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Saturday, August 23, 2025

THE WEIGHT OF THE BLESSING


Hey, The Blessing,

I listened to a message recently, and when the minister prayed for a certain woman, she said, “May the Lord give you the capacity to bear the blessing.” Of all the powerful words spoken, that line stuck with me: “May the Lord give us the capacity to bear the weight of the blessing.”

For every blessing, there is a weight attached—constraints, consecration, discipline, sacrifice, daily dying to self. And still, we are blessed. We are the blessing.

I had to call us the blessing so we don’t forget. It’s easy to look in the mirror and forget the image we saw. It’s easy to hear God call us into blessings, but harder to accept that He has renamed us as the personification of blessing. So, I affirm today: I am the blessing.

Because I am the blessing, I posture myself to sustain the blessings I have entered into. If God gives me the marriage I’ve prayed for, I must seek Him for the guidelines to keep it a blessing—not a burden. If the land God gave to the Israelites could later become a place of bondage, then it makes sense that He gave them the Book of the Law. In God, there is order.

 Yes, we live in grace, but grace still calls for posture—one that proves we don’t take His blessings for granted. If I’ve received the business I prayed for, I must still learn the principles to build and sustain it. If God gives children, He also gives instruction: “Train up a child in the way they should go.”Proverbs 22:6 (KJV)  

God's children needs to be trained in the way they should go.

God said to me in worship today, the relationship I have brought your way isn't for you to leave everything and build your life on it but you can weild it and allow me build you through it.

Blessings often come as seeds. Satan tried to corrupt the seed God brought to earth—and he’s still looking for whom to devour. God’s strategy for us is vigilance. The enemy wants your blessings—will you build a defense, or let him steal, kill, and destroy?

He’s not just after the marriage, the business, the children, the family, the career—he’s after you. But you can boldly say, “No place for you here.”

Don’t forget—you are The Blessing.


Stay Revived!

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

The Face of the Blessing

Does the blessing have a face?

What if the blessings we receive from God are acts of favor that, on the surface, don’t look favorable?  

Maybe it’s because I am African, but whenever we speak of "the blessing," it must be something good—favorable, shiny, that takes us from zero to hero. The whole world must hear about it and turn to the God we serve. But blessings go beyond that. They include the trainings and dealings of the Spirit. That’s why the Bible says:

"Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds..."  

(James 1:2-4, NLT)

I often pray, "God, bless me," and I know that’s your prayer too—even the prayer of someone who doesn’t fully know God yet. But when we ask God for the blessing we are also giving Him permission to prune our lives, to refine us, and to balance our very existence.

Just like God’s words to Abraham—He didn’t just bless him, He also instilled the weight of the blessing. And because Abraham took the posture of willingness, he didn’t just become a blessed man—he became the blessing.

I want to be blessed in all things—just like you—in marriage, family, career, business… in all things. But God's response to our desire for blessing is often this:  

"I don’t just want to give you blessings; I want to give you the capacity to carry the weight of the blessing."

I want to give you the marriage, but I know that the opposite of the blessing is a curse. So there’s a posture you must take to carry this blessing, so your marriage itself becomes the blessing.

If our goal is to become like Christ, then our hearts must be tuned to Him. The blessing doesn’t mean there will be no warfare. Scripture says:  

“No, despite all these things, overwhelming victory is ours through Christ, who loved us.”  

(Romans 8:37, NLT)

So every blessing assigned to us is also a call to warfare.  

The enemy—the thief—comes to steal, kill, and destroy our possibilities (John 10:10), but Christ—the Eternal Blessing—came that we might not only receive blessing but become partakers of Him and become the blessing.

Today, we declare that Jesus is the face of our blessing, and we take on the posture that enables us to walk in it.

I’m not just blessed…  

I AM the blessing.


Stay Revived!

Sunday, August 17, 2025

Who owns you?

There are moments when we reach a crossroads and begin to doubt if God even remembers our existence.

Have you ever gotten to that point?  
Most times, we may not say it aloud, but we act it out—living in silent frustration—until it becomes a full-blown crisis. Then we finally phrase the question: “God, do You even know that I’m still alive?”

This morning, I woke up with this song in my spirit: “Amaram Onyewem”—an Igbo phrase from Nigeria meaning “I know the One who owns me.” “Amaram” translates to “I know,” and “Onyewem” means “the One who owns me.”

There is no question as to whether God knows us or considers us His own—unless we consciously choose the way of the enemy and reject Him. Yet, even in such moments, God extends mercy. He still says, “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.” There is always room for redemption in Him.

But the bigger question is: Do you know the One who owns you?

Someone once said, “More people talk about prayer than actually pray,” and I believe the same goes for knowing God—we often speak of Him more than we truly seek to know Him.

 Do you know your God?

Not just the God of heaven and earth in theory—but the personal, intimate, ever-present God. Because Scripture says, “Those who know their God shall be strong and do great exploits”(Daniel 11:32). Not just those who know about Him—but those who truly know their God, it could be any God but if you have chosen Yahweh do you know Him?

Have life’s situations given you a distorted picture of who God is?  
Has the enemy caged your mind and limited your sense of what’s possible in God?  
Has constant struggle made you doubt the power and love of your Father?

Let me remind you today: God knows you.
That’s the truth you must anchor yourself in. You may have forgotten Him for a season—or maybe even longer—but He has never blotted you out of His sight. His eyes still roam the earth, and just like He encountered Saul on the road to Damascus, He can find you again.

Here’s the good news: The God who owns you—your true Owner—longs to be gracious to you.  
He promises you perfect peace.

And you know what beloved God in the building doesn't mean they won't be wars, it is just our victory sound, our victory chant, our victory posture,our ultimate victory song. 

I AM OWNED BY GOD.

Stay Revived!

Friday, August 15, 2025

Made to fulfil a need.

 

We were not created by accident or simply just for existence. The bible tell us that, “The LORD has made everything for His purpose” (Proverbs 16:4, NKJV). There was a need in the heart of God — a divine assignment — and He looked for someone who could fulfill it.

Sometimes we pray fervently and yet see no answer. In such moments, it is wise to pause, watch, and reflect. Hannah’s story in 1 Samuel 1 illustrates this truth. For years, she prayed for a child, but it was when she discerned what God needed that the breakthrough came. She observed the corruption of Eli’s sons (1 Samuel 2:12) and realized Israel needed a priest who would honor the Lord. Her prayer shifted from personal desire to aligning with heaven’s agenda: “O LORD of hosts, if You will… give Your maidservant a male child, then I will give him to the LORD all the days of his life” (1 Samuel 1:11).

Our deepest pain can become the place where we perceive heaven’s need. In that holy moment of alignment, purpose is revealed — and purpose is always tied to fulfilling something in God’s plan on earth.

Friends, have you sought the Lord — with the guidance of the Holy Spirit — to know the need you were created to meet? Jesus Himself said, “My food is to do the will of Him who sent Me, and to finish His work” (John 4:34). When Hannah understood God’s will, she prayed with focus, made a vow, and kept it. She gave Samuel to serve in the Lord’s house, and in return, God blessed her with more children (1 Samuel 2:21).

May we, like Hannah, find the joy of living for the purpose in God’s heart — for in meeting His need, we discover the fullness of our calling and truly live.


Stay Revived!

Sarah Laughed too

How often do we laugh when God shows us what He intends to do in us and through us? How often do we ask, "How can this be?...