
We See Through the Last Objection
We See Through the Last Objection declares that Christ in us reveals truth beyond the last objection of impossibility. We see from His finished victory, not from fear, delay, or visible resistance. His light within us exposes every false argument, strengthens our corporate sight, and moves us into bold action as His authority speaks through us.
AL320
Chapter 1: The Objection Loses Its Voice
The last objection begins as a lie against our union with Christ. It says we are standing outside His power, outside His sight, and outside His action. We refuse that lie because Christ lives in us and reveals truth through us today. We do not look at impossibility as strangers to the resurrection. We see from the risen Lord who has already conquered sin, sickness, bondage, death, lack, and darkness. His finished work gives our eyes their government. We do not bow to the argument that says the problem is too large.
The objection tries to sound wise, but fear dressed as wisdom is still fear. It studies the wall, measures the delay, counts the failures, and names the situation final. We are not ruled by that language. We walk by faith, not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:7, KJV). Faith is not denial of what appears; faith is agreement with Christ above what appears. His truth forms our sight, His Word steadies our speech, and His authority answers through us when visible conditions demand surrender.
We do not accept the voice that says our eyes are only natural. Christ within us has made us children of light, and His light exposes darkness without fear. We do not stare at symptoms until they become lords. We do not stare at bondage until it becomes identity. We do not stare at lack until it becomes law. The natural report may describe a condition, but it cannot define the throne. Christ in us reveals the higher verdict, and our sight comes under His dominion.
The old objection says, “This case is different.” Christ in us answers, “His dominion is not different.” The old objection says, “This has remained too long.” Christ in us answers, “His life is not weakened by time.” The old objection says, “This cannot change.” Christ in us answers, “All things are possible through the authority of the risen Lord expressed through us today.” We do not argue from human ability. We answer from Christ’s finished work, His present life, and His unshaken reign.
Jesus said all things are possible to him that believeth (Mark 9:23, KJV). We receive that word as the language of union, not as pressure upon human effort. Christ Himself is the faithful One living through us. His certainty carries us beyond the last objection. We do not manufacture confidence from ourselves. We agree with the Son of God in us. His faithfulness is expressed through our words, our hands, our steps, and our obedience. Impossibility loses its final voice when Christ speaks through us.
We see through the last objection because Christ is not beneath it. He is above every name that is named, and His life in us refuses the false authority of visible resistance. We do not need darkness to explain itself before light acts. We do not need the mountain to shrink before Christ’s authority speaks. We do not need the captive to appear free before His freedom is declared. Revelation does not wait for permission from the problem. Revelation carries the verdict of the King.
Our sight is not weak because Christ is not weak. Our speech is not empty because Christ’s Word lives in us. Our action is not independent because Christ is the source moving through us today. We refuse the objection, expose the lie, and agree with truth. We see sickness beneath His stripes, bondage beneath His freedom, lack beneath His supply, and death beneath His resurrection. We look from Christ, speak through Christ, and act as His living body in the earth.
Chapter 2: The Delay Language Breaks
Religion taught delay where Christ gave union. Fear taught hesitation where Christ gave authority. Misunderstanding taught distance where Christ gave indwelling. We reject every voice that trained us to stare at impossibility while calling passivity humility. Christ did not join us to Himself so we could wait outside the works of God. He lives in us today, and His life breaks delay language from our mouths. We do not honor traditions that make inactivity sound holy. We honor the risen Lord by agreeing with His present command.
Separation language made the last objection sound stronger than Christ within us. It said God was far, power was rare, authority belonged elsewhere, and action required another season. That language does not come from the finished work. Jesus said, “He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also” (John 14:12, KJV). We receive His words as present truth. Christ speaks through us, sees through us, and reaches through us. His command is not postponed by our former vocabulary.
Fear often hides behind careful speech. It says, “We should not presume,” while refusing what Christ already said. It says, “We should wait,” while need stands before us. It says, “We should be cautious,” while oppression continues speaking. We reject fear’s imitation of wisdom. Wisdom begins with agreement with God. Christ in us is not reckless, but He is never passive before darkness. His compassion moves with authority. His authority moves with mercy. His mercy moves through us without asking fear for approval.
The old habit of delay made the impossible appear permanent. It trained our eyes to accept long conditions as final conditions. We break that training today because Christ’s truth is stronger than religious habit. The length of a battle does not outrank the victory of the cross. The depth of a need does not outrank the fullness of Christ. The history of bondage does not outrank the name of Jesus. We do not let time become a teacher above the Lord who conquered death.
