
We Hear the Impossible Lose Its Authority
We Hear the Impossible Lose Its Authority declares that Christ in us guides us above visible pressure, natural limitation, and impossible reports. We do not live under circumstance as ruler. We hear truth by the Spirit, speak from union, and act from Christ’s finished authority. The impossible loses command when Christ’s voice governs our hearing.
AL514
Chapter 1: The False Voice of Impossibility
The impossible speaks like it owns the room, but Christ in us is the voice of final authority. We do not receive circumstance as lord, master, prophet, or judge. The report may be loud, the pressure may be visible, and the obstacle may appear immovable, yet none of these possess the throne. Christ’s truth governs our hearing today, and the impossible loses its authority when our ears belong to His finished word.
Natural sight calls the mountain permanent, but Christ in us hears from a higher government. We are not trained by fear, lack, delay, or defeat. We are trained by the Spirit of truth, who guides us into all truth (John 16:13, KJV). The impossible only rules where its voice is honored above Christ. We hear the voice of the risen Lord, and every lesser voice is brought under His dominion through us.
The lie says we are distant from answer, separated from power, and dependent on change before obedience can begin. Christ in us destroys that lie. We are not waiting for permission from circumstance. We are not asking impossibility to approve our obedience. The same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead lives in us, and His life makes us witnesses of authority today before the visible condition changes.
The impossible wants agreement before it keeps ruling. It asks for our language, our silence, our hesitation, and our surrender. Christ in us gives it none. We do not bless impossibility with agreement. We do not call bondage permanent. We do not call lack final. We do not call sickness lord. We hear Christ speak truth within us, and His voice forms bold action through us.
When Christ speaks through us, impossibility loses the right to define the moment. The dead place hears life. The empty place hears supply. The oppressed place hears freedom. The confused place hears order. The broken place hears wholeness. Our hearing is not passive; it receives truth and carries command. Faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God (Romans 10:17, KJV).
We refuse the false humility that calls obedience presumption. Christ in us is not presumption. Christ in us is truth, life, wisdom, and power expressed through yielded sons. We do not boast in ourselves. We boast in the Lord who lives through us. The impossible loses authority today because Christ’s voice is not trapped in heaven; His voice is alive in us and expressed through our mouths, hands, and steps.
We hear above fear, above evidence, above delay, and above contradiction. We hear from Christ’s completed victory. We do not need the impossible to become smaller before Christ moves through us. His authority speaks through us while the mountain still stands. His life rises through us while the report still argues. His guidance leads us today, and the impossible is exposed as a defeated voice without rightful dominion.
Chapter 2: The Noise That Trained Delay
Religion without union trained us to honor distance more than indwelling. It taught hesitation as wisdom and silence as reverence. It gave fear a holy name and called delay patience. Christ in us breaks that training. We are not governed by systems that explain why nothing moves. We are governed by the Spirit who reveals Christ’s finished work. The impossible gained false authority through wrong teaching, but truth removes its throne today.
Separation language made us speak like Christ was absent, slow, or uncertain. We heard prayers shaped by lack, sermons shaped by waiting, and counsel shaped by fear of action. Those sounds trained the ear to expect postponement. Christ in us restores clean hearing. We do not ask whether Christ is near. He is our life. We do not speak as abandoned people. We speak as His body through whom He acts.
Fear often sounded responsible while it protected unbelief. It asked for more signs, more meetings, more approval, and more delay before obedience. Christ in us does not need fear’s permission. When Jesus sent the twelve, He commanded them to preach the kingdom and heal the sick (Matthew 10:7-8, KJV). That commission did not honor delay. It released action from His authority through those He sent.
The impossible gained authority when our ears were filled with human limitation. We heard too long what man could not do, what systems could not fix, what money could not supply, what doctors could not change, and what history could not restore. Christ in us changes the sound within us today. We do not deny facts; we deny their right to govern truth. Truth in Christ rules the facts through us.
