
We Kneel in Worship and Health Comes Forth
We Kneel in Worship and Health Comes Forth declares that as we bow in union with Christ, healing answers without delay. We do not treat sickness as final authority, because Christ in us is present wholeness now. We believe that we receive, we speak from finished work, and we walk in manifested health as worship flows through us.
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Chapter 1: We Refuse the Authority of Sickness Before Christ
We refuse the lie that sickness carries authority where Christ dwells in us. We do not bow to pain, diagnosis, or visible breakdown as final truth. We kneel in worship, yet we do not kneel under disease. Christ in us stands above every condition, and His life defines what remains. We reject the report that says the body must submit to decline. We hold that Christ is present now, and His presence is not passive. What appears impossible does not govern us, because Christ governs from within us as living authority.
We expose the claim that symptoms speak louder than Christ. We do not allow discomfort, weakness, or duration to establish truth. We do not measure reality by what the body displays. Christ in us is the measure, and He is not sick, failing, or limited. We kneel in worship as agreement with His indwelling life, not as surrender to affliction. We do not grant sickness a voice that competes with Christ. We silence every report that contradicts His finished work and present life within us.
We declare that what is impossible with man is not impossible where Christ lives in us. We do not accept natural limitation as final law. We acknowledge that Christ’s presence overrides visible conditions. We kneel, not in defeat, but in alignment with Heaven’s order now established in us. As it is written, “The things which are impossible with men are possible with God” (Luke 18:27, KJV). We are not separate from this reality, because Christ dwells in us as the living answer to every impossible condition.
We dismantle the belief that sickness must run its course. We reject timelines that oppose Christ’s present authority. We do not say healing is distant, forming, or delayed. We declare that Christ in us is complete now. We kneel in worship as an expression of agreement with completed work, not as a request for future action. We do not wait for symptoms to approve truth. We establish truth because Christ is present. Healing does not wait for permission from appearance when Christ indwells us.
We confront the thought that the body has the final say. We do not allow biology, history, or inherited patterns to define our outcome. Christ in us is not subject to decay, and we are not subject to it as final authority. We kneel in worship as those joined to the incorruptible life of Christ. We do not call persistent sickness permanent. We call Christ present. His life speaks louder than every condition, and we align with His voice alone.
We reject fear that magnifies symptoms and minimizes Christ. We do not fear what we see, because we know who lives in us. Fear does not instruct us, and it does not lead us. We kneel in worship as those anchored in Christ’s finished work. As it is written, “For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind” (2 Timothy 1:7, KJV). We operate from this truth, not from the instability of visible conditions.
We establish that Christ in us is the present end of sickness. We do not negotiate with disease, and we do not share authority with it. We kneel in worship, fully aware that we are united with the One who is life itself. We refuse to call impossible what Christ indwells. We do not step back, delay, or dilute truth. We stand in union, and we declare that health answers now because Christ is present now within us as living, active wholeness.
Chapter 2: We Break Agreement with Delayed Healing Thinking
We expose the lie that healing must be delayed, gradual, or uncertain. We do not accept teachings that lower expectation below Christ in us. We refuse agreement with voices that say we must wait, struggle, or endure without answer. We kneel in worship as those who agree with present truth, not postponed outcomes. Christ in us is not partial, developing, or restrained. We do not treat healing as rare or selective. We declare that what lives in us is complete, active, and present now, and we align our expectation with His finished work.
We confront religious patterns that teach us to tolerate sickness instead of confront it. We do not spiritualize delay or excuse lack of manifestation as normal. We do not call endurance victory when Christ has already overcome. We kneel in worship as agreement with Christ’s victory, not as acceptance of defeat. We reject every doctrine that separates Christ’s presence from visible result. We do not allow tradition to silence bold faith. We declare that Christ in us is not limited by systems that expect less than His fullness.
We reject fear that exalts diagnosis above Christ. We do not treat medical conclusions as final authority over our bodies. We respect knowledge, yet we do not submit to conclusions that contradict Christ in us. We kneel in worship, acknowledging that Christ is greater than every report. As it is written, “Who hath believed our report? and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?” (Isaiah 53:1, KJV). We believe the report of the Lord, and we refuse to elevate any other voice above His truth within us.
We break agreement with unbelief that measures possibility by past outcomes. We do not let previous experience define present expectation. We do not say that because something remained, it must continue. Christ in us is not bound by history. We kneel in worship as those who stand in present union, not past limitation. We declare that what Christ is now in us is the only measure we accept. We do not carry yesterday’s outcomes into today’s faith.
We confront the idea that faith must struggle to receive. We do not labor to convince Christ to act. We do not beg for what is already given. We kneel in worship as those who receive from union, not from distance. We do not chase healing as if it were outside of us. Christ in us is the source and substance of what we receive. We believe that we receive because He is present, not because we have achieved a level of readiness.
We establish that believing is not passive agreement but active reception. We do not wait for feeling, evidence, or confirmation before we believe. We kneel in worship as those who receive before sight responds. As it is written, “Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We act on this word now, not later, because Christ in us makes it present reality.