We are not servants of religious phrases that weaken action. We do not speak as though Christ must arrive from a distance. We do not speak as though His Spirit must be persuaded to care. The kingdom of God is not in word, but in power (1 Corinthians 4:20, KJV). That power is not self-originating in us. It is Christ expressed through us. We speak from His nearness, lay hands from His compassion, and command freedom from His throne.
Misunderstanding loses strength when truth becomes clear. We are not trying to become vessels after enough delay. We are the body through whom Christ manifests His life. We are not building a case for worthiness. We stand in His righteousness. We are not asking impossibility to approve our obedience. We act because His Word governs us. When the last objection says, “Not yet,” Christ in us answers with finished work. His life through us is the answer to hesitation.
Delay language breaks because Christ is present in us today. Fear language breaks because perfect love has claimed our voice. Separation language breaks because we are one Spirit with the Lord. We no longer train our eyes to expect defeat before action. We see through the objection and move with Christ’s authority. We do not call passivity patience. We do not call silence wisdom. We do not call fear discernment. We call Christ Lord, and His Lordship speaks through us.
Chapter 3: Our Sight Is Joined to Christ
Our identity is not formed by the objection we face. Our identity is established in Christ, and His life governs our sight. We are not a weak company looking upward from separation. We are joined to the Lord as one Spirit, and His truth lives in us today. The impossible does not define us. Delay does not define us. Opposition does not define us. Christ defines us. His righteousness, wisdom, authority, and compassion are not distant resources; they are His life expressed through His body.
We see differently because we are born of God. Old sight measured from Adam, weakness, fear, history, and visible decline. New sight measures from Christ, resurrection, dominion, mercy, and finished victory. If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature (2 Corinthians 5:17, KJV). We stand in that new creation reality together. The old creation cannot provide the final interpretation of any need before us. Christ in us interprets every need through redemption, restoration, and the authority of His name.
The last objection attacks identity because identity governs action. If it can convince us we are separate, it can train us into silence. If it can convince us we are powerless, it can make need appear untouchable. We refuse its accusation. Christ is not ashamed to live in us. His Spirit bears witness with our spirit. His Word renews our thinking. His love removes fear. His authority steadies our speech. We see ourselves in Him, and that sight becomes action through Him today.
We are not trying to borrow authority from heaven as outsiders. We are seated with Christ by grace, and His victory names our position. Raised-up life changes the way we see every contradiction. We do not stare from below the situation. We look from union with the risen Son. God hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus (Ephesians 2:6, KJV). This truth rules our eyes, our words, our hands, and our movement.
Our corporate voice carries His identity because His Spirit has made us one body. We do not stand as isolated witnesses trying to prove ourselves. We stand as Christ’s living expression in the earth. His eyes of mercy see through us. His truth exposes falsehood through us. His compassion moves through us. His authority answers through us. We are not defined by religious limitation. We are defined by the indwelling Lord, and the last objection cannot survive where His light is obeyed.
Identity does not wait for the impossible to soften. Identity stands before the impossible already settled in Christ. We do not ask the mountain who we are. We do not ask sickness who Christ is. We do not ask bondage whether freedom has permission. We do not ask lack whether supply may speak. Christ in us is the answer before the question rises. His finished work gives us our name, our sight, our standing, and our action.
We see through the last objection today because we see from who we are in Christ. Our eyes are no longer trained by separation. Our speech is no longer chained to fear. Our hands are no longer held back by false humility. We are His body, filled with His life, governed by His Word, and sent in His name. We behold impossibility beneath His feet, and we act as those through whom His risen life is revealed.
Chapter 4: His Life Opens Our Eyes
Union with Christ is the death of distant sight. We do not look toward Him as though His life remains outside us. Christ lives in us, and His life opens our eyes from within. We see by the light of His indwelling presence today. This is not mystical language without action. This is finished-work reality. The same Lord who healed the sick, freed the oppressed, cleansed the unclean, and raised the dead has joined us to Himself. His life becomes visible through our obedience.
The last objection depends on separation. It must convince us Christ is near in theory but absent in operation. We refuse that divided thought. Christ in us is the hope of glory (Colossians 1:27, KJV). Glory is not hidden weakness. Glory is God revealed. His glory in us speaks, touches, commands, serves, heals, frees, and restores. We do not reduce union to comfort. Union is the living presence of Christ expressed through His body for the needs standing before us.
His life opens our eyes to the difference between appearance and authority. Appearance says the tomb is sealed. Authority says life is stronger than stone. Appearance says the water is final. Authority says the sea can part. Appearance says the body is finished. Authority says resurrection belongs to Christ. We do not let appearance disciple our sight. We let Christ in us teach our eyes to see according to His throne. He reveals truth beneath noise, beyond pressure, and above the last objection.
