Sunday, May 17, 2026

Sadhu Sundar Singh: Gandhi Tried to Recruit Him. He Handed Him a Bible Instead.

 Discover how Sadhu Sundar Singh walked barefoot across the Himalayas fifteen times, survived a sealed well with no escape, and stood before Gandhi credible enough to be recruited — yet consecrated enough to decline. This documentary traces the extraordinary life of Sundar Singh, a Sikh aristocrat who burned a Bible at fourteen and became one of the most supernaturally authenticated missionaries in Asian Christian history. From the 3:00 AM vision that transformed him, to the saffron robe that carried the Gospel where no Western missionary could go, Sundar Singh surrendered everything — and left a legacy that outlasted his own disappearance into the Himalayan mist.




Tibet, 1912. In a small town called Rasar, a dry well deep in the earth, sealed above by a locked iron lid, and the key is held by the king himself and no one else. Inside, a man has been lying for 3 days. He was rolled tightly inside a large mat, stabbed with daggers, and thrown unconscious into this pit. Already weak from fasting and prayer when they seized him.

His body lies among the filth and darkness, wounded, barely breathing. He did not end up here by accident. He came here on purpose, to preach the name of Jesus Christ in the most hostile territory on earth. And when no one would listen, he did something extraordinary, he walked into an open field and began to bathe publicly.

Because he had discovered that Tibetans,  in the extreme cold, went years without bathing. Crowds gathered   immediately, baffled and curious. The moment they assembled, he stopped, put on his clothes, and began preaching the gospel right there in the open field. Many listened. Many said, "This person is saying something good." The king's informants were in the crowd. They reported him. He was [music] arrested, stabbed, and thrown into the well. The king locked it

1:341 minute, 34 secondspersonally and kept the key. Now it is [music] the third day. He regains consciousness in the dark, wounded,

1:421 minute, 42 secondsstarving, surrounded by the smell of death. And he prays the [music] most honest prayer of his life. Lord, I came

1:491 minute, 49 secondsout here to serve you and here I am thrown in a well. At that precise moment, [music] the door at the top

1:561 minute, 56 secondsgrinds open. A rope descends. A voice calm, certain, unhurried. [music]

2:032 minutes, 3 secondsHold this and come out. He gathers what remains of his strength. He grabs [music] the rope. He climbs. His feet

2:102 minutes, 10 secondshit solid ground and cold mountain air floods his lungs. He looks around to thank the one who opened it. There is

2:182 minutes, 18 seconds[music] no person. There is no rope. The door above him is shut again. He goes straight back to preaching. The next

2:262 minutes, 26 secondsmorning, the king goes to the well himself. The door is shut. The lock is [music] intact. He reaches for his belt.

2:342 minutes, 34 secondsThe key is still there, exactly where it has been for 3 days. He never left his quarters. He opens the well and looks

2:422 minutes, 42 secondsdown into [music] empty darkness. The man is gone. The king stands at the edge of that well and says what this documentary will spend the [music] next hour proving. This person is different.

2:532 minutes, 53 secondsHe has a different power, a different strength. Have you ever [music] asked yourself what kind of man after being stabbed and thrown into a pit walk

3:023 minutes, 2 secondsstraight back to the people who put him there? And what kind of god unlocks what a king has personally sealed just to

3:093 minutes, 9 secondssend his servant back to finish the work. This is the story of Sadhu Sundar Singh. And the story you are about to

3:173 minutes, 17 secondshear will not allow you to stay comfortable with a small life. Comment below with I belong to the road. [music]

3:243 minutes, 24 secondsIf you are ready to pray until God answers, surrender every comfort for the call he has placed on your life and keep walking toward the thing that frightens

3:333 minutes, 33 secondsyou most. And stay with us until the very end of this video where we will reveal the hidden daily discipline that

3:403 minutes, 40 secondskept Sundar's fire [music] burning for over two decades, which will enable you to run with endurance the race that God has specifically set before you.

3:513 minutes, 51 secondsSundar Singh was born in 1889 in Rampur,

3:543 minutes, 54 seconds[music]

3:553 minutes, 55 secondsPunjab. A village in the most spiritually charged region of India into a wealthy seek household into a family

4:034 minutes, 3 secondsof aristocrats, silk, land, political influence and deep religious devotion woven together into a single life. His

4:124 minutes, 12 secondsmother is the first fire. She takes him weekly to sit at the feet of a sadu, a wandering holy man who has surrendered

4:194 minutes, 19 secondseverything for the pursuit of God. She does not wish for her son to be famous, wealthy or powerful. She has one single

4:274 minutes, 27 secondsambition. Sundar, find [music] God. By the age of seven, he has memorized the

4:344 minutes, 34 secondsentire Bhagavad Gita. He studies Sanskrit, Persian, Udu [music] and Hindi alongside his native Punjabi. This is

4:424 minutes, 42 secondsnot a boy dabbling in religion. This is a soul on fire searching for the fire's source. A boy who went to the deepest

4:504 minutes, 50 secondsend of his own tradition [music] and found the water there unable to satisfy.

4:554 minutes, 55 secondsThen when Sundar is 14 years [music] old, his mother dies suddenly. The anchor of his soul is gone. The hunger

5:045 minutes, 4 secondsshe planted has no one left to direct it. And it turns with full force into rage. He tears apart a Bible. He pours

5:125 minutes, 12 secondskerosene [music] over its pages and strikes a match, burning it in the courtyard of his family home. [music] While his father and friends watch in

5:205 minutes, 20 secondssilence, he leads other boys in, throwing mud at missionaries [music] and disrupting their meetings. His father

5:275 minutes, 27 secondswatches him read through the night, ruining his eyes with grief and desperate searching, [music] and pleads with him, "Why torment yourself so

5:365 minutes, 36 secondsmuch?" And Sundar can only answer, "I must have peace at any cost." Any cost.

5:435 minutes, 43 secondsThe irony of those four words will follow him for the rest of his life.

