Book cover

We Sit Until Bodies Answer Christ

We Sit Until Bodies Answer Christ declares that Christ reigning within us releases restoration into bodies, land, and created order now. We do not bow to damage or weakness. We receive before sight confirms. From seated authority, we speak, bless, and command restoration. Creation answers Christ in us with visible repair, strength, and order as we walk in present-tense union and reign.

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Chapter 1: We Sit Above the Lie of Ruined Creation

We sit with Christ in authority, and we refuse the lie that damage in bodies or disorder in creation holds final power. We do not accept weakness as ruling truth. We do not accept broken function as a fixed outcome. Christ in us is present now, and His reign is not limited by what appears damaged or diminished. We sit crowned with Him, and from that position we see clearly that no condition in body or creation outranks Christ. What appears ruined does not define reality where Christ dwells in us.

We recognize that the curse touched the ground, but we also recognize that Christ bore that curse. The thorns placed upon His head testify that He carried what entered creation through disobedience. We do not separate His work from the earth or from the body. We sit in the knowledge that what He bore, He removed as ruling authority. “Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us” (Galatians 3:13, KJV). We sit in that finished reality now.

We do not let visible weakness in the body or visible disorder in the environment speak louder than Christ in us. We do not let pain, deterioration, or imbalance define what is true. We are not observers of brokenness; we are carriers of Christ’s reign. As we sit, we align with what is already established in Him. Christ is not diminished. Christ is not weakened. Christ is not subject to decay. Therefore, what He indwells is not abandoned to decay as final authority.

We reject the idea that time, history, or damage has the last word. We do not say that something has gone too far to be restored. We do not call anything permanently ruined where Christ is present. Creation groans, but it does not groan without answer. We are that answer in Him. “For the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God” (Romans 8:19, KJV). We sit as those who manifest Him now.

We understand that sitting with Christ is not passive. Sitting is reigning. Sitting is governing. Sitting is alignment with finished authority. From this position, we do not strive to become powerful. We express the power already present in Christ within us. We do not descend into the condition to agree with it. We remain seated and release Christ into it. The throne defines the outcome, not the condition. We sit until bodies and creation answer that throne.

We do not call anything impossible that Christ indwells. We do not agree with limitation. We do not confess restriction. We do not yield to appearances that contradict Christ’s present reign. What is damaged does not resist Him. What is weakened does not overpower Him. We sit and know that restoration is not a distant concept but a present expression of Christ in us. We are not waiting for permission. We are aligned with what is already true in Him.

We sit crowned with Christ, and from that place we declare that bodies respond, creation responds, and order returns. We do not move from fear. We do not move from uncertainty. We move from union. We sit until what appears broken aligns with what is established in Christ. We do not rise to chase outcomes; we remain in Him and release what is already finished. Bodies answer Christ. Creation answers Christ. We sit, and Christ is expressed.

Chapter 2: We Reject Small Expectation Over the Earth

We reject every teaching that lowers expectation beneath Christ’s present reign in us. We do not accept reduced outcomes as normal. We do not accept that bodies remain weakened or that creation remains disordered as an unchangeable condition. We refuse small expectation that agrees with visible limitation. Christ in us defines expectation. We do not measure possibility by what we see. We measure by who indwells us. We sit in authority and reject every voice that teaches us to expect less than restoration, order, and visible answer through Christ in us now.

We expose religious patterns that separated the cross from creation and limited its effect to inward ideas. We do not accept that Christ’s work stops at the unseen while leaving bodies and the earth untouched. We reject the teaching that says restoration belongs only to a distant future. Christ bore the curse completely, and we do not divide what He accomplished. “Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree” (Galatians 3:13, KJV). We sit in the fullness of that work and expect it to touch what was damaged.

We reject fear that elevates natural processes above Christ. We do not fear deterioration, cycles of decay, or inherited weakness. We do not call them permanent. We do not honor them as authority. Christ in us is not subject to those patterns. We do not let knowledge that excludes Christ define what is possible. We do not accept conclusions that contradict His presence. We sit and allow Christ to define what is true. Fear loses voice where Christ is recognized as present authority in us.

We reject tradition that taught us to tolerate what Christ answers. We do not accept language that delays manifestation or excuses lack of visible change. We do not say that restoration is uncertain. We do not say that bodies must remain weakened. We do not say that creation must remain disordered. We refuse every form of unbelief that agrees with the condition over Christ. We sit and renew expectation according to Him. Our expectation is not shaped by history but by His indwelling life now.

