree before we stand. We stand in agreement with Christ first. We receive His wholeness as present, not pending.

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 do not rearrange this order. We do not reverse receiving and having. We believe that we receive now. We do not treat receiving as future. We receive in the present because Christ is present in us. We do not hesitate. We do not question His indwelling life. We receive fully, without waiting for visible confirmation.

We also stand on what is written: “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). We do not depend on sight. We depend on faith. We do not measure reality by appearance. We measure reality by Christ in us. Faith is not empty. Faith carries substance. We receive that substance now. We do not treat unseen as unreal. We treat unseen as present through Christ. We stand in what is true before it is visible.

We do not let doubt interrupt receiving. We do not entertain hesitation. We do not speak against what we have received. We do not cancel truth with conflicting words. We remain aligned with Christ in us. We do not move back into agreement with lack. We stay in agreement with wholeness. We do not fluctuate with circumstances. We remain steady in receiving what Christ has already supplied within us now.

We do not reduce receiving to passive thought. We receive actively. We receive with clarity. We receive with conviction. We receive from union. We do not separate ourselves from what we receive. We receive as those in whom Christ dwells. We do not doubt His presence. We do not doubt His ability. We do not doubt His expression. We receive fully because He is fully present within us now as wholeness.

We stand in received wholeness and move forward. We do not retreat into waiting. We do not speak as those uncertain. We speak as those who have received. We declare that structure answers what we have received. We declare that bones align, organs function, teeth restore, and all missing parts respond. We do not wait for permission. We walk in what we have received. We believe, we receive, and we stand in Christ as present wholeness now.

Chapter 5: We Speak to Bone and Form

We speak directly to the body from union with Christ in us. We do not speak as observers. We do not speak as those outside of authority. We speak as those in whom Christ dwells now. We do not ask the body for permission. We command in alignment with Christ. We do not hesitate to address bone, structure, organs, and teeth. We speak clearly, knowing that Christ in us is not silent. His life within us gives voice, and we release that voice with authority into every form of visible lack.

We command bone to align and structure to form. We do not plead with conditions. We speak to them. We do not describe what is wrong. We declare what is true in Christ. We do not repeat damage. We speak restoration. We do not rehearse absence. We call forth presence. We do not accept broken alignment. We command order. We speak to every part of the body, knowing that Christ in us is the standard of wholeness, and we release that standard through our words now.

We stand on what 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 lay hands with authority. We do not question whether recovery is possible. We declare recovery as the expression of Christ in us. We do not separate laying hands from His indwelling life. We release what is within us. We do not hesitate to act. We move with clarity, knowing that Christ in us restores what appears damaged or missing.

We also stand on what is written: “And these signs shall follow them that believe” (Mark 16:17, KJV). We do not chase signs. Signs follow Christ in us. We do not strive to produce outcomes. We release what is already present. We do not question whether restoration belongs to us. We walk in it. We do not separate belief from action. We believe and we act. We believe and we speak. We believe and we lay hands. We believe and we command structure to respond now.

We do not speak weakly. We do not speak with uncertainty. We do not speak in questions. We speak in authority. We do not ask if bone can form. We command bone to form. We do not ask if teeth can return. We declare restoration. We do not ask if organs can function. We command life and function. We speak as those who know Christ is in us. We do not dilute our words. We release them with clarity, alignment, and certainty in His indwelling presence.

We do not separate speaking from believing. We speak what we have received. We do not contradict ourselves. We remain consistent with Christ in us. We do not speak one way and think another. We align fully. We speak from truth, not from fear. We speak from union, not from observation. We do not echo limitation. We declare wholeness. Our words carry agreement with Christ, and that agreement is released into the body now as restoration and completion.

We act as those sent to restore structure. We do not remain passive. We do not delay action. We move in alignment with Christ in us. We lay hands, we speak, we command, and we stand. We do not retreat when conditions resist. We remain in authority. We declare that bones respond, organs respond, teeth respond, and all structure answers Christ in us. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We speak, and we see alignment follow His presence within us.

Chapter 6: Wholeness Manifests Beyond Loss

We witness that wholeness manifests where loss once appeared final. We do not treat restoration as theoretical. We recognize that Christ in us produces visible change. We do not say that damage remains untouched. We declare that what is missing responds to Him. We do not accept permanent absence. We stand in the truth that Christ in us expresses wholeness in the body. We do not reduce manifestation to inward comfort. We see outward restoration as the expression of His indwelling life now.

