Private obedience isn’t glamorous, but it’s where God does His best work. This is the soil where anointing is cultivated—when nobody sees you, when no one claps, but you keep showing up anyway. Public anointing doesn’t fall out of nowhere; it flows from the hidden yes. From the field. From the quiet place. If you’re wondering where your oil is, look at your obedience when the lights are off.
Category: Becoming Spiritually Free
The Power of Surrender: Why Emptiness Isn’t the End
Sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is show up empty. Not with answers. Not with strength. Just with willingness. God is not looking for your perfection—He’s looking for your surrender. He fills what we cannot. He strengthens when we cannot. When you’re tired of trying to be strong, let Him be your strength. Being empty doesn’t make you weak. It makes you ready.
How to Handle Seasons of Hiddenness Like David
David was anointed long before he was crowned king. His story reminds us that delay doesn’t mean denial—it’s part of divine development. Between the promise and the fulfillment were battles, lessons, and hidden seasons that shaped him. If you feel stuck between what God said and what you see, stay faithful. God isn’t late; He’s getting you ready for what He’s already prepared. The oil still speaks—even when it feels like the world doesn’t notice.
Is It Time to Come Back to Church?
Returning to church community isn’t about picking up old routines—it’s about reconnecting with a family built on grace, not perfection. Whether you’ve been gone for weeks, months, or years, your seat is still here. In showing up again, you step back into healing, strength, and becoming. Church isn’t about having it all together—it’s about coming together as we are. Even after seasons of silence or struggle, community still matters. And you are still part of it.
What I Had to Unlearn to Be Free – Some teachings were tradition, not truth.
I didn’t get free when I got saved—I got free when I started unlearning. Some of the hardest chains to break were the ones handed to me in the name of tradition. But not everything passed down was truth. Some of it was fear. Some of it was silence. And some of it was shame. Freedom began when I stopped agreeing with the lies and started rebuilding my faith on Jesus—not just on what I was told.
Real freedom doesn’t always make a scene. It’s often quiet, tucked inside the small choices we make daily—choosing peace over panic, surrender over control. It’s not about proving deliverance to others, but about walking it out with God. This post reminds us that freedom isn’t defined by how loud our testimony is—it’s in the quiet yes we give Him, again and again. Because victory isn’t just shouted—it’s lived.
How to Walk in Freedom After Breakthrough
Freedom doesn’t end when the chains fall—it begins there. True freedom is a journey, not just a moment. After the breakthrough, you’re called to walk in what God has done, building new habits, boundaries, and identity. It’s not always easy, especially when your past feels more familiar than your future. But God didn’t just free you to breathe easier—He freed you to live bolder. This is about more than escape—it’s about embracing who you’re becoming, one step at a time.