У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно The New Creation Further Expanded | David Offong | Dec 11, 2025 | MSOP или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Melchizedek School of Priesthood | Dec 11, 2025 You were never meant to live by reaction, survival, or religious routine. You were created to live by revelation. Everything in the spiritual life begins and ends with sight—not physical sight, but spiritual seeing. Until your eyes are opened to behold Christ as He truly is, your life will remain fragmented, reactive, and limited, regardless of your sincerity or effort. Revelation is not information; it is illumination. And illumination is what activates identity, authority, peace, and purpose. Without it, people function beneath their design, hiding from enemies that no longer have rightful power over them, misusing spaces and seasons meant for dominion because they do not yet know who they are. The Holy Spirit did not come primarily to create noise, emotional moments, or religious excitement. He came to restore fellowship—bringing humanity back into intimacy, oneness, and alignment with God. Fellowship is the womb of transformation. It is the place where identity is clarified, where the self is recalibrated, and where divine life is imparted. Until fellowship is restored, power will be misused, prayer will be selfish, worship will be shallow, and faith will revolve around personal survival rather than divine purpose. You do not discover who you are by introspection; you discover yourself by beholding Him. There is no true self apart from Christ. Identity does not exist independently—it is derived. The more clearly you see Him, the more accurately you understand yourself. This is why spiritual growth is not about striving to become something, but about allowing what already is to take over your consciousness. The new creation is not a goal to be reached; it is a finished reality to be inhabited. You are not becoming righteous, powerful, victorious, or accepted—you already are. The issue is not provision; the issue is possession. Truth must move from doctrine into consciousness. What you merely agree with intellectually will not govern your life. Only what possesses you will produce results. This is why many remain inconsistent, fearful, and unstable—not because God has withheld anything, but because they have not stayed long enough with truth for it to take them over. Growth in God is progressive, not instant. Revelation demands time, attention, and discipline. The believer who refuses this process will remain spiritually underdeveloped, even while quoting accurate scriptures. Signs, wonders, and miracles were never meant to be the summit of spiritual life. They are introductory tools, designed to draw attention and awaken interest. When they become the focus, spiritual growth stagnates. God desires mature sons, not dependent crowds. The inheritance of the believer is far greater than miracles—it is union, likeness, dominion, and intimacy. Life is meant to be lived from the eternal realm, not dictated by visible circumstances. The spiritual realm is not imaginary; it is the true reality. The material realm is temporary and responsive. When the spiritual is rightly engaged, the natural obeys. Peace is not emotional calm; it is spiritual certainty. Fearlessness is not bravery; it is revelation. Authority is not volume; it is alignment. Dominion is not control over others; it is mastery over life. These are not achievements—they are outcomes of truth ruling the inner life. However, none of this happens accidentally. There is a price, and that price is not money—it is time, focus, and surrender. The private place with God is not optional; it is essential. The closet is where truth stops being theoretical and becomes operational. What is received publicly is meant to be worked out privately. A life without a strong inner altar will eventually collapse under pressure. Ministry without intimacy produces activity without substance. Leadership without feeding produces movement without maturity. Teaching that does not lead people into possession leaves them informed but unchanged. True spiritual leadership is measured not by numbers, excitement, or visibility, but by growth, stability, fearlessness, and transformation in the people being led. Worship must evolve with revelation. Old expressions cannot adequately carry new light. God releases songs, expressions, and sounds that correspond with what He is unveiling in a season. These are not performances but responses—expressions born from hunger, truth, and intimacy. Songs emerge not because someone is gifted, but because revelation demands expression. Worship is theology made audible; it reinforces doctrine, culture, and identity. Where worship is shallow, revelation is weak. Where worship is aligned, transformation accelerates. The question is no longer whether God has done enough, but whether you will allow what He has done to fully take over.