5:475 minutes, 47 secondsDecember 1903, 3 days after burning the Bible, Sundar Singh reaches the absolute end of

5:545 minutes, 54 secondshimself. He wakes [music] before dawn and makes a decision that will change the history of Asia. If the true God does not reveal himself to me before

6:036 minutes, 3 secondsmorning, I will go to [music] the railway tracks and place my head under the 5:00 express train. He bathes, he

6:126 minutes, 12 secondskneels, he prays in the darkness, not with serenity, but with the ferocity of a man staking his entire existence on

6:206 minutes, 20 secondsthe answer. The room fills with light, not lamp light, not moonlight, something alive, something pulsing with presence.

6:306 minutes, 30 secondsHe expects a Hindu deity. [music] He expects the seek guru. Instead, he sees the radiant figure of a man bearing

6:386 minutes, 38 secondswounds in his hands. And a [music] voice speaks in his own language in Hindustani.

6:446 minutes, 44 secondsHow long will you persecute me? I have come to save you. You were praying to know the right way. Why do you not take it? He knows instantly. This is Jesus.

6:546 minutes, 54 seconds[music] The one he burned. The one he mocked. the one who came anyway. He collapses. He weeps. He runs to his

7:037 minutes, 3 secondsfather shouting, "I have seen Jesus." His father thinks the boy has lost his mind. He has not lost his mind. He has

7:117 minutes, 11 secondsfinally found what his mother sent him looking for. September 3rd, 1905. Sundar Singh is baptized in Simla at St.

7:217 minutes, 21 secondsThomas Church by Reverend CE Redmond of the Church Mission Society [music] on his 16th birthday. A new birth on the

7:287 minutes, 28 secondsday of his first birth. The community [music] erupts. The family erupts. But Sundar's face in that moment is not

7:387 minutes, 38 secondstriumphant. It is not fearful. It is settled. He has made the calculation. He knows the price. He pays it without

7:467 minutes, 46 secondshesitation. [music] I will follow Christ at any cost.

7:517 minutes, 51 secondsHis father runs out of patience. He sends Sundar to a wealthy uncle who opens his treasury, gems, jewels, land deeds, and inheritance laid visibly before the boy's eyes. I will give you all of this, the uncle says quietly, if you deny Christ.

Sundar looks at the jewels. He looks at the man. He answers without wavering. I cannot deny Christ. I have seen him. He is true. He walks out of that room as calmly as he walked into it. His father disowns him that night, ceremonially, legally, cast out of the family estate with nothing but the clothes on his back. In one night, he loses his father, his home, his inheritance, his cast, [music] and every material future that had been prepared for him. The documentary must not rush past this moment. The offer was not vague. The jewels were in his hands. He set them down and walked

 away. What his family could not accomplish through persuasion, they attempted through poison. His last meal

at home is laced with a slow acting toxin. He collapses under a tree near a missionary station, bleeding from the mouth near death. He prays. He recovers.

He rises from that sick bed and continues forward without bitterness, without retaliation, and without looking back. 33 days after his baptism, Sundar Singh is on the road, not as a western-dressed missionary with a salary in a station. He has thought this through. He has seen what the church in India is becoming, a foreign institution [music] in foreign clothes, singing foreign songs, offering a foreign looking god. He sees clearly. We have been offering Christianity in a

9:399 minutes, 39 secondswestern cup and India rejects it. But when we offer the water of life in an eastern bowl, our people will take it

9:489 minutes, 48 secondsgladly. He puts on the saffron robe of a sadu, the mark of one who has renounced the world. He lets his hair grow. He

9:579 minutes, 57 secondsgoes barefoot. He carries one new testament and [music] a blanket. No money, no home, no salary, no

10:0410 minutes, 4 secondsdenominations covering. [music] Just Christ and the open road and the open hand of a man who has decided that God is enough. Before the great [music]

10:1210 minutes, 12 secondsjourneys begin, he serves at the leprosy hospital in Sabathu. Quietly, humbly, without [music] audience, he tends the

10:2010 minutes, 20 secondsdiseased, the disfigured, the untouchable. There are no miracles recorded here, no crowds, no applause,

10:2810 minutes, 28 seconds[music] just a young man in a saffron robe on his knees washing wounds. This is the hidden foundation. This is where

10:3610 minutes, 36 secondsthe fire is banked before it is released.

10:3910 minutes, 39 secondsHere is where most people's accounts of Sundar Singh stop. [music] And here is where the real story begins. Before

10:4810 minutes, 48 secondsentering any new village, anywhere in India, anywhere in the Himalayas, anywhere in Tibet, Sundar Singh does not

10:5610 minutes, 56 secondswalk straight in and begin preaching. He camps outside. He fasts, he prays

11:0111 minutes, 1 second[music]

11:0211 minutes, 2 secondsfor three full days without food, alone before God. He [music] waits before he crosses the threshold. And in those

11:1011 minutes, 10 secondsthree days, something the communities he visited and those who traveled with him have passed down across generations of testimony [music] occurs. The Holy

11:1811 minutes, 18 secondsSpirit teaches him the local language, the dialect, the specific [music] tongue of that community. Without a teacher,

11:2611 minutes, 26 secondswithout vocabulary, [music] without prior study, when he enters and opens his mouth, he

11:3311 minutes, 33 secondsspeaks their words back to them. Stop here. This is the documentary's first major argument, and it must be heard.