We do not limit what can be restored. We do not set boundaries on what Christ manifests. We do not say that certain structures are beyond return. We do not accept that organs cannot function again. We do not agree that teeth cannot be restored. We do not call missing parts unreachable. We do not define outcomes by natural law. We define outcomes by Christ in us. We declare that His presence answers every form of loss, and we stand in expectation of visible wholeness now.

We stand on what is written: “Stretch forth thine hand. And he stretched it forth; and it was restored whole, like as the other” (Matthew 12:13, KJV). We do not treat restoration as partial. We see that wholeness is complete. We do not reduce outcomes. We receive full restoration. We do not speak of improvement only. We declare wholeness. We do not limit what restoration looks like. We accept what Christ expresses. We stand in agreement with complete manifestation through His presence in us.

We also stand on what is written: “Whether is easier, to say, Thy sins be forgiven thee; or to say, Arise, and walk?” (Matthew 9:5, KJV). We do not divide forgiveness from restoration. We do not separate spiritual truth from physical manifestation. We recognize that Christ speaks and bodies respond. We do not treat healing as secondary. We see it as expression. We do not reduce His words to concept. We recognize that what He speaks through us produces visible change now.

We do not accept delay as authority. We do not allow time to dictate truth. We do not say that manifestation must take long. We do not define outcomes by process. We stand in Christ now. We do not reduce expectation to gradual change. We remain open to immediate restoration. We do not limit how quickly structure can respond. We recognize that Christ in us is not bound by time, and we align with His present expression of wholeness now.

We do not withdraw when results challenge expectation. We remain steady. We do not return to agreement with lack. We stay aligned with Christ in us. We do not speak against what we have declared. We remain consistent. We do not shift back into doubt. We stand in truth. We do not allow temporary appearance to redefine reality. We remain in agreement with wholeness until it is visible, knowing that Christ in us is not changing.

We walk in the evidence of Christ expressed through us. We do not hide what He does. We do not minimize restoration. We do not silence testimony. We declare that wholeness manifests. We declare that missing parts respond. We declare that structure is restored. We do not glorify loss. We glorify Christ in us. We stand as witnesses of His life expressed in the body, and we continue to act, speak, and believe in alignment with His present wholeness now.

Chapter 7: We Are Sent to Restore What Is Missing

We stand as those sent in Christ to restore what appears missing. We do not remain observers. We move as participants in His life. We do not shrink back from impossible conditions. We confront them with Christ in us. We do not wait for instruction beyond what He has spoken. We act now. We do not question our place. We know that we are in Him. We walk as those commissioned to release wholeness into bodies, knowing that Christ in us is the answer to every form of visible lack.

We ask in faith without hesitation. We do not ask uncertainly. We ask knowing that Christ is present in us. We believe that we receive as we ask. We do not delay belief. We do not postpone receiving. We ask and we receive now. We do not separate asking from union. We ask from within Christ. We do not reduce our request. We ask fully, aligned with His wholeness. We do not ask for partial outcomes. We ask for complete restoration, knowing that Christ in us is not lacking anything.

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 obey this directly. We do not reinterpret it. We believe that we receive. We do not wait to receive. We receive now. We do not separate believing from manifestation. We believe, and we see. We do not hesitate. We stand in full agreement with Christ in us as present wholeness, and we move forward in that truth.

We also stand on what is written: “Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils” (Matthew 10:8, KJV). We do not treat this as suggestion. We act on it. We do not delay obedience. We do not reduce the command. We move in authority. We do not separate ourselves from this instruction. We walk in it. We do not question whether it applies. We know Christ is in us, and we release His life through our actions now.

We speak to the body with authority. We command wholeness. We declare restoration. We call missing parts to answer Christ. We do not ask the body what is possible. We tell the body what aligns with Christ. We speak to bone, to tissue, to nerve, to blood, to teeth, and to organs. We command alignment and function. We do not speak in doubt. We speak in certainty. We do not withdraw our words. We stand in them until wholeness appears visibly.

We refuse visible finality. We do not accept that what is seen is the end. We do not call anything permanent that Christ has not declared. We stand in authority over appearance. We do not submit to limitation. We do not bow to loss. We do not agree with absence. We agree with Christ in us. We declare that what is missing responds now. We do not move back into silence. We remain active, speaking, commanding, and releasing wholeness continuously.

We walk as Christ in the earth. We do not separate identity from action. We live what is true. We do not delay obedience. We do not wait for confirmation. We move now. We lay hands, we speak, we command, and we stand. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We release wholeness wherever we go. We act as those sent, and we remain in motion, knowing that Christ in us restores all structure now.