We have the mind of Christ (1 Corinthians 2:16, KJV). That means our thinking is not condemned to natural limitation. His mind does not bow to impossibility, and His Spirit renews our understanding. We do not think as those abandoned to visible reports. We think from the finished work, the open tomb, the ascended Lord, and the present indwelling of His life. Our shared mind is not self-confidence. It is Christ’s wisdom expressed through us today with clarity and holy action.
Union makes revelation practical. We see the sick through His stripes. We see bondage through His triumph. We see lack through His fullness. We see fear through His love. We see death through His resurrection. We are not guessing at divine willingness. Jesus is the will of God made visible. His life in us carries the same compassion that touched lepers, opened blind eyes, cleansed bodies, multiplied bread, rebuked devils, and raised the dead. We agree with His life, and His life acts through us.
The last objection grows weak when union becomes our settled language. We do not speak as though Christ is visiting us occasionally. We speak as those in whom He dwells. We do not speak as though power must fall from far away. We speak as those through whom His Spirit gives witness. We do not speak as though action must wait for special status. We speak as His body under His headship. Every word becomes cleaner when union governs the mouth.
Christ’s life opens our eyes today, and our opened eyes move our feet. Revelation that does not move into obedience becomes religious decoration. We reject decoration. We receive manifestation. His truth through us meets actual pain, actual bondage, actual lack, actual fear, and actual death. We look again because Christ sees through us. We speak again because Christ speaks through us. We lay hands again because Christ heals through us. We stand again because Christ’s risen life cannot be defeated.
Chapter 5: Authority Sees Before It Speaks
Authority begins with sight under Christ’s rule. We do not speak at random, and we do not act from self-originating force. We see what Christ has finished, and we speak from His throne. The last objection loses power when authority sees through it today. Authority does not deny the condition; authority denies the condition permission to outrank Jesus. We stand in His name, not our name. We carry His command, not human ambition. His Lordship gives our voice its strength and our action its purity.
Jesus gave authority over devils and sickness, and He sent His own to proclaim the kingdom with power. He called the twelve together and gave them power and authority over all devils, and to cure diseases (Luke 9:1, KJV). We receive that pattern as Christ’s authority expressed through His body. The source is always Him. The power is always Him. The glory is always His. Our part is not independent greatness; our part is yielded expression of the King who lives within us.
Authority sees before it speaks because truth must govern the mouth. We do not repeat the objection until it shapes our expectation. We do not magnify the difficulty until it becomes our doctrine. We do not rehearse the history of defeat until our speech bows beneath it. We behold Christ above the condition. We see His wounds as the answer to sickness. We see His blood as the answer to guilt. We see His resurrection as the answer to death and hopelessness.
When authority speaks through us, it carries the mercy of Christ. We do not command to display ourselves. We command because love refuses to leave people under darkness. We do not lay hands to prove our courage. We lay hands because Christ’s compassion moves through us. We do not cast out demons to make noise. We command release because Christ’s dominion is present in us today. Authority without love becomes harsh, but Christ through us carries both tenderness and dominion.
Jesus said that signs shall follow them that believe, and His name would mark the works of authority (Mark 16:17, KJV). We do not separate His name from His life. His name is not a phrase added to human effort. His name is the authority of the living Christ expressed through us. We speak in His name because we live in Him. We act in His name because His Spirit dwells in us. We expect His works because His Word is true.
The last objection often asks, “Who are we to speak?” Christ in us answers, “We are His body under His headship.” The objection asks, “What if nothing changes?” Christ in us answers, “Truth is not measured by fear.” The objection asks, “What if the need is too strong?” Christ in us answers, “No need outranks the risen Lord.” We refuse the interrogation of unbelief. We submit our sight, speech, and hands to Christ’s authority and move in His name.
We see through the last objection today because Christ’s authority teaches our eyes where to stand. We stand above defeat in Him, beneath His Lordship, and beside the hurting with His mercy. We do not act as independent sources. We act as vessels of the King. His finished work forms our confidence. His love forms our tone. His dominion forms our command. His glory forms our purpose. We speak, touch, serve, and move because Christ lives and reigns through us.
Chapter 6: The Pattern of Christ Revealed
Jesus revealed the pattern of life that sees beyond impossibility and acts from the Father’s will. He did not flatter sickness, negotiate with demons, honor storms, or surrender to death. He saw from heaven while standing on earth. That same Christ lives in us today, and His pattern continues through His body. We do not imitate Him as separate admirers. We express Him as those joined to His life. His works reveal the will of God, and His Spirit carries that same will through us.