11:4011 minutes, 40 secondsThis is not a talent. This is not a spiritual [music] gift operating independently of cost. According to those who witnessed his ministry

11:4911 minutes, 49 secondsfirsthand, this was the direct supernatural fruit of a specific practice. 3 days without food, alone

11:5711 minutes, 57 secondswith God [music] before every new assignment. You are not watching a special man. You are watching what happens when anyone pays the price of

12:0512 minutes, 5 secondswaiting. Sundar carries no money. He has never carried money. Those who traveled with him in those years recount one

12:1312 minutes, 13 secondsparticular journey where a ticket [music] inspector removes him from a moving train. He does not argue. He steps off, finds a platform bench,

12:2212 minutes, 22 seconds[music] and sits down to pray. The train does not move. The engine runs. The signal is clear. No brake [music] is

12:3012 minutes, 30 secondsstuck. No fault found. An hour passes, then an hour and a half. The passengers begin to murmur among themselves. They

12:3912 minutes, 39 secondslook out the windows at the barefoot man on the bench. It's the sadu we put off.

12:4512 minutes, 45 secondsThey send for him. The moment his foot touches the train, the engine moves. A man who owns nothing is not a man

12:5212 minutes, 52 secondswithout resources. He has the most powerful resource in existence. Unbroken access to the god who owns everything.

13:0013 minutesIn 1908, Sundar Singh sets his face toward Tibet. [music] Tibet is not merely dangerous. It is deliberately systematically hostile to Christianity.

13:1013 minutes, 10 secondsThe penalty for introducing a new religion is death. The Himalayan passes that lead into it have claimed hardened mountaineers. Sundar Singh crosses them

13:1913 minutes, 19 secondsbarefoot in a thin cotton robe, leaving bloody [music] prints on ice, passing the frozen corpses of other travelers as warnings the mountain itself is issuing.

13:3013 minutes, 30 secondsHe is arrested, beaten, expelled. He returns the following year and the year after and the year after that. Year

13:3913 minutes, 39 secondsafter year, journey after journey, [music] he returns to Tibet. Not occasional bravery, systematic,

13:4613 minutes, 46 secondsrelentless annual consecration. Every year, back to the mountain that tried to kill him. Every year, the same question.

13:5313 minutes, 53 secondsWill you go again? Every year, the same answer. Yes. Late at [music] night, in a simple room on the road, a young woman

14:0214 minutes, 2 secondsis sent to Sundar's door. Planted deliberately by those who want to trap, compromise, and silence him. She enters

14:1114 minutes, 11 secondsexpecting to find a man alone and vulnerable.

14:1414 minutes, 14 secondsSundar looks at her not with alarm,

14:1614 minutes, 16 seconds[music]

14:1714 minutes, 17 secondsnot with condemnation, not with the cold superiority of a religious man, but with a compassion so deep and so disarming

14:2514 minutes, 25 secondsthat she stops moving. He says quietly, "My sister, your soul is too precious to

14:3214 minutes, 32 secondsbe sold this way. She does not go through with it. She later leaves that life entirely. The miracles on the

14:4014 minutes, 40 secondsmountain are the overflow of a life kept clean in the room. Consecration is not a public performance.

14:4814 minutes, 48 secondsEvery host who ever sheltered Sundar Singh reports the same pattern. He rises [music] before dawn and disappears for 5

14:5514 minutes, 55 secondsor 6 hours. Not preparing [music] strategy, not composing sermons, simply present before the one who sent him.

15:0415 minutes, 4 secondsThere is one particular night when Sundar is under the same roof as Mahatma Gandhi and [music] the poet Rabindranath

15:1015 minutes, 10 secondsTagore introduced through their mutual friend Reverend CF Andrews. Gandhi rises early to find this young man has already

15:1915 minutes, 19 secondsbeen at his Bible and in prayer for hours before the household stirred. He watches in silence and does not interrupt.

15:2715 minutes, 27 seconds[music]

15:2715 minutes, 27 secondsWhen Sundar finally rises from his knees, Gandhi approaches him [music] and after a long conversation, makes his

15:3515 minutes, 35 secondsoffer. You speak very well. Your knowledge is excellent. I am fighting a great [music] battle and I want you to

15:4215 minutes, 42 secondsjoin me. Sundar's reply is immediate, calm, and total. The battle [music] you are fighting is to win a country. The

15:5015 minutes, 50 secondsbattle I am fighting is to win souls. My battle [music] and yours are very different. He reaches into his robe,

15:5815 minutes, 58 secondstakes out his own Bible, the one he carries everywhere, and hands it across.

16:0316 minutes, 3 secondsRead this and study it daily. Know the truth, and the truth will set you free.

16:1016 minutes, 10 secondsThe man credible enough for Gandhi to recruit, consecrated enough to decline.

16:1516 minutes, 15 secondsAnd the documentary places this here immediately after the morning prayer because the clarity that answers Gandhi in that conversation came from the hours

16:2316 minutes, 23 secondsbefore Gandhi ever woke up. This is where the hook opened. This is where [music] we completed. As Sundar himself

16:3116 minutes, 31 secondsrecorded, and as the king's own reaction confirms, what happened in Rasar in 1912 has never been explained. [music] He had

16:4016 minutes, 40 secondsbeen arrested, stabbed, and thrown into the well, sealed above the key on the king's [music] belt. 3 days passed. Then

16:4916 minutes, 49 secondson the third day, he regains consciousness in the dark and prays the most honest prayer of his ministry.

16:5616 minutes, 56 secondsLord, I came out here to serve you, and here I am, thrown in a well. At that moment, metal grinds against metal above

17:0417 minutes, 4 secondshim. The lid opens. [music] A rope descends. A voice, "Sundar, come." He

17:1117 minutes, 11 secondsgrabs it. He climbs. He emerges into cold mountain air [music] and turns to thank his rescuer, but no one is there.

17:1917 minutes, 19 secondsThe door is sealed again. When the king investigates in the morning, [music] the key is found on his own belt. He never left his quarters. The well is empty.