Passive speech weakens action when it hides behind respectability. We are not called to admire impossibility with religious vocabulary. We are called to hear Christ and obey as His life moves through us. The Spirit does not guide us into fear. The Spirit does not train us to preserve bondage. The Spirit reveals Christ, and Christ through us speaks to what resists His finished dominion.
The apostles did not carry a powerless message. Peter said, “In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk” (Acts 3:6, KJV). That was not self-originating confidence. That was Christ’s authority expressed through a man united to His name. We stand in the same risen Lord. We do not imitate human boldness; Christ’s own authority speaks through us as His body.
Noise loses force when truth becomes our hearing. We do not live under the echo of powerless religion, fearful counsel, or impossible reports. Christ in us restores the ear of obedience. We hear command where delay once spoke. We hear life where death once claimed authority. We hear supply where lack once shouted. Christ guides us today, and every false sound bows beneath His finished voice through us.
Chapter 3: Our Hearing Belongs to Christ
Our identity determines what we hear. We are not abandoned listeners trying to find a distant signal. We are one with Christ, and His Spirit bears witness with our spirit that we are the children of God (Romans 8:16, KJV). We hear from sonship, not insecurity. We hear from union, not religious distance. The impossible loses authority because it cannot speak louder than the life of Christ within us today.
We are not ears owned by fear. We are not minds owned by pressure. We are not bodies owned by defeat. Christ has made us His dwelling, and His voice has rightful rule in us. The inward witness of truth is not emotional proof. It is the settled reality of Christ in us. We hear what agrees with His finished work, and we reject every sound that contradicts His dominion.
Identity removes confusion from hearing. When we know we are Christ’s body, we stop treating His commands as unreachable ideals. His word is not far above us as an accusation. His word lives in us as power. We do not hear “go” as impossible, “heal” as impossible, “speak” as impossible, or “stand” as impossible. Christ in us makes obedience the expression of His own life today.
The world hears impossibility as final because it hears without union. We hear differently because Christ is our life. Our ears are not trained by panic. Our hearing is not shaped by lack. Our discernment is not borrowed from circumstance. We have an unction from the Holy One, and we know all things necessary for obedience (1 John 2:20, KJV). Christ’s anointing teaches us truth.
We do not need another identity before Christ acts through us. We are not junior sons waiting for adulthood in the Spirit. We are not partial vessels waiting for a greater Christ to arrive. Christ is complete in us. His fullness does not require circumstance to agree before He speaks. We hear from completeness, and His completeness becomes visible through our obedience, compassion, command, and service.
The impossible loses authority when we stop introducing ourselves by limitation. We are not the weak trying to become strong. Christ is our strength. We are not the confused trying to earn guidance. Christ is our wisdom. We are not the fearful trying to gather courage. Christ is our boldness. His name governs us from within, and our hearing receives what His identity declares.
We hear as sons because Christ has made us sons in Himself. We hear as His body because His Spirit lives through us. We hear as sent ones because His commission remains active. The impossible may present evidence, history, numbers, symptoms, or threats, but our identity is not built from those voices. Christ in us guides us today, and our ears obey the truth that proceeds from Him.
Chapter 4: One Spirit, One Voice, One Direction
Union with Christ makes hearing clear. We are not two lives negotiating direction. We are one Spirit with the Lord, and His life is expressed through us (1 Corinthians 6:17, KJV). This union is not theory. It is the present ground of obedience. The impossible loses authority because it cannot separate us from the voice of Christ within us. His truth guides us today from the inside out.
Christ is not giving us distant instructions from outside our life. He is our life. His mind renews our understanding, His Spirit governs our hearing, and His authority moves through our obedience. We do not wait for a special atmosphere to hear truth. Truth is established in Him. We hear as those who belong to Him, live from Him, and act because He expresses Himself through us.
The impossible depends on division. It wants us to think Christ is powerful but we are disconnected, Christ is willing but we are unready, Christ is victorious but we are still under the report. Union destroys that division. Christ does not stand apart from us while asking us to represent Him alone. He lives in us, speaks through us, and manifests His finished triumph through our yielded action today.
