Book cover

We Reach and Release Bodily Health

We Reach and Release Bodily Health declares that Christ in us heals now as we extend our arms in faith and action. We do not wait for change to begin; we minister health from union. As we reach, we release what is already present. Bodily affliction does not override Christ in us, and healing flows through us into every condition now.

AI418

Chapter 1: We Refuse the Lie of Untouchable Affliction

We refuse the lie that bodily affliction holds authority where Christ dwells in us. We do not accept sickness, damage, or pain as immovable realities. Christ in us is present now, and His presence is not restricted by visible conditions. We do not measure truth by symptoms or diagnosis. We measure truth by Christ Himself. What appears fixed is not final where Christ lives in us. We stand in the truth that the impossible does not govern us. We do not call any condition untouchable, because Christ in us has already overcome all limitation and resistance.

We reject the idea that the body can resist Christ. The body does not outrank the indwelling life of Christ. We do not yield to the testimony of pain, weakness, or dysfunction. We acknowledge what is seen, but we do not bow to it. Christ in us speaks louder than every report. We do not allow affliction to define what is possible. We declare that Christ in us is active, present, and sufficient now. We do not wait for change to begin before we believe. We believe because Christ is already present within us now.

We do not separate Christ from bodily reality. Christ in us touches every part of our being, including the body. We do not treat healing as distant or reserved. We do not postpone what Christ has already made present. We do not say that some conditions are beyond reach. We reject every boundary that attempts to limit Christ in us. We affirm that no sickness stands outside His authority. We stand in union, and from that union we refuse every lie that says healing cannot reach the body now.

We believe what is written, that with God nothing shall be impossible (Luke 1:37, KJV). We do not reinterpret this truth through the lens of limitation. We do not reduce its meaning to fit visible conditions. Christ in us is the living expression of this truth. We do not stand outside of possibility; we stand within Christ. We do not speak as those hoping for intervention. We speak as those in whom Christ dwells now. We reject every voice that attempts to elevate impossibility above the indwelling life of Christ.

We also stand on the words of Jesus, that all things are possible to him that believeth (Mark 9:23, KJV). We do not treat belief as passive agreement. We believe from union with Christ. We believe because Christ is present in us now. We do not wait for evidence to validate belief. We believe first, and we remain established in that belief. We do not allow the body to dictate what we accept. We allow Christ in us to define what is true, and we stand in that truth without wavering.

We reject every system that teaches us to accept affliction as normal or permanent. We do not make peace with what Christ overcomes. We do not call endurance the goal when Christ in us manifests change. We do not glorify suffering as a fixed state. We honor Christ by acknowledging His present work in us. We refuse to lower our expectation. We do not negotiate with sickness. We stand in the authority of Christ in us, and we reject every lie that attempts to keep affliction in place.

We move from refusal into action. We do not remain passive in the face of affliction. We reach because Christ in us is active. We release because Christ in us flows. Our arms are not empty gestures; they are expressions of union. We do not hesitate to act. We do not wait for permission from appearance. We act from Christ in us now. As we reach, we release bodily health into affliction. We stand, we speak, and we move, knowing that Christ in us is not stopped by the impossible.

Chapter 2: We Reject Reduced Expectation in Healing

We reject every teaching that lowers expectation below Christ in us. We do not accept traditions that explain away healing or postpone it. We refuse language that suggests healing is rare, delayed, or uncertain. Christ in us is not reduced by doctrine shaped by disappointment. We do not inherit limitation from past experience. We stand in present truth. We do not measure what is possible by what we have seen. We measure by who lives in us now. Reduced expectation has no authority over us, because Christ in us defines what we expect and what we release.

We refuse fear that magnifies diagnosis above Christ. We do not allow medical conclusions to become final authority over the body. We respect knowledge, but we do not submit to limitation. Christ in us remains the higher truth. We do not fear conditions that appear advanced, chronic, or resistant. We do not adjust our expectation to match severity. We remain fixed in Christ. Fear does not guide us; union does. We do not shrink back when facing affliction. We move forward with clarity, knowing Christ in us is not diminished by any report.

We reject unbelief disguised as wisdom. We do not call caution what is actually doubt. We do not accept guarded language that protects disappointment. Christ in us is not fragile. We do not shield ourselves from hope. We stand boldly in truth. We do not speak in uncertainty. We speak from union. Unbelief has no place in our confession. We do not balance faith with doubt. We remain established in Christ. What He is in us defines what we declare. We reject every internal agreement that contradicts His present healing life.