17:2917 minutes, 29 secondsSundar walks back into the village and continues preaching. On another Tibet journey, [music] Sundar is seized by a crowd who condemn him to death slowly

17:3817 minutes, 38 secondsand with maximum suffering. According to his own accounts and the testimonies of those who [music] knew him, they sew him

17:4517 minutes, 45 secondstightly inside a wet raw yak skin [music] and leave him in the blistering sun. As the skin dries and shrinks, it

17:5317 minutes, 53 secondscompresses his body with [music] crushing bonebreaking force. The design is to suffocate him over hours. [music]

18:0118 minutes, 1 secondThrough the stitches in the skin, the crowd outside hears something that stops them cold. He is not screaming. [music]

18:0818 minutes, 8 secondsHe is not begging. He is singing hymns quietly [music] and steadily. From inside the killing, his prayer life

18:1618 minutes, 16 seconds[music] has gone so deep. His communion with Christ so real that his mind has completely [music] transcended the

18:2318 minutes, 23 secondsphysical, inhabiting a state of heavenly fellowship that the body's [music] agony cannot reach. The torturers had no access to the part of him that mattered.

18:3318 minutes, 33 secondsAnd now hear the words of Sundar Singh himself from his own diary. It is easy to die for Christ. It is hard [music] to

18:4018 minutes, 40 secondslive for him. Dying takes only a few minutes or at worst an hour or two. But to live for Christ means to die [music]

18:4818 minutes, 48 secondsdaily to myself. Every well, every yak skin, every frozen Himalayan pass. Those

18:5618 minutes, 56 secondsare the [music] easy prices. The hard price is the daily dying. The 5 hours given in the dark before anyone is

19:0319 minutes, 3 secondswatching. The 3 days fasting outside every village. The private room kept clean when a woman comes to the door.

19:1019 minutes, 10 secondsThe Bible handed to Gandhi's hands when it could have remained a point of pride.

19:1419 minutes, 14 secondsThat is the price the viewer is being [music] asked to pay. By 1920, Sadhu Sundar Singh is a global figure. He

19:2319 minutes, 23 secondstours Europe, Britain, America, and Australia. The largest churches and auditoriums in the world filled a capacity for this barefoot man from

19:3219 minutes, 32 secondsPunjab who speaks of Christ like someone describing a friend he had breakfast with this morning. During one American

19:3919 minutes, 39 secondsmeeting, as thousands of sophisticated Westerners sit in their pews, watching this saffronroed figure with his unhurrieded eyes and worn blanket, a

19:4819 minutes, 48 secondsthree-year-old girl stands up in the audience, tugs her mother's sleeve, and says, "Mom, he looks like Jesus." The

19:5619 minutes, 56 secondshall goes quiet out of the mouths of babes. The documentary's [music] entire central thesis spoken by a child who had no theology and needed none.

20:0520 minutes, 5 seconds[music]

20:0620 minutes, 6 secondsHe is offered money, positions, denominational covering, publishing contracts, comfortable homes in England

20:1420 minutes, 14 secondsand America. He refuses everyone. He is deeply grieved [music] by the materialism of the western church,

20:2220 minutes, 22 secondswealth and comfort strangling spiritual [music] life in the very nations that had sent missionaries to the world. He

20:2920 minutes, 29 secondsreturns [music] to the saffron robe, the bare feet, and the Himalayan road. The world laid its best offer at his feet.

20:3820 minutes, 38 secondsHe stepped [music] over it and kept walking.

20:4220 minutes, 42 secondsThe year is approximately 1920. [music] Sundar Singh is at the height of his international influence. A letter

20:5020 minutes, 50 secondsarrives from Rampur from his father. The man who disowned him, allowed him to be poisoned, told

20:5720 minutes, 57 secondshim he was no longer worthy to be called a son. Sher Singh writes, "Son, the one you believe in, I have now made him my

21:0721 minutes, 7 secondsgod, too. Years of the road, the well, the yak skin, the repeated Himalayan

21:1421 minutes, 14 secondscrossings, and a father in a Punjab [music] village meets the same Jesus his boy met on a winter morning in 1903.

21:2221 minutes, 22 secondsHis elder brother follows, coming to faith [music] in 1950.

21:2621 minutes, 26 secondsAnd in a detail that closes the circle completely, Sher Singh [music] having found the same Christ his son had walked

21:3321 minutes, 33 secondsaway from everything to proclaim goes further still. [music] He begins helping to fund Sundar's later missionary

21:4021 minutes, 40 secondsjourneys to Europe. The man who disowned his son for following Christ ends his life financing the mission. The price

21:4821 minutes, 48 secondspaid in [music] act two purchases this moment in act five. The seed planted in suffering grows in ground only God can

21:5521 minutes, 55 secondsreach. For every viewer who has paid a relational price for their faith, the documentary looks directly at you here.

22:0222 minutes, 2 secondsThe road is longer than you think. Keep walking.

22:0722 minutes, 7 secondsIn the final season of his life, Sundar Singh writes an article for the British and Foreign Bible Society titled What

22:1422 minutes, 14 secondsthe [music] Bible is to me. He writes, "It is now about a quarter of a century since this precious book introduced

22:2222 minutes, 22 seconds[music] me to its author." He describes its power as magnetic, unseen, irresistible, drawing sinners to the

22:3122 minutes, 31 secondsSavior the way a [music] magnet draws iron. He ends it as a prayer. May God grant that many more like me will

22:3822 minutes, 38 secondsreceive eternal life from the living Savior by this precious [music] book.

22:4322 minutes, 43 secondsThe inversion is total. The boy who poured kerosene on these pages and struck a match now writes for the Bible

22:5022 minutes, 50 secondssociety, calling [music] it the most precious book on earth. The fire he lit that day in the courtyard destroyed one

22:5722 minutes, 57 secondsBible. The fire God lit through him [music] distributed scripture across a continent. April 18th, 1929.

23:0623 minutes, 6 secondsSabathu, Simla Hills. Sundar Singh, age 39. His body, [music] aged far beyond

23:1423 minutes, 14 secondsits years by frostbite, beatings, poisoning, and years of Himalayan crossings, [music] takes up his pen and writes his last letter. His friends have

23:2323 minutes, 23 secondsbegged him not to go. His eyesight [music] is failing. His body is breaking. He knows exactly what he is walking toward. [music] He writes anyway. His own words in his own hand.