The voice of Christ carries peace without passivity. It does not make us inactive. It makes us settled and active. His peace rules while His authority moves. When He said, “Peace be unto you: as my Father hath sent me, even so send I you,” He joined peace and mission together (John 20:21, KJV). We receive that same union of rest and action.
We do not confuse noise with guidance. Pressure can shout, urgency can demand, fear can imitate wisdom, and delay can dress itself as caution. Christ’s voice carries truth consistent with His nature, His cross, His resurrection, His compassion, and His commission. His guidance does not make us protect impossibility. His guidance moves us as witnesses of a kingdom that cannot be shaken.
Union makes obedience natural to Christ in us. We are not forcing spiritual activity from human effort. We are allowing His life to be expressed through our words, hands, feet, and compassion. When we speak, Christ’s truth speaks through us. When we serve, Christ’s love serves through us. When we confront bondage, Christ’s authority confronts it through us. The source remains Him.
We hear one voice, because one Lord lives in us. We do not divide life into sacred speech and ordinary surrender. Every place of pressure becomes a place where Christ guides, Christ speaks, Christ acts, and Christ reveals His dominion. The impossible loses authority today because union removes the lie of distance. We are not trying to reach Christ. Christ lives through us and leads through us.
Chapter 5: Authority Answers What Circumstance Says
Authority begins where Christ’s lordship is known and expressed. We do not answer circumstance from irritation, ambition, or human force. We answer from Christ in us. His authority does not beg the impossible to cooperate. His authority speaks truth, releases life, and calls creation into order. Jesus gave power and authority over all devils and to cure diseases (Luke 9:1, KJV). That authority flows from Him through us today.
Circumstance may say no, but Christ in us carries the stronger word. Lack says there is not enough. Christ through us reveals supply. Sickness says the body must remain bound. Christ through us reveals wholeness. Oppression says freedom is delayed. Christ through us reveals release. Death says nothing can rise. Christ through us reveals resurrection life. Authority hears what Christ says and answers what resists Him.
We do not let the impossible define the boundaries of obedience. Christ’s command defines the boundary. When He sends, we go. When He speaks, we speak. When compassion moves, we act. The impossible becomes smaller when Christ’s authority is expressed through us. We do not magnify opposition by rehearsing its strength. We magnify Christ by allowing His finished victory to govern our response today.
Authority operates through hearing joined to obedience. We hear truth, and Christ expresses action through us. We do not hear for information only. We hear for manifestation. The ear receives the word; the mouth proclaims; the hand serves; the foot goes. The body moves as one expression of the Head. Christ in us does not create spectators. His voice forms witnesses who act.
The centurion understood authority when he said, “speak the word only, and my servant shall be healed” (Matthew 8:8, KJV). Jesus called that faith great because it recognized the power of command under true authority. We stand under Christ and speak from His life within us. The power is not our independent possession. The authority is Christ’s, and He makes it visible through our obedience.
Authority refuses negotiation with bondage. We do not counsel demons into comfort. We do not manage sickness as master. We do not give lack a throne. We do not protect death’s reputation. Christ through us confronts what contradicts His kingdom. His authority speaks with compassion, not cruelty; with certainty, not pride; with dominion, not noise. The impossible loses command when Christ’s word moves through us.
We hear authority before we see change. We hear the finished work before evidence agrees. We hear the kingdom before the condition bows. This hearing forms bold speech and obedient action. Christ in us guides us today above circumstance, and His authority answers every lesser voice. The impossible loses its ruling sound because our ears belong to Christ, our speech proceeds from Christ, and our action reveals Christ.
Chapter 6: Christ’s Pattern Heard and Obeyed
Jesus heard the Father and acted with perfect union. He did not consult impossibility as counselor. He did not ask sickness whether healing was permitted. He did not ask storms whether peace could be spoken. He did not ask death whether resurrection was reasonable. He said the Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the Father do (John 5:19, KJV). Christ’s life through us follows that same union pattern today.