We stand on what Jesus said, that we believe that we receive when we pray (Mark 11:24, KJV). We do not delay reception until manifestation appears. We receive now. We do not wait for symptoms to change before we accept truth. We accept truth because Christ is present. Our expectation flows from this receiving. We do not pray hoping to receive later. We pray knowing we receive now. This establishes our expectation at the level of Christ, not at the level of circumstance or delay.

We also affirm that Christ in us is the hope of glory (Colossians 1:27, KJV). This hope is not distant. It is present and active. We do not interpret hope as waiting. We interpret hope as confident expectation rooted in Christ within us. We do not separate glory from the body. Christ in us touches every part of our being. We expect visible expression because Christ is not hidden in effect. We do not lower expectation to protect ourselves. We remain aligned with the fullness of Christ in us now.

We reject the pattern of explaining why healing did not happen. We do not build theology around lack of manifestation. We build on Christ. We do not analyze failure to redefine truth. We return to union and stand there. We do not accept compromise. We do not say that some are healed and some are not as a final statement. We declare Christ in us as consistent. We remain anchored in Him. Reduced expectation dissolves as we remain in the truth of His indwelling presence and power.

We move forward with restored expectation. We reach with confidence, not hesitation. We release healing without reservation. Our arms extend from union, not uncertainty. We do not question whether Christ will act. We act because Christ is present in us. We do not limit what flows through us. We expect bodily health to answer as we minister. Our expectation is not fragile. It is rooted in Christ. We stand, we reach, and we release, knowing that healing flows through us now.

Chapter 3: We Reveal Christ in Us as Present Healing

We reveal that Christ in us is the present answer to every bodily affliction. We do not look outside ourselves for what already dwells within. Christ in us is not distant or inactive. He is present and expressing now. We do not approach healing as observers. We participate as those joined to Christ. We do not minister from emptiness. We minister from fullness. The healing we release is not borrowed; it is expressed from union. We stand in this reality and make it visible through our actions and our words.

We do not divide Christ from the body. Christ in us reaches into every system, function, and structure. We do not treat healing as separate from our identity. It flows from who we are in Him. We do not attempt to access power externally. We live from indwelling life. The same Christ who is whole lives in us now. We do not consider wholeness absent. We recognize it present. As we acknowledge Him, we reveal what is already true. The body responds as Christ is expressed through us.

We declare that we are not alone in the face of affliction. We do not stand as natural individuals trying to overcome conditions. We stand as those in whom Christ dwells. We do not carry responsibility apart from Him. We act from union. Christ in us is the active agent. We cooperate with Him. We do not strive to produce results. We express what is already present. This removes pressure and replaces it with clarity. We move with confidence because Christ in us is already sufficient.

We affirm the words of Jesus, that he that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also (John 14:12, KJV). We do not reinterpret this as symbolic. We receive it as present reality. Christ in us continues His works through us now. We do not separate His ministry from our lives. We are joined to Him. Therefore, what He does is expressed through us. We do not hesitate to act. We recognize that His works include healing, restoration, and bodily wholeness made visible.

We also stand in the truth that Christ liveth in us (Galatians 2:20, KJV). This is not a concept; it is our present condition. We do not treat this as future or partial. Christ lives in us fully now. His life is not dormant. It is active. We do not wait for activation. We are already in union. This changes how we see the body. We do not see a body separated from Christ. We see a body touched by His indwelling life. We release what is already present within us.

We do not conceal Christ through passivity. We reveal Him through action. Our arms become expressions of His life. When we reach, Christ is expressed. When we speak, Christ is heard. When we lay hands, Christ ministers. We do not separate our actions from His presence. We move as one with Him. This removes hesitation and uncertainty. We do not ask if Christ is willing. Christ in us is already willing. We act from that certainty and allow His healing to flow through us into the body.

We live as the visible expression of Christ in us. We do not hide behind theory or delay. We step forward in union. We reach and release bodily health now. We do not wait for a different moment. We act in this moment. Christ in us is present now, and we reveal Him now. As we move, healing is ministered. As we speak, wholeness is declared. As we act, the body responds. We stand in union and make Christ visible through the healing that flows from us.

Chapter 4: We Receive Before the Body Agrees

We receive bodily health before the body shows agreement. We do not wait for visible change to begin believing. Jesus teaches us to believe that we receive when we pray, not after we see results. We align with this truth. We do not make sight the condition of faith. We receive now because Christ in us is present now. The body does not authorize truth; Christ does. We stand in receiving before evidence appears. This establishes us in unshaken confidence that does not move with symptoms.

We reject the lie that manifestation must be felt first. We do not depend on sensation to confirm reality. We do not require improvement before we believe. We believe because Christ is present. Our receiving is not emotional; it is grounded in union. We do not fluctuate with the body’s condition. We remain fixed in Christ. We do not chase signs. We stand in truth. As we receive, we establish what is already true in Christ, and the body comes into alignment with that truth.

