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Thursday, January 8, 2026

Light for Revelation


Beloved, understand this that where there is no light, confusion thrives. At night, when there is no illumination, you may reach into a basket of keys knowing your car key is there—yet you cannot distinguish it. Presence without light does not guarantee access. This is why light is not optional; it is essential.

Light brings clarity. Light brings revelation.

Light is not merely a phenomenon; light is a system. And the system of light is the system of God. Scripture declares plainly, “God is Light, and in Him there is no darkness at all” (1 John 1:5). Wherever God is permitted to rule, darkness loses jurisdiction.

At the dawn of creation, darkness covered the face of the deep. Chaos existed, not because darkness was powerful, but because light had not yet been released. Then God spoke light into existence: “Let there be light.” And immediately, light appeared. After light appeared, God separated light from darkness. Light always precedes separation. Revelation always comes before distinction.

Genesis 1:1–4 reveals a pattern:
Light is introduced first, then darkness is confronted.

However, the fall of man introduced another dimension of darkness—not environmental darkness, but internal darkness. This was not the darkness God addressed in the beginning. This darkness settled within the human nature, corrupting perception, desire, and direction.

Jehovah Elohim is Light. When a man encounters Him, the first evidence is illumination. Sight is restored. Understanding is awakened. Direction becomes clear. It is never God’s intention for His children to navigate life by guesswork. Darkness is not a sign of humility; it is often a sign of withheld revelation.

When God sees a heart that genuinely seeks Him—one that longs to know His ways and walk in obedience—He releases light. That light most often comes through His Word.

“In the beginning was the Word, and the Wor.d was with God, and the Word was God” (John 1:1).

This same Word did not remain abstract. The New Testament reveals that the Word became flesh.

“And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory” (John 1:14).

Therefore, when we declare, “Come into the light of Elohim,” we are issuing a summons:
Come through Jesus.
Engage the Word.
Study it.
Speak it.
Live it.
Obey it.

Because light is released where the Word is honored.

In this season, God is turning on the light. He is shining His illumination upon lives, families, ministries, businesses, nations and bloodlines. Hidden things will be exposed—not for condemnation, but for correction. Not to shame you, but to empower you.

Some have lost glory through demonic patterns, disobedience, or unaligned choices. Scripture records a moment of loss when a child was named Ichabod—“the glory has departed” (1 Samuel 4:21). Yet today, the Spirit of the Lord is calling: Ichabod, arise. Return to the light of Elohim.

Therefore, build a system that attracts and sustains light—a lifestyle anchored in the Word, sustained by prayer, expressed through obedience, and sealed by total surrender.

Where light reigns, darkness has no voice.


Stay revived!

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

The Ichabod System


JJ and I had a conversation concerning this blog, and she shared that God had told her that this year’s God-encounter for the ReviveWithJJ family would center on the Light of Elohim. Because of this, in the very first days I did not want to journal my revive journey in a way that diverted from what God had already spoken to her.

Then, during the late hours of Sunday, I received a clear word:
“Ichabod, Ichabod, Ichabod—come into the Light of Elohim.”
Immediately, my eyes flung open.

There is a place in God for this family, and that place is one of breaking the Ichabod structures and systems that have caged us from manifesting and encountering God’s light. This word led me to the story of Ichabod. Not much detail is given about his life after birth, but the circumstances surrounding his birth speak loudly.

The sins and ignorance of his bloodline became his harvest—a fulfillment of the saying, “Our fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the children’s teeth are set on edge.” His name unfolds the story of a boy—and later a man—whose teeth would constantly be on edge. Ichabod means, “Where is the glory?” or “No glory” (1 Samuel 4:21). The Ichabod system is an enclave of darkness,shame,reproach,loss, limitations and constant setbacks.

So, every question life would ask this boy would center on one thing:
“Where is your glory?”
You who were born on the day the Ark was taken from Israel. You whose father’s family and whose own father’s death came before your birth.
And today, God is speaking to those of us who were thrown into life’s chaos:
“Come into the Light of Elohim.”

“I know the errors and sins of others spearheaded a harvest of shame for you, but I am the One whose mercy endures forever. You can come into My light. There is room enough for you in Me.”