The pattern of Jesus is not distant history. It is the revelation of Christ expressed through a body that hears and obeys. He spoke to winds, touched lepers, opened blind eyes, multiplied bread, cast out demons, and raised the dead. Each act revealed the kingdom above circumstance. The same Christ lives in us. We do not copy miracles as technique. We express His life as union.
The apostles heard Christ’s commission and acted from His name. They did not wait for the world to become welcoming. They did not wait for temples, courts, prisons, threats, or weakness to approve their obedience. Christ’s authority moved through them while opposition remained loud. The impossible lost authority because the risen Lord was not silent in His body. His voice continued through those joined to Him today.
Paul did not preach human excellence as the source of power. He declared that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us (2 Corinthians 4:7, KJV). That remains our pattern. We do not claim ourselves as origin. We carry treasure in earthen vessels, and Christ reveals His power through us. The impossible falls because the source is divine, not human.
Jesus and the apostles show us hearing that becomes action. Truth received becomes truth spoken. Compassion received becomes healing released. Authority received becomes bondage commanded to leave. Resurrection received becomes death confronted with life. We hear Christ, and His life forms action through us. We do not admire the pattern from a distance. Christ in us continues His own pattern through His body.
The impossible loses authority when Christ’s pattern is restored in our hearing. We do not reduce Scripture to memory without manifestation. We do not honor apostolic accounts while denying Christ’s present expression. We receive the same Lord, the same Spirit, the same kingdom, and the same commission. His life has not weakened. His authority has not retired. His compassion has not ended.
We hear the testimony of Jesus as present instruction. We hear His works as revelation of His nature. We hear the apostles as witnesses of Christ expressed through yielded vessels. The same Christ lives in us and guides us today. We walk in the pattern of union, not imitation without life. The impossible loses its authority because Christ continues to speak and act through His body.
Chapter 7: We Act While the Impossible Falls
We preach the Kingdom because Christ’s authority speaks through us. We do not wait for perfect conditions, welcoming rooms, or visible agreement. The Kingdom is at hand because the King lives in us and expresses His reign through us. Jesus commanded, “preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand” (Matthew 10:7, KJV). We hear His command today, and the impossible loses authority under the sound of His gospel.
We heal the sick because Christ’s healing life moves through us. We lay hands because His compassion is not trapped in theory. We speak wholeness because His body carries His name. We do not manufacture healing by effort. Christ heals through us as His life is expressed. The sick are not problems to avoid. They are people Christ loves, and His love moves through our obedience today.
We cast out demons because Christ’s freedom speaks through us. We do not fear darkness, study bondage as master, or treat oppression as equal authority. Jesus said, “In my name shall they cast out devils” (Mark 16:17, KJV). His name is not a slogan in our mouths. His name is His authority expressed through His body. We command release because Christ the Deliverer lives in us.
We raise the dead because Christ’s risen life answers death through us. We do not worship death as final. We do not build doctrine around defeat. We do not let funerals define the limits of obedience. Christ is resurrection and life. When death confronts us, we hear His triumph above the silence. His victory moves through our mouths, our hands, our compassion, and our obedience.
We walk as Christ because Christ lives through us. We preach, heal, lay hands, cast out demons, raise the dead, and release freedom as expressions of His life, not our independent strength. We do not separate identity from action. We do not separate union from commission. The Spirit guides us into truth, and truth moves. Christ’s voice becomes visible through our obedience today.
We refuse silence where Christ speaks. We refuse passivity where Christ acts. We refuse fear where Christ reigns. We refuse delay where Christ has already finished the work. The impossible may still shout, but it no longer commands us. We hear the Lord within us. We speak what agrees with Him. We touch what He loves. We go where His compassion sends.
We are Christ’s body in the earth, and His authority is expressed through us. We preach the Kingdom. We heal the sick. We lay hands. We cast out demons. We raise the dead. We walk as Christ walked because Christ lives through us. The impossible loses its voice beneath His finished dominion, and our ears remain filled with truth that becomes action through us.