We do not separate ourselves from what creation waits to see. We do not speak as observers of the earth’s condition. We speak as those through whom Christ is revealed. Creation does not wait for improvement; creation waits for manifestation. “Because the creature itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God” (Romans 8:21, KJV). We sit as those who carry that liberty now, and we release it without hesitation.

We reject the idea that visible proof must come before believing. We do not require evidence to agree with Christ. We believe because Christ is present. We receive before sight confirms. We do not adjust expectation downward to match what we see. We adjust what we see by what we know in Him. Sitting with Christ establishes our confidence. We do not fluctuate with appearance. We remain steady in union, and from that place, expectation remains full and unmoved.

We sit and expect bodies to answer Christ. We sit and expect land, systems, and living order to respond to His reign. We do not lower expectation to protect ourselves from disappointment. We remain aligned with truth. Christ in us is not uncertain. Christ in us is not limited. We reject every small thought and every reduced expectation. We sit crowned, and from that place we hold full expectation that restoration appears where Christ is revealed through us.

Chapter 3: We Reign With Christ Over Groaning Order

We reign with Christ now, and we do not stand outside creation as distant observers. We are joined with Him, and His authority is active in us. We do not approach groaning creation as powerless. We approach as those in whom Christ dwells. We do not face disorder alone. We do not face weakness alone. Christ in us is present authority, and we reign with Him over what appears broken. Sitting with Him establishes our position, and from that place we release what is already true in Him.

We recognize that creation groans under what entered through the fall, yet we do not accept that groaning as final authority. We do not interpret groaning as permanence. We understand it as expectation. Creation anticipates expression, and we are that expression in Christ. “For we know that the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now” (Romans 8:22, KJV). We do not ignore the groan, but we answer it through Christ in us. We reign as the response.

We do not reduce Christ in us to inward comfort while leaving outward conditions untouched. We recognize Him as Lord over all that was affected. We do not confine His reign to thoughts or feelings. His reign extends through us into what is visible. Bodies, environments, and living systems are not outside His reach. We sit and release that reign. We do not strive to bring Christ near. We manifest the One who is already present in us now.

We do not approach restoration as effort. We approach it as expression. Christ does not struggle to restore. Christ expresses wholeness. We align with that expression. We do not labor to produce outcomes. We release what is already established in Him. We sit in union, and from that union, restoration flows. What appears disordered does not intimidate Christ. Therefore, it does not intimidate us. We reign without hesitation because we are joined to Him who is complete.

We do not separate the body from creation in our understanding of restoration. What touches one touches the other. The same Christ restores both. We do not limit His work to one area. We recognize His authority across all that was affected. “The earth is the LORD’S, and the fulness thereof” (Psalm 24:1, KJV). We sit in that truth and release His order into every place we encounter. Nothing lies outside His dominion, and nothing resists His presence in us.

We reign by remaining seated in Him. We do not descend into agreement with disorder. We do not speak from beneath conditions. We speak from the throne. Our words carry the authority of union. Our presence carries the authority of Christ. We do not wait for signs to confirm our position. We act from what is already established. Sitting with Christ is active governance. From this place, we release restoration without delay or uncertainty.

We sit and reign, and as we do, creation responds. We do not force outcomes. We express Christ. Bodies respond to His life in us. Environments respond to His order in us. We do not question whether He is sufficient. We know that He is present. We reign over groaning order, and we release what answers that groan. We sit crowned, and through us, Christ is made visible as restoration in what was weakened and disordered.

Chapter 4: We Receive Restoration Before Sight Agrees

We receive restoration now, and we do not wait for sight to authorize what Christ has already established. We believe before we see. We do not depend on visible change to confirm truth. Christ in us is the basis of our receiving. We sit in Him and receive fully. We do not measure reality by appearance. We measure by union. What He is, we receive. What He carries, we receive. Restoration is not distant. It is present in Christ, and we receive it now.

We follow the words of Jesus and believe that we receive when we ask. We do not delay receiving until evidence appears. We receive in the moment of alignment with Him. “What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them” (Mark 11:24, KJV). We sit in that instruction and act upon it. We do not shift into doubt when sight is unchanged. We remain in receiving because Christ is unchanged.