23:3523 minutes, 35 secondsMy reverend friend, I am leaving today for Tibet. I know the dangers and difficulties of this journey, but I must

23:4323 minutes, 43 secondstry my best to do my duty according to my calling. He cites Acts 20:24. [music] I count not my life precious to myself

23:5223 minutes, 52 secondsso that I finish my course with joy and the [music] ministry I received from the Lord Jesus. He signs it. I hope to be

24:0024 minutesback in 2 or 3 months and will write as soon as I return. with best [music] wishes and love to you all. Yours affectionately, Singh. He never [music]

24:0924 minutes, 9 secondswrites again. His friends gather at the mountain path. He embraces each one. He turns toward the Himalayas. The saffron

24:1824 minutes, 18 secondsrobe catches the morning light. A mist rolls in from the peaks. His figure grows smaller. The white of the robe

24:2624 minutes, 26 secondsdissolves [music] into the white of the snow and the white of the fog. He was never seen again. No body, no word, no

24:3424 minutes, 34 secondsgrave. He walked into God's hands and did not return. He wrote Acts 20:24 in his own hand, then lived it to the

24:4224 minutes, 42 secondsletter. A century passes. His books [music] remain in print across dozens of languages. Churches across Asia trace

24:5024 minutes, 50 secondstheir roots to the wave of consecration he carried. Men and women who heard his story gave up everything [music] and

24:5724 minutes, 57 secondsfound exactly what he found. He paid every price. He kept nothing for himself. And the man who kept nothing [music] left everything.

25:0925 minutes, 9 secondsYou stayed to the end. And as promised, the hidden discipline beneath everything Sadhu Sundar Singh ever did was this. He waited [music] on God before he moved.

25:2225 minutes, 22 secondsEvery village, three full days fasting and praying outside the threshold before he crossed it. every [music] morning, 5

25:3025 minutes, 30 secondsor 6 hours in silence before the road ever saw him. He never opened his mouth in [music] a new place before God had filled it. He never acted before he had

25:3925 minutes, 39 secondsheard. And in the waiting, God gave him what no classroom, no denomination, and no strategy [music] session could

25:4625 minutes, 46 secondsprovide. The clarity to decline Gandhi's offer, the peace [music] to sing while he was dying inside a yak skin, and the

25:5425 minutes, 54 secondsauthority that stopped a king [music] at the edge of an empty well, the discipline was the waiting. It is invisible, [music]

26:0226 minutes, 2 secondsunglamorous, relentless, and it is available to you right [music] now, today. If this video has been a

26:1026 minutes, 10 secondsblessing to you, consider joining our Cloud of Witnesses membership for exclusive content, early access, and a community of people committed to running

26:1826 minutes, 18 secondswith [music] endurance the race God has set before them. Hit the join button on the channel homepage or click on the membership link in the description below.

26:2926 minutes, 29 secondsYou have watched a [music] man burn a Bible and become a Bible Society author.

26:3326 minutes, 33 secondsYou have watched a man lose a father and [music] win him back through 30 years of faithfulness on the road. You have watched a man [music] walk into a well,

26:4126 minutes, 41 secondsa yak skin and a Himalayan mist and come out or not come out with equal and

26:4826 minutes, 48 secondsunshakable peace. The question is not could God use someone like Sundar Singh.

26:5426 minutes, 54 secondsYou already know the answer. The question [music] is what are you doing before the break of dawn? What happens

27:0127 minutes, 1 secondin the 3 days before you walk into the assignment God [music] has given you? Is there a jewel in your hand right now that he has told you to set down?

27:1027 minutes, 10 secondsComment below [music] with I.

27:1327 minutes, 13 secondsI belong to the road. If you are ready to wait before you move, surrender what God is asking you to release and keep

27:2227 minutes, 22 seconds[music] walking toward the thing that frightens you most. Don't forget to hit that notification bell, like and

27:2827 minutes, 28 secondssubscribe to Cloud of Witnesses for more life-changing stories [music] of faith that will equip you to boldly fulfill

27:3527 minutes, 35 secondsthe call of God in your life. This week, set your alarm 30 minutes earlier than normal. [music] Before you speak to

27:4327 minutes, 43 secondsanyone, open your Bible, sit in complete silence, and ask God one question only.

27:5027 minutes, 50 secondsWhat are you saying to me right now? Do this for seven consecutive mornings. Do not replace it with a podcast. Give God

27:5827 minutes, 58 secondsthe first silence of your day [music] and watch what he does with the rest.

28:0228 minutes, 2 secondsNext, we cover a man who videostepped onto a ship to China [music] with no map, no contacts, no common language, and a mission the entire Western church

28:1128 minutes, 11 secondssaid was impossible. He waited 27 years before he saw a single convert. What kept him faithful across three decades

28:1928 minutes, 19 seconds[music] with nothing to show for it? And what would change in your life if you made the same decision he made? Check out this video on Robert [music]

28:2628 minutes, 26 secondsMorrison to discover the hidden principle that turns decades of silence into eternal harvest [music] and the one decision that will determine whether you finish what God started in you.

Rachel Sizelove: They Called Her Crazy Until the Ceiling Literally Disappeared . Lord, I want my inheritance.

 In this powerful message, Rachel Sizelove reveals how an ordinary wife and mother of nine — a circuit-riding evangelist with no title, no budget, and no platform — carried fire from Azusa Street to a bloodstained Missouri city and ignited a movement that would grow to 67 million people across 366,000 churches worldwide. Through her story, you will witness the secret disciplines of intercession, travail, and total surrender that transformed obscurity into world-changing power, and learn why the revival that shook Springfield was born on a midnight train ride where nobody watched.

The year is 1907.

A taxi wagon rolls down a dirt road in Springfield, Missouri on a rainy May afternoon. A woman sits inside, middle-aged, plainly dressed, carrying no impressive credentials, no letter of endorsement, no invitation from any church or denomination.