We do not call delay a requirement. We do not say that time must pass before healing appears. We receive now. We do not build expectation around process. We build on Christ. Receiving is immediate because Christ is present. We do not stretch receiving across time. We take hold now. This does not deny what we see; it places Christ above it. We do not argue with symptoms. We remain established in receiving. Our posture is settled, confident, and unwavering in Christ in us.

We stand on the words of Jesus, that when we pray, we believe that we receive (Mark 11:24, KJV). We do not reinterpret this as gradual. We accept it as immediate. We receive in the moment of asking. We do not postpone reception. This anchors us in certainty. We do not revisit whether we have received. We stand in it. Our confidence is not based on change we see, but on Christ who is present. This stabilizes our faith and removes fluctuation.

We also affirm that faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen (Hebrews 11:1, KJV). We do not treat unseen reality as less real. We recognize it as established in Christ. We do not wait for the body to confirm what faith already holds. Faith carries substance now. We stand in that substance. We do not shift back into doubt. We remain established. This keeps us aligned with Christ in us, rather than with temporary appearance or report.

We do not move backward after receiving. We do not re-evaluate based on symptoms. We remain in what we have received. We do not speak contrary to our receiving. Our words stay aligned with Christ. We do not allow frustration to enter. We remain steady. Receiving is not fragile. It is anchored in Christ. We hold firm and continue to act. As we remain, the body aligns. We do not force change; we remain in truth, and change follows.

We act from receiving. We reach with confidence because we have already received. We release healing because it is already ours in Christ. We do not act to get something. We act because we have it. Our actions reflect our receiving. We do not hesitate. We move forward in certainty. As we reach and release, bodily health is ministered. We remain grounded in Christ in us, knowing that what we have received is now expressed through us into the body.

Chapter 5: We Extend Our Arms in Authority

We extend our arms as expressions of Christ in us. We do not reach as empty vessels hoping for response. We reach as those filled with His life now. Our arms are not symbolic; they are active instruments of His authority. We do not hesitate to lay hands on the body. We do not question whether we carry what is needed. Christ in us is sufficient. We move with clarity. As we extend, we release. As we touch, we minister. Authority flows through us because Christ in us is present and active now.

We do not separate authority from action. We do not claim truth without expression. We act because we are joined to Christ. We do not wait for special conditions to minister healing. We carry Christ now. We do not postpone our reaching. We step forward immediately. Our arms move with purpose. We lay hands on the sick, and we expect response. We do not treat this as optional. It is the natural outflow of Christ in us. Authority is not theoretical; it is expressed through our actions.

We speak to the body with clarity. We do not speak as those uncertain. We command from union. We address pain, sickness, and dysfunction directly. We do not plead with conditions. We do not negotiate with affliction. We speak as those in whom Christ dwells. Our words carry authority because they flow from Him. We do not soften our voice in the face of resistance. We remain firm. As we speak, we release healing. The body hears and responds to the authority of Christ expressed through us.

We stand on what Jesus said, that they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover (Mark 16:18, KJV). We do not treat this as distant or symbolic. We receive it as instruction and reality. We lay hands, and we expect recovery. We do not add conditions. We do not delay expectation. We act in alignment with His words. As we lay hands, we release what is already present in us. Recovery is not separate from our action; it is connected to the authority of Christ in us.

We also stand in the truth that we are complete in Him (Colossians 2:10, KJV). We do not minister from lack. We do not attempt to generate power. We are already filled. Christ in us is complete, and we minister from that completeness. We do not strive to become effective. We already are in Him. This removes hesitation. We act with confidence. Our reaching is not uncertain. It is grounded in the finished reality of Christ in us, and from that place, we release bodily health.

We do not withdraw our hands when symptoms persist. We remain steady. We continue to speak, to lay hands, and to release. We do not measure effectiveness by immediate change. We remain anchored in Christ. Authority does not fluctuate. We do not retreat into doubt. We stand firm. Our arms remain extended, not in effort, but in expression. We continue until the body aligns. We do not surrender to appearance. We remain in union and continue to release what Christ in us carries.

We move outward with purpose. We do not keep this within ourselves. We reach others. We lay hands on those afflicted. We speak healing into every condition. We do not hold back. Our arms are given to extend Christ into the world. We do not wait for perfect settings. We act now. As we reach and release, bodily health flows. Christ in us is made visible through our actions. We extend, we speak, and we see the body respond to the authority we carry now.