We do not allow the body or environment to dictate what we receive. We do not wait for improvement before we agree with Christ. We agree first. We receive first. We do not negotiate with appearance. We do not adjust truth to match what is seen. We remain firm in receiving. Sitting with Christ anchors us in what is already done. From that place, we do not move. We hold what we receive without wavering, because Christ in us is stable and complete.

We receive restoration into bodies without requiring immediate visible confirmation. We receive order into creation without waiting for full outward alignment. We understand that faith receives ahead of sight. We do not treat unseen reality as less real. We treat it as governing. “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). We sit in that evidence and allow it to shape what appears.

We do not speak as those uncertain of receiving. We speak as those who have received. Our words align with what is established in Christ. We do not describe ourselves as waiting. We describe ourselves as possessing what He provides. We do not confess lack. We confess fullness in Him. Sitting with Christ fixes our language. We speak from union, not from observation. What we say reflects what we have received, not what we are still expecting to gain.

We remain steady in receiving even when conditions attempt to contradict. We do not react to delay. We do not interpret resistance as failure. We remain in Christ, and we remain in receiving. We do not abandon what we have received because sight has not yet aligned. We continue in agreement. Sitting with Christ keeps us anchored. We do not drift into doubt. We remain in truth, and from that place, manifestation proceeds.

We sit and receive restoration, and from that place we release it. We do not separate receiving from expression. What we receive, we speak. What we receive, we act upon. Bodies answer what we receive. Creation aligns with what we receive. We do not step out of receiving into uncertainty. We remain seated, confident, and aligned. We receive before sight agrees, and we continue in that receiving until what is visible aligns with Christ in us.

Chapter 5: We Speak as Kings Over Land and Body

We speak as those seated with Christ, and our words carry the authority of His reign. We do not speak as observers. We do not speak as those beneath conditions. We speak as those crowned with Him. Our words are not empty. Our words release what is established in Christ. We do not wait for the body or the environment to change before we speak. We speak because Christ in us is present authority. From this seated place, we declare restoration into what appears weakened, and we do so with certainty.

We ask in faith, and we believe that we receive as we ask. We do not ask from doubt. We do not ask from distance. We ask from union. “And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive” (Matthew 21:22, KJV). We sit in that instruction and act upon it. Our asking is not a request for possibility. Our asking is agreement with what Christ already carries. We ask, and we receive. We speak, and we release what we have received.

We bless the ground, and we bless the body. We do not curse what Christ has redeemed. We do not agree with disorder. We speak peace into what is unsettled. We declare fruitfulness where there has been barrenness. We command strength where there has been weakness. We do not hesitate in our words. We do not soften what Christ establishes. We speak clearly and directly. Our words align with His reign, and through us, restoration is released into what hears.

We command with authority because we are in Christ. We do not command from effort. We command from union. We speak to the body, and we speak to the environment, and we expect response. “And Jesus rebuked the wind, and said unto the sea, Peace, be still” (Mark 4:39, KJV). We follow His pattern. We do not negotiate with disorder. We speak peace. We speak order. We speak restoration. What hears Christ in us responds to Christ in us.

We stand in what we have spoken. We do not withdraw our words. We do not reverse our declarations. We remain aligned with what we have released. Sitting with Christ stabilizes our speech. We do not fluctuate between agreement and doubt. We remain consistent. Our words continue to carry authority because they flow from union. We do not look for permission to continue speaking. We are already positioned in authority, and we remain there as we speak.

We do not speak occasionally. We speak continually from our seated place. Our language is shaped by Christ in us. We do not speak weakness. We do not speak defeat. We do not speak limitation. We speak what aligns with His reign. Bodies hear that language. Creation hears that language. We do not separate our words from their effect. Our words are instruments of release. What we speak carries the substance of what we have received in Him.

We sit and speak as kings, and from that place, restoration flows. We do not strive to produce outcomes. We release what is already established. We speak until bodies answer Christ. We speak until creation aligns with His order. We do not retreat into silence. We remain active in our speaking. From the throne, we release His reign, and what is weakened responds with restoration as Christ is expressed through us.

Chapter 6: We Witness Creation Yield to Christ in Us

We witness creation respond to Christ in us, and we do not treat restoration as distant or rare. We recognize that what is impossible with man yields where Christ is present. We do not stand as spectators. We stand as participants in His expression. We see bodies strengthened. We see order restored. We see what was weakened respond to His life in us. We do not call these things unusual. We call them consistent with Christ. We witness restoration because Christ in us is active now.