We declare that delay has no covenant with us. We do not give time authority over manifestation. We kneel in worship, fully aligned with Christ’s immediacy. We refuse to postpone what Christ has completed. We do not call healing future when Christ is present. We stand in agreement with His finished work, and we expect visible answer because He lives in us now as the unchanging source of wholeness.
Chapter 3: We Stand in Christ as Present Wholeness
We declare that Christ in us is present wholeness now. We do not see ourselves as separate from the One who is life. We kneel in worship as those joined to Him, not reaching toward Him. We do not face sickness as isolated individuals. Christ in us is the answer already present. We do not call ourselves incomplete while He indwells us. We affirm that His life defines our state, and His presence establishes our condition as whole now.
We reject the lie that we must become whole through process. We do not build toward what Christ already is in us. We kneel in worship as those who stand in completed union. We do not describe ourselves as broken while He lives within us. Christ in us is not lacking restoration. We align with His finished state, and we speak from that reality. We do not treat healing as distant when wholeness dwells in us now.
We affirm that the same Christ who walked in visible healing lives in us now. We do not separate His works from His presence in us. We kneel in worship, acknowledging that His life is active within us. As it is written, “Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, KJV). We do not reduce this truth to concept. We declare it as present function. His indwelling life expresses the same authority now through us.
We reject the thought that our bodies are outside the reach of Christ’s life. We do not divide spirit and body as if Christ only touches one part. We kneel in worship as those whose whole being is occupied by Him. We declare that His life fills every part of us. We do not allow any area to remain labeled as unreachable. Christ in us is complete, and His completeness addresses every condition within us.
We establish that union means participation in His life now. We do not observe Christ from a distance. We kneel in worship as those who share in His life actively. As it is written, “He that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit” (1 Corinthians 6:17, KJV). We do not treat this union as symbolic. We declare it as functional reality. His life operates within us now, not as potential, but as present truth.
We refuse to call ourselves victims of condition when Christ lives in us. We do not adopt identity from symptoms. We kneel in worship as those who receive identity from Christ alone. We declare that we are defined by His life, not by what we feel or see. We do not yield our identity to sickness. Christ in us establishes us as whole, and we stand in that identity without compromise.
We declare that wholeness is not approaching but present. We do not wait for Christ to become what He already is in us. We kneel in worship as those who recognize and receive His life now. We do not defer manifestation to time. We stand in union, and we declare that health flows because Christ lives in us as present, active, unchanging wholeness.
Chapter 4: We Receive Health Before It Is Seen
We declare that we receive health before it appears in the body. We do not wait for visible change to confirm truth. We kneel in worship as those who believe that we receive now. Christ in us is the basis of our confidence, not what we see. We do not require evidence before agreement. We establish that receiving is present, because Christ is present. What we receive is not formed by sight but by union with Him.
We reject the lie that manifestation must be felt before it is real. We do not depend on sensation to validate truth. We kneel in worship as those who receive beyond feeling. Christ in us defines reality, not our senses. We do not measure truth by comfort or discomfort. We align with His presence, and we declare that what we receive is real before the body reflects it.
We establish that believing is the point of reception. We do not separate belief from possession. We kneel in worship as those who take hold now. As it 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 act on this word as present instruction. We receive now, and we expect manifestation to follow because Christ is present within us.
We reject the idea that time must pass before healing begins. We do not assign delay to what Christ has completed. We kneel in worship as those who live in immediacy. We declare that receiving is not postponed. Christ in us does not operate on delay. We do not allow time to redefine truth. We stand in present reception, knowing that what we receive is established now.
We confront the thought that symptoms cancel what we receive. We do not withdraw belief when the body speaks otherwise. We kneel in worship as those who remain aligned with Christ. We do not reverse our agreement because of appearance. Christ in us remains unchanged, and our reception remains firm. We do not let contradiction move us away from truth.
We affirm that faith holds what it receives. We do not release what we have taken hold of in Christ. We kneel in worship as those who stand in agreement without wavering. As it is written, “For we walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7, KJV). We live by this reality now. We do not shift based on what is seen. We remain anchored in what we have received.
We declare that receiving produces manifestation. We do not separate the two. We kneel in worship, confident that what we receive answers in visible form. We do not question the outcome. Christ in us is the guarantee of what we receive. We stand in present faith, and we declare that health comes forth because we receive now in full agreement with His indwelling life.
Chapter 5: We Speak Healing as We Bow in Worship
We declare that our worship is not passive but filled with authority. We do not kneel as those without voice. We kneel in worship and we speak from union with Christ. Our words do not beg or hesitate. Christ in us speaks through us, and His life carries power. We do not separate worship from authority. As we bow, we release truth. Healing answers the voice of Christ expressed through us, and we do not withhold that expression.
We reject the idea that silence is humility. We do not remain quiet in the presence of sickness. We kneel in worship and we speak directly to the condition. We do not describe the problem; we address it. Christ in us does not observe sickness; He answers it. We align with His authority and we release it in clear command. We do not ask sickness to consider leaving. We declare its end because Christ is present within us.