Chapter 6: We Witness Healing Flow Through Us

We witness healing as the natural flow of Christ in us. We do not treat healing as rare or unpredictable. We expect it as the expression of His life. As we reach and release, we see change occur. Bodies respond because Christ in us is active. We do not create healing; we witness it flow. This keeps us grounded in truth. We do not take ownership of results. We remain in union. As we act, we observe the manifestation of what is already present in Christ within us.

We see pain leave as we speak. We see strength return as we lay hands. We see function restored where there was limitation. We do not treat these as unusual. We recognize them as the result of Christ expressed. We do not react with surprise. We remain steady. Healing is not an interruption; it is a continuation of His life in us. As we minister, we expect the body to align. We remain consistent, knowing Christ in us does not fail to express His nature.

We do not elevate difficulty above Christ. We do not label cases as hard or easy. We do not rank conditions. Christ in us is the same in every situation. We approach each body with the same confidence. We do not adjust our faith based on appearance. We remain fixed in union. As we minister, we see varied expressions, but the source remains the same. We do not shift our position. We remain anchored in Christ and allow His healing to flow freely through us.

We stand on the truth that Jesus went about healing all that were oppressed (Acts 10:38, KJV). We do not limit this to history. Christ in us continues this work now. We are joined to Him. Therefore, His works are expressed through us. We do not separate His ministry from our present action. We walk as He walked. We reach, we speak, and we release. Healing flows because Christ in us is active. We witness what He continues to do through us now.

We also affirm that the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up (James 5:15, KJV). We do not treat this as uncertain. We stand in it. We release faith through our actions and our words. We do not wait for another moment. We act now. As we minister, we see the sick raised up. We do not disconnect faith from outcome. We remain aligned with Christ in us, and we witness the body respond as healing is released.

We remain consistent in what we do. We do not minister once and withdraw. We continue. We speak again. We lay hands again. We remain steady. This is not repetition from doubt; it is continuation from union. We do not abandon the body to appearance. We remain engaged. As we continue, we witness change unfold. Healing is not forced; it is revealed. We stay aligned with Christ and allow His life to continue expressing through us into the body.

We live as witnesses of healing. We do not keep silent. We do not hide what Christ does. We move forward, reaching others. We extend our arms again and again. We release bodily health into every place we go. We do not wait for ideal conditions. We act now. As we move, we see healing flow. Christ in us is made visible through the restoration of the body. We witness it, we continue in it, and we remain established in this reality.

Chapter 7: We Go Forth Releasing Health Now

We go forth with boldness, not hesitation. We do not remain passive. We are sent as expressions of Christ in us. We ask in faith, and we believe that we receive now. We do not wait for confirmation. We move in certainty. Our arms extend into the world. We lay hands on the sick. We speak to the body. We command wholeness. We do not call impossible what Christ indwells. We walk as Christ, and we release bodily health into every condition we encounter.

We refuse to be silent in the presence of affliction. We speak directly. We command sickness to leave. We command pain to stop. We command function to return. We do not speak from emotion; we speak from union. Christ in us is our authority. We do not ask whether healing is available. We release it. Our words carry weight because they flow from Him. We act without delay. We move with clarity. The body responds as we speak and release what Christ in us carries now.

We ask in faith and believe that we receive (Mark 11:24, KJV). We do not revisit this. We stand in it. We do not shift back into doubt. We remain fixed. As we go, we do not question whether we have what is needed. Christ in us is enough. We act from this place. We lay hands and expect response. We do not lower expectation. We remain aligned with truth. Receiving fuels our action, and our action releases what we have already received.

We also stand in the truth that we shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover (Mark 16:18, KJV). We do this. We do not delay. We do not hesitate. We lay hands now. We speak now. We act now. Recovery is not separate from our obedience. As we go, we release healing. We do not hold back. We do not question. We move as those sent. Christ in us is expressed through us, and the body responds as we minister.

We walk into every place with readiness. We do not prepare to become effective. We are already joined to Christ. We act immediately. We do not wait for ideal conditions. We move in daily life. We reach people where they are. We lay hands without hesitation. We speak with authority. We release bodily health into every situation. We do not shrink back. We move forward as those commissioned. Christ in us is revealed through our obedience and action now.

We refuse visible finality. We do not accept any condition as beyond change. We do not call anything permanent. Christ in us overrides every limitation. We speak to the body again and again. We remain firm. We do not yield to resistance. We stand in authority. As we continue, we see change. We do not measure progress by appearance. We remain in truth. The body aligns as we persist in releasing what Christ in us carries.

We go, we reach, we lay hands, we speak, we command, and we release. We do not stop. We do not retreat. We remain active. Christ in us is not hidden. We make Him visible through healing. We carry this into every place. We act now. We release now. We walk as Christ now. Bodily health flows through us into affliction, and we remain established in this commission without hesitation or delay.