The trades that sold your essence—your glory, your voice, your peace, your marriage, your health, your business, your career, your stability—simply because of your connection to certain places, people, or structures are being confronted. There is a greater connection that speaks, and it is the blood of the New Covenant that has been poured out. We accept forgiveness and enthrone a new government over our lives.

Today, God’s voice is declaring:
“Come into the Light of Elohim.”

Confess this words over again:
I come into the light of Elohim.

Stay Revived!

Monday, January 5, 2026

Light as an illuminating System



Light is a form of radiation that makes visibility possible, but in  Genesis 1: 3 we see that light carries a far deeper meaning. 
The Greek word for light, phōs, means luminous illumination. It speaks of visibility, sight, and revelation—illumination coming into a place where darkness once prevailed.

When God declared, “Let there be light,” He was not merely calling forth a physical object that emits light. He was introducing illumination itself into creation.
Genesis 1:3 — Then God said, “Let there be light”; and there was light.
These light brought light into existence. God saw that this light was good and separated the light from the darkness. This moment tells us that ight existed before the sun, the moon, and even before man was formed.
Later in creation, God established physical sources of light.
Genesis 1:16 — God made two great lights: the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night. He made the stars also.

This shows us that while the sun and moon are sources of light, light itself is a state of divine order, revelation, and clarity.
Before light appeared, Scripture describes the earth as without form and void, covered in darkness, while the Spirit of God hovered over the surface of the deep. Chaos, emptiness, and darkness existed simultaneously. Then light came—and with it, order began.

This pattern still applies today. When the Holy Spirit enters the life of a person, He hovers. And when He hovers, He brings a holy disturbance that causes areas of a man's life marked by emptiness, dryness, confusion, and lacks direction begin to shift. Darkness reacts, why? Because light has arrived.
As illumination increases, clarity follows. God begins to order what was once disordered, turning a life into an illuminating system that reflects His purpose.
Jesus affirms this truth when He declares that we are “the light of the world, a city set on a hill that cannot be hidden.” Beloved, we are not merely recipients of light—we are carriers of divine illumination.

When God calls a person into His phōs, He sets them apart. This creative and illuminating light aligns, orders, and positions them according to divine purpose. Light is not just something we see—it is a state we enter when God speaks.
And when God speaks light, chaos must give way to order.


Stay Revived!

Saturday, January 3, 2026

LIGHT AND WARFARE


When JJ and I began studying the book of beginnings—Genesis—we found ourselves lingering on one powerful phrase: “And God saw that it was good.” 
We declared in that moment: “We step into the good of God!”  
That “good” brought us into the light—the very light that God Himself called good.

For a long time, I thought of warfare as something reserved for only certain aspects of the Christian life.  
“Christ has already paid the price,” I reasoned. “Do we really still need to fight?”
But then the Scripture says, “The weapons of our warfare are not carnal but mighty through God…” (2 Corinthians 10:4)  
If God has given us weapons, then we’ve been called to war.

There is a war.
And it is staged by the enemy—daily.

Warfare must become a way of life.

As long as we live in this world, we will face battles—in our health, our marriages, our careers, our ministries.  
And God is saying:  
The light you need to live in cannot exist alongside darkness—you must war for it.

Every day, we must posture our hearts and ask:  
Lord, teach me how to war for the light I’m meant to walk in.”
And here’s what’s wild—God’s weapons don’t always look like swords and shouting.  
Sometimes, warfare is found in the sound you make,  
the silence you keep,  
the forgiveness you give,  
the songs you listen to,  
the books you read,  
the way you raise your children,  
the movies you consume,  
the decisions you make under pressure.

When you pray, study the Word, and worship,  
God tailors every part of your life to fight back against the enemy’s strategy.

He doesn’t want us ignorant.  
He wants us alert, standing at the gates—declaring war, even in moments that feel like peace.

Jesus is Light.
And we must take a posture to enter into that Light.

Stay Revived!

A Heart Like Abraham's

Lately, as I have been reading about the journey of Father Abraham, I cannot help but wonder what kind of heart he had. Imagine ...