When Jesus saw lack, He did not call the crowd hopeless. He blessed the bread, multiplied provision, and revealed the Father’s abundance. When He saw uncleanness, He touched with purity stronger than contamination. When He saw blindness, He answered with sight. When He saw the dead, He spoke life. He went about doing good and healing all that were oppressed of the devil (Acts 10:38, KJV). We receive His works as the visible pattern of Christ’s compassion and dominion.
The apostles did not treat impossibility as a reason for silence. At the gate called Beautiful, Peter did not offer an explanation of limitation. He spoke in the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, and the lame man rose. The power did not originate in Peter. The authority did not originate in human flesh. Christ’s risen name carried the work. We see this pattern and reject every objection that would make us spectators. Christ still expresses His life through His body.
When Peter said, “Such as I have give I thee,” he did not boast in personal greatness. He gave what Christ had made present through him. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk (Acts 3:6, KJV) reveals authority joined to mercy. We stand in that same principle today. We do not claim independent power. We carry Christ’s life. We do not worship human vessels. We honor the Lord who fills them and works through them.
Jesus and the apostles show us that revelation becomes movement. Sight becomes speech. Mercy becomes touch. Truth becomes command. Authority becomes restoration. We do not turn their works into museum pieces. We read the pattern and obey the living Christ. His body is not called to admire past deliverance while present bondage speaks louder. His Word lives in us. His Spirit acts through us. His compassion reaches through us. The impossible still meets the same Lord, because Christ remains alive in His people.
The last objection says the age of action has closed, but Christ has not ceased being Christ. His name has not weakened. His Spirit has not withdrawn. His mercy has not expired. His kingdom has not surrendered. We reject every teaching that makes the book of Acts a locked room instead of a living witness. We see Jesus revealed, the apostles moved, and the church empowered. We do not step outside Scripture. We step into agreement with the Lord Scripture reveals.
We see the pattern of Christ today, and we refuse to break fellowship with His works. We preach because He preached. We heal because He healed through His servants. We lay hands because His life moves through His body. We command freedom because His authority has not changed. We raise the dead because His resurrection is not a doctrine without manifestation. We walk as Christ because Christ lives in us, sees through us, speaks through us, and acts through us.
Chapter 7: We Act From Revealed Victory
We stand before the last objection with opened eyes and settled union. We are not waiting for impossibility to approve the command of Christ. We see through the argument because Christ in us has already judged darkness beneath His feet today. We do not carry hesitation as humility. We carry obedience as sons of God in the Son. His life supplies the action. His authority supplies the command. His mercy supplies the reach. His resurrection supplies the answer. We move because Christ moves through us.
Preach the Kingdom as Christ’s message through us, not as human opinion. We declare that the King has come, the cross has triumphed, the tomb is empty, and His Spirit lives within His people. We do not preach delay, distance, weakness, or religious survival. We preach repentance, righteousness, union, authority, healing, deliverance, and resurrection life. The gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world (Matthew 24:14, KJV). Our mouths belong to Christ, and His truth speaks through us.
Heal the sick as Christ’s compassion through us. Lay hands as His mercy made visible through our bodies. We do not lay hands as independent sources of power. We lay hands because Christ heals through us today. Pain does not instruct us. Symptoms do not govern us. Medical names do not become thrones above Jesus. We honor wisdom, but we do not let natural language become final language. By His stripes healing belongs to the finished work, and His life is expressed through us.
Cast out demons as Christ’s authority through us. We do not fear devils, study darkness as master, or negotiate with bondage. We command release because Jesus is Lord. He gave power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy (Luke 10:19, KJV). That authority is not pride in flesh. It is submission to Christ’s reign. We stand clean in His victory, speak in His name, and refuse every hold that tries to claim what His blood has purchased.
Raise the dead as Christ’s risen life through us. We do not make death our teacher. We do not let graves write doctrine above resurrection. We do not speak from shock, panic, or human strength. We speak from the living Christ who conquered death and holds the keys. When death stands before us, Christ’s victory answers through us today. We command life in His name, honor His Lordship, and refuse to let the final objection silence the witness of resurrection.
Walk as Christ because Christ lives in us. We walk in mercy, truth, holiness, authority, compassion, obedience, and boldness. We do not separate character from power or power from love. Christ in us is whole. His life does not divide itself into private devotion and public silence. His life reaches the hurting, confronts darkness, feeds the hungry, strengthens the weak, restores the broken, and reveals the Father. We walk as His body, not as religious observers. We act because His command is living.
We see through the last objection today, and we act from revealed victory. We preach the Kingdom, heal the sick, lay hands, cast out demons, raise the dead, and walk as Christ by His life expressed through us. We do not wait for another voice to replace the voice of the Lord. We do not wait for another season to replace His finished work. Christ is in us, Christ is through us, Christ is among us, and Christ receives the glory as impossibility yields.