She has no money worth speaking of.

She is not famous by every visible measure. She is completely ordinary.

The wagon pulls up to a white clapboard farmhouse on East Division Street. Two children are playing on the front porch. a boy of seven named Fred and his 10-year-old sister, Hazel. They see the wagon coming up the road and tear toward the house, screaming, "Mama, mama, she's here." The woman steps out and something is wrong. Or rather, something is extraordinarily terrifyingly right. From behind his mother's apron, young man watches his aunt step through the doorway. Her face glowing, her countenance radiant, her hands lifted high, speaking in a heavenly language. She had not yet said hello. She had not set down her bag. She stepped through that door with both hands raised toward heaven, speaking in tongues. And her first words in English were a prophetic declaration over the house. The dove of peace shall hover over this house. That night, a fire fell on Springfield, Missouri that would not go out for a century.

In the early hours of June 1st, 1907, in that farmhouse on East Division Street, a woman was baptized in the Holy Spirit who said she wanted 10,000 tongues to praise God. That woman's living room prayer meetings became a church. That church became the mother church of the Assemblies of God.

 That denomination grew to 67 million people in 366,000 churches across the  earth. And it all started because one ordinary woman refused to keep the fire to herself. 

Have you ever wondered what it looks like when one available praying woman changes the spiritual geography of an entire nation? Have you ever wondered what God can do through someone with no title, no budget, and no plan except obedience?

You are about to find out. Her name was Rachel Caizelov. She was not extraordinary by the world's estimation. She was a wife, a mother of nine children, a circuit writer who had given 20 years to ministry before the fire ever fell. She was simply available.

And that turned out to be enough to alter the course of church history.

If something in you is still hungry, if something in you says there has to be more, comment below with, "Lord, I want my inheritance right now and stay with us for the full story." Here is what most people never know about Rachel size love. She was not a young woman stumbling accidentally into revival. Born on September 3rd, 1864 in Morango, Indiana. The sixth of 10 children, Rachel Harper grew up in a household of faith that forged something deep in her from the beginning. By the time she walked through the doors of the Azusa Street Mission in 1906, Rachel and her husband Joseph had already been free Methodist Holiness Circuit Writing Evangelists for more than 20 years. They had arrived in Los Angeles as far back as 1895.

11 years before any fire fell on Azusa Street. Think about that. 20 years of faithful, unglamorous, underpaid ministry. 20 years of riding circuits, preaching in difficult places, raising nine children, and serving without recognition. They gave their lives to God long before Pentecost had a name. And after all of that, Rachel Sizelove was still dry inside. Not faithless, not backslidden, but dry. She could feel the edge of something she had never fully touched. A depth of God's presence, a dimension of power that all her years of sincere ministry had pointed toward, but never delivered. She prayed in private. She fasted when no one knew. She wrestled with scripture on her knees in the early hours, not for sermon preparation, but out of a hunger she could not fully name. Now, have you ever served God [music] faithfully for years and still felt that something essential was missing? That dry hunger was not a sign of spiritual failure in Rachel's life. It was the sign that God was about to do something extraordinary. Revival does not begin at the altar. It begins in the private dissatisfaction of someone who refuses to settle for less than everything God has. Then one day in 1906, walking through Los Angeles with Joseph, Rachel heard singing coming from a building no respectable person would enter, a run-down former stable at 312 Azusa Street. The newspapers had been mocking it.  The established church was distancing itself. Rachel Sizelove walked toward the sound. Picture what she found inside. A warehouse with no stage, no program, no  polished worship leader. The floors are bare wood. The benches are rough and plain.  And leading the gathering is a nearly blind black man named William Seymour, who sometimes prays with his head bowed inside an empty shoe box between sermons because he has decided the only posture worthy of this moment is total childlike humility before God. When Rachel crosses the threshold, she writes that she was touched by the presence of God, not moved by good preaching, not stirred by musicians, but touched directly, personally, unmistakably by God himself.

She raised both hands and spoke five words that define everything that follows. Lord, I want my inheritance, the baptism of the Holy Ghost. Study those words carefully.

She did not say, "Lord, bless me if you see fit." She declared, "I want my inheritance.

That is covenantal language. The language of a daughter who has served the father for 20 years and is finally standing at the counter saying, "I know what belongs to me, and I am not leaving without it." Scripture rose within her immediately. As the deer pants for the waters, so my soul longs after thee. She received a vision of the Holy Spirit descending as a dove into her life. Within weeks, July 1906, Rachel and Joseph were both baptized in the Holy Spirit. She wrote later that the experience gave her a new sense of the Holy Peace of God. And then she said something that every believer who has ever struggled to hear God needs to hear. She wrote that after the baptism, the voice of the Lord grew clearer while the voices of the world grew distant. That is what the fire does. It does not make you louder to the world. It makes God louder to you. In the very middle of this glorious encounter, God gave her a burden that was not for herself. A precise geographic unmistakable call. Go to Springfield, Missouri. Your mother is there. Your sister Lily, your family. Carry this fire to them.  The greatest spiritual experience of her life. And God immediately converted it into a commission because that is how the Holy Spirit always works. He does not fill you and leave you sitting. He fills you so he can send you. Before she left Los Angeles, Rachel went to the elders of the Azusa Street Mission and asked for their blessing. She would not move without covering. An elder responded with words she would carry across a continent. My child, you may go and I will be with you. Before Rachel ever packed for Springfield, she picked up a pen. For months  before she boarded any train, she wrote letters to Lily, detailed,urgent, glowing accounts of what God was doing at ISUsa Street. She enclosed copies of William Seymour's apostolic faith paper. Back in Springfield, Lily read them aloud. She began  to seek. She began to pray specifically for the baptism of the Holy Spirit. The ground was being prepared from a  distance. The carrier was already carrying before she ever left Los Angeles.

May 31st, 1907. Rachel boards the train for Missouri.

While every other passenger sleeps, Rachel does not sleep.

She is in travail, that grinding private intercession with no audience and no applause, weeping  quietly over the miles, pressing into God through the night. What you must understand about the revival that broke out in Springfield is this. It did not happen because Rachel arrived. It happened because she had already prayed it into existence. The work on the train was more important than the work in the tent. The hidden always precedes the visible and the visible is always proportional to what happened in the hidden. What are you doing right now with the ordinary invisible hours of your life?

The train ride always comes before the arrival and the arrival is always proportional to the travail. And her first words in English declare over the house, the dove of peace shall hover over this house. That night, the family gathers in the parlor. In the early hours of June 1st, 1907, Lily Harper Cororum is baptized in the Holy Spirit. Listen to Lily's own words.

 I wanted 10,000 tongues to praise the Lord. He lifted me up in his mighty power while myriads and myriads of angelic hosts sang with me as the spirit gave me utterance. That is not emotion. That is encounter. Lily Cororum became the first recorded person to receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit in Springfield, Missouri.

Overcome with joy, Lily ran to her Baptist pastor to share the testimony. He scoffed, rejected her. The Korum family was forced to leave their church. Hurt and baffled, they went home and they began prayer meetings in their living room. Do not miss what that rejection accomplished. The Mother Church of the Assemblies of God, serving 67 million people worldwide, was born because a Baptist pastor closed a door. God moved the fire out of the institution and into a farmhouse. Rachel herself left Springfield shortly after, not because the fire had burned out, but because she had made a prior commitment to serve at a camp meeting in Los Angeles before she ever came. She planted the seed and honored her obligation. She trusted God to tend what she had started. That is not abandonment. That is the posture of someone who genuinely believes the fire belongs to God, not to them. The prayer group grew through homes, rented halls, and eventually a large gospel tent on Center Street near the Springfield Courthouse. Large crowds gathered. Men threatened to organize a posi and drive the Pentecostals out of town. One man from First Baptist stood up. Let them alone. If it is not of God, it will fall through. But if it is of God, it will stand. It stood. Here is something history rarely places side by side, [music] but must. On April 14th, 1906, a mob of over a thousand people gathered on the Springfield town square.

Three African-American men, Horus Duncan, Fred Coker, and Fred Allen, were lynched. Hundreds of black residents fled Springfield permanently. The ethnic makeup of that city still reflects that horror today. On that exact same day, the Saturday before Easter, William Seymour opened the first services at 312 Azusa   Street in Los Angeles. Heaven came down in Los Angeles while all hell broke loose in Springfield. And God chose that city, that specific bloodstained city as the place where he would plant his fire.

Rachel was not carrying the fire to a neutral location. She was carrying it to a battlefield. The proof came in the testimony of a man named Gistler. He had personally participated in the Springfield lynching, an unsaved alcoholic consumed by racial hatred.

Around 1907, he traveled to Joplain  and encountered a Pentecostal street preacher who confronted him directly.  Everybody who gave their consent for killing those men was a murderer. Geisler went into the mission intending to argue. He came out repentant, saved, and baptized in the Holy Spirit. He returned to Springfield and spent the rest of his life as a faithful member of the congregation Rachel had ignited. His story was repeated regularly in that church because the community believed that a heart genuinely full of the Holy Spirit had no room left for racial   hatred. The fire Rachel carried did not merely bless Springfield. It began to heal it, but the road was not smooth. In 1911, local boys repeatedly disrupted tent meetings and physically tore the tent apart. The evangelistic efforts seemed to produce little visible impact. The believers were demoralized. What held them was not momentum. It was a circle of three women, Lily Cororum, Birdie Hoy, and Amanda Benedict, who joined in sustained prayer and refused to let the flame die. And into this struggling company came a hardened former sailor named Joe French who testified that God had literally raised him from the dead during the the revival of 1909. That resurrection sent him to Springfield where he opened a restaurant and became one of the lay preachers in the congregation. No platform, no title, just a man with a resurrection testimony serving the church from a table. Meanwhile, from the same Theer revival, word spread of horse thieves and a woman who operated a local brothel running to the altar in repentance. The fire that Rachel had carried from Azusa Street was reaching not just the religious. It was reaching the broken, criminal, and the outcast in every direction. I need to stop and tell you about Amanda Benedict, an  intercessor in the shadows. Because this story cannot be honestly told without her. Educated in New York, she had run a rescue home for girls in Chicago and served a faith home for children in Iowa. She moved to Springfield and met Lily Cororum while working door to door as a salesperson.

When she heard that the Holy Spirit had fallen at the Cororum farmhouse, she sought [music] the baptism immediately.

And when the fire fell on Amanda, God dropped into her spirit a vision.

Springfield was going to become a global center from which the blessings of God would radiate to the ends of the earth. Amanda Benedict decided she was going to pray until it happened.

For one full year, 365 consecutive days, she lived on bread and water alone. She would go to a nearby grove of trees during tent meetings and pray through the entire night alone in the dark on her face before God. No audience but heaven. At her funeral, a woman stood and testified. I believe this present assembly, the Gospel Publishing House, and the Central Bible Institute are all here as a result of that praying in the Holy Ghost on the part of Sister Benedict. One woman, bread and water, one year, three world changing institutions.

11 days before her death, Amanda wrote a final letter to Lily Cororum. Pray, fight, hold till hell gives way till the real power of His might shall fall with such invincible force that sin shall go down before it. Our fighting force is small, but it is gaining ground. Every forward step is hotly contended. But our flag is flying. Our bugle is sounding an advance to our forces. A retreat to the foe. She died 11 days later. Her grave in East Lawn Cemetery went unmarked for 82 years.