We establish that asking flows from union, not distance. We do not reach upward as if Christ were far. We kneel in worship as those in whom Christ dwells. As it is written, “If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you” (John 15:7, KJV). We ask from abiding, and we expect answer because Christ is active within us now.
We speak directly to the body with authority. We do not hesitate or soften truth. We kneel in worship and we command restoration. We speak to bones, blood, tissue, nerves, and function. We do not plead; we declare. Christ in us is the source of wholeness, and we release that wholeness through our words. We do not allow any part of the body to remain outside of His life.
We reject uncertainty in our speaking. We do not mix doubt with declaration. We kneel in worship as those who speak with clarity. As it is written, “They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:18, KJV). We act on this word as present instruction. We lay hands, we speak, and we expect recovery because Christ in us fulfills what He has spoken.
We establish that blessing and commanding are aligned. We do not separate compassion from authority. We kneel in worship and we release both. We bless the body and we command sickness to leave. We do not divide tone from truth. Christ in us expresses both authority and life. We speak from that union, and our words carry His nature and power together.
We declare that our worship releases manifestation. We do not treat worship as isolated from result. We kneel in worship and we act in authority. We speak, we lay hands, and we stand firm. We do not withdraw or reconsider. Christ in us answers through us, and we expect visible healing because His life is expressed as we worship and speak.
Chapter 6: We Witness Healing Yield Where Christ Is Expressed
We declare that healing yields where Christ is expressed through us. We do not separate His life from visible result. We kneel in worship and we witness conditions change. Sickness does not remain where Christ is revealed. We do not treat healing as rare or uncertain. Christ in us is consistent, and His expression produces result. We stand as those through whom His life is seen, and we expect manifestation wherever we act in His name.
We affirm that the works of Jesus continue through us now. We do not treat them as distant history. We kneel in worship and we act in present authority. As it is written, “He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also” (John 14:12, KJV). We do not delay this truth. We walk in it now. Christ in us expresses the same life, and healing answers as we move in union.
We reject the idea that some conditions are resistant beyond answer. We do not categorize sickness as too advanced or too complex. We kneel in worship and we confront every condition with Christ’s authority. We do not allow severity to define outcome. Christ in us is not limited by degree. We declare that every condition answers to His life, and we stand firm in that truth.
We witness bodies respond to His presence. We do not remain theoretical. We kneel in worship and we observe change. Pain leaves, strength returns, and function restores. We do not treat these as exceptions. Christ in us is the source of these outcomes. We do not question what He expresses. We acknowledge it and we continue in it.
We establish that obedience releases manifestation. We do not delay action. We kneel in worship and we move as Christ leads. As it is written, “And they went forth, and preached every where, the Lord working with them, and confirming the word with signs following” (Mark 16:20, KJV). We act, and Christ confirms. We do not separate speaking from result.
We reject passivity that waits without action. We do not remain inactive while claiming faith. We kneel in worship and we act immediately. We lay hands, we speak, and we stand. Christ in us is expressed through action, not delay. We do not hold back. We release what is within us, and healing answers.
We declare that manifestation follows expression. We do not doubt the outcome. We kneel in worship and we walk in authority. Christ in us is seen through us, and healing yields as we remain aligned. We continue without hesitation, knowing that His life is active and effective now.
Chapter 7: We Rise Commissioned in Worship and Power
We rise from worship as those fully commissioned in Christ. We do not remain stationary. We kneel and we rise in the same authority. We go as those in whom Christ lives now. We do not wait for further confirmation. We ask in faith, we believe that we receive, and we move. Christ in us is the sending and the power. We walk as His expression, and we carry His life into every place we go.
We speak to the mountain and we do not retreat. We command sickness to leave and we do not reconsider. We lay hands on the sick and we expect recovery. We do not hesitate or soften our command. As it is written, “All things are possible to him that believeth” (Mark 9:23, KJV). We believe, and we act in full agreement with this truth now.
We refuse to call impossible what Christ indwells. We do not accept limits placed by appearance. We rise from worship and we confront every condition. We do not negotiate with sickness. We declare its end and we stand firm. Christ in us is not challenged by difficulty. We move in confidence, knowing that His life answers every condition we face.
We command the body to align with Christ. We speak to organs, tissue, blood, and structure. We declare restoration, strength, and function. We do not speak loosely. We speak with precision and authority. Christ in us defines what we say, and what we say carries His life. We expect immediate response because He is present now within us.
We lay hands with confidence and clarity. We do not act uncertainly. We rise from worship and we release Christ through touch and word. As it is written, “They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:18, KJV). We fulfill this now. We do not delay, and we do not question. We act and we expect result.
We continue without interruption. We do not stop because of resistance. We rise from worship and we persist in truth. Christ in us is constant, and we remain aligned. We do not withdraw or reduce expectation. We continue to speak, act, and stand until every condition answers. We do not accept partial agreement. We move in full authority.
We go as those who carry Christ in full expression. We ask in faith, we believe that we receive, we speak with authority, and we act without delay. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We walk as Christ, and we release His life everywhere. Healing comes forth as we worship, rise, and move in Him.