We see the pattern of Jesus, and we walk in that same authority. We do not separate ourselves from His works. We recognize that His life continues through us. “The works that I do shall he do also” (John 14:12, KJV). We sit in that truth and act accordingly. We do not question whether restoration can appear. We release it because Christ is present. What He did, we express. What He revealed, we continue. We witness creation yield as we remain in Him.

We see peace replace disorder. We see stability replace imbalance. We see fruitfulness where there was barrenness. We do not attribute these things to chance. We recognize them as responses to Christ in us. We do not exaggerate. We do not minimize. We simply acknowledge what aligns with Him. As we sit and reign, what is around us begins to align. Creation responds to His presence expressed through us, and we witness that response with clarity and confidence.

We see bodies answer Christ. We see strength return. We see function restored. We do not call this extraordinary. We call it the expression of His life. “They shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover” (Mark 16:18, KJV). We sit in that promise and observe its fulfillment. We do not separate promise from manifestation. We see both as united in Christ. As we act in union, what is spoken and released becomes visible in what responds.

We do not take credit for what we witness. We recognize Christ as the source. We remain in humility without lowering authority. We do not detach from what is happening. We remain aligned with Him as the one expressed. We witness without pride and without doubt. We continue in the same posture. Sitting with Christ keeps us steady. We do not shift into self-focus. We remain in union, and we continue to see restoration as His life flows through us.

We do not limit what can respond. We do not restrict restoration to certain areas. We allow Christ to be expressed fully. What we encounter becomes a place of manifestation. We do not hold back. We do not hesitate. We remain open to His expression in every setting. We witness creation yield, not because of circumstance, but because Christ in us is present. We remain available, and through us, restoration continues to appear.

We sit and witness, and as we do, we continue to act. We do not become passive because we see results. We remain engaged. We continue to speak. We continue to bless. We continue to release. What we witness strengthens our alignment, but it does not define our authority. Christ defines it. We sit in Him, and we witness creation yield again and again as His life is expressed through us into what was weakened.

Chapter 7: We Commission Restoration Through Our Reign

We rise in boldness while remaining seated in Christ, and we move as those commissioned to release restoration. We do not wait for further confirmation. We act now. We ask in faith. We believe that we receive. We walk as Christ in the earth. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We carry His reign into every place we encounter. We are not sent later. We are sent now. We move from union, and we release restoration into bodies and creation without hesitation.

We speak peace into the land, and we bless the ground. We do not accept barrenness. We do not accept disorder. We declare fruitfulness. We declare stability. We speak Christ’s order into what is unsettled. “The wilderness and the solitary place shall be glad for them; and the desert shall rejoice, and blossom as the rose” (Isaiah 35:1, KJV). We speak in agreement with that reality, and we release it into what we encounter. We command the earth to answer Christ.

We speak to bodies, and we command restoration. We do not hesitate. We do not soften our words. We declare strength. We declare function. We declare wholeness. We do not accept weakness as final. “Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee” (Acts 3:6, KJV). We give what we carry. We release Christ. We command bodies to align with His life. We speak directly, and we expect response because Christ in us is present authority.

We refuse the permanence of the curse. We do not agree with decay. We do not agree with disorder. We stand as those through whom Christ is revealed. We walk as sons in the earth, and creation responds. We do not withdraw. We advance in His authority. We do not retreat into silence. We remain active in speaking, blessing, and commanding. We reveal His reign through action. What we release is not uncertain. It is established in Christ.

We move into places and release restoration without delay. We do not wait for ideal conditions. We do not wait for visible signs. We act because Christ is present. We speak over homes, over land, over systems, and over bodies. We declare alignment with His reign. We do not ask whether it is possible. We know that Christ in us answers what we encounter. We walk in that knowing, and we release restoration as we go.

We remain steadfast in what we release. We do not reverse our words. We do not retreat from our position. We continue in alignment. We continue in speaking. We continue in acting. Sitting with Christ anchors us. We do not drift into doubt. We remain fixed in union. From that place, restoration continues to flow. We do not measure by immediate appearance. We measure by Christ in us, and we continue until what is visible aligns.

We are commissioned. We ask. We believe that we receive. We walk as Christ. We speak peace into the land. We bless the ground. We declare fruitfulness. We speak order into disorder. We call barren places to answer Christ. We refuse visible finality. We speak to bodies. We command wholeness. We release restoration. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We go, and through us, Christ is revealed as restoration in all we encounter.