Heaven had not forgotten her. In August 1913, Rachel returned to Springfield for a season. One afternoon, alone in prayer, she received a vision. [music] A beautiful bubbling sparkling fountain rising from the very heart of Springfield, its waters flowing east and west, north and south, until the whole land was covered with living water. She walked into the dining room with a holy glow on her countenance and declared, "I have been in the presence of the Lord. I saw the Lord sounding a bugle for the angels of heaven to go and [music] do battle for the city of Springfield. Then the word of God came directly. I am going to do a mighty work in Springfield that will astound the world. This vision arrived 8 months before the Assemblies of God was founded at Hot Springs in April 1914 and 5 years before the AoG moved its headquarters to Springfield.

At the time, no one had [music] any plan or reason to believe this struggling Ozark city held any significance whatsoever. But Rachel initially held   something back. Even after all she had seen and planted, she was opposed to the kind of denominational structure the Assemblies of God represented. She valued the freedom of the spirit and feared organization would quench it. It was a real tension, a genuine struggle. But as she watched her vision come to pass, brick by brick, institution by institution, she changed. She wrote, "But when I think of the vision the Lord brought before me of the waters flowing out from Springfield, I have to say, surely the general counsel at Springfield is of God." She was willing to be wrong. She was willing to grow. That teachability was as much a part of the fire as any miracle. January 1st, 1915. Five teenage boys, Fred Cororum, his brother Paul, their cousin Laurel Tiaoh, and two others cut through a loose board in the fence of White City Park, a Springfield amusement park with a reputation for wickedness. One stops and says, "This place is unclean." Another, "Do you suppose it could ever belong to God?" Laurel responds, "Let's claim it for the Lord." Five boys knelt on that ground in the dark of New Year's morning and prayed with everything in them. When they rose, one looked at the stars overhead and said, "When God told Abraham to count the stars, those were the same stars we see tonight." Another replied, "Let's pray that the gospel will reach as many people as there are stars."

Every piece of that property eventually came into the possession of the Assemblies of God.  It became the national leadership and resource center, shipping gospel literature and curriculum to the ends of the earth every single working day. When Fred Cororum stood on that ground in 1972 and saw what it had become, he wrote, "When I look on this area now and see the general council headquarters complex, central assembly and the district headquarters all on this property, I am overwhelmed. When I see the presses turning out the printed word and the missionaries being commissioned and the radio programs going to the ends of the earth, I know there is a God who hears our sincere prayers. How insignificant one feels to behold His mighty works that are exceedingly and abundantly above all that five teenage boys or grown folk either could ask Him to do.

 The seven-year-old boy who watched Rachel step through the doorway became a Harvard attorney and he stood on transformed ground 60 years later. Overwhelmed, Rachel's size love watched the Assemblies of God be organized in 1914.

She saw it moved to Springfield in 1918.

She witnessed Central Bible College open in the basement of a church that was born in her sister's living room. She watched the movement she helped ignite reach across the earth. and she died on May 20th, 1941, aged 76 at her home at 115 South Cresant Heights Boulevard in Los Angeles. She was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale. The Los Angeles Times called her a retired evangelical minister. She left behind her husband, Joseph, and nine children. Nine children she had raised while writing circuits, carrying fire, writing letters to sisters, praying on trains, and planting rivers in cities that did not yet know they needed them.

No stadium bears her name. No theological institution claims her as a founder. History gave her a paragraph,  maybe a chapter. One historian summarized it this way. Her greatest contribution was not what she did at Azusa Street. It was what she carried away from it. Rachel's size love was not a special woman. She was an available one. She was not more gifted than you.

She was more hungry. She did not have more resources. She had more surrender. She was a mother of nine who still found the hours to pray on a train. She was a 20-year veteran of ministry who still raised her hands and said, "Lord, I want more." She was a woman who planted a fire and left, trusting God to tend it. She was a woman who was wrong about something important and humble enough to change. She raised her hands in a broken down warehouse in Los Angeles and staked a claim that changed the history of a movement. Lord, I want my inheritance.

The fire is still available. The commission is still open. The question is not whether God will send the fire.

The question is, are you willing to be the one who carries it? The woman who changed the destiny of a city did not do it from a platform. She did it on her knees, in prayer closets , on train rides, in farmhouse living rooms, in all night intercessions witnessed only by God. Rachel's size love secret was not strategy. It was surrender. 

And surrender is available to every single person  right now.

 This week, set aside 30 minutes of prayer every morning, not to present requests, but to declare hunger. Speak Rachel's exact words aloud. Lord, I want my inheritance.

Do this every day for seven consecutive days. Watch what God begins to awaken in your spirit. Now, if Rachel's carrying fire on a train moved you, wait until you encounter a woman who carried that same fire across an ocean while every institutional door slammed in her face. 

Who was Florence Crawford?

How did a woman with no title and no formal ordination plant Pentecostal fire across an entire continent? 

What did she discover about spiritual endurance that most believers never find? 

And could her refusal to quit be the answer your own calling has been waiting for?

.


Saturday, May 16, 2026

God-kind of life Ζωή

 Ζωή ( written in Greek)

ZOE, a Greek word for life used multiple times in the Bible, means eternal life or “The God-kind of life.” The rich, abundant divine nature of God; His fullness of love, joy, power, and ability.

When you get born-again, this abundant life and nature of God is imparted into your spirit from God.


“For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.” John 3:16


“But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.” John 20:31


“Very truly I tell you, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me HAS eternal life and will not be judged but has crossed over from death to life.” John 5:24


God recreates you by taking away your old spirit and giving you a brand new spirit created in His own image and likeness so that you nces  child and His direct offspring. Zoe is the essence of salvation.


“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!” 2 Corinthians 5:17


“I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.” Ezekiel 36:26


 


God is divine. Since “like begets like,” when you become God’s child, you share in this divine nature of God.


“Flesh gives birth to flesh, but the Spirit gives birth to spirit.” John 3:6


“Through these He has given us His very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature…” 2 Peter 1:4a


 


Christ, who is life, brings us life eternal. So, zoe is not only about spending eternity with God in heaven. It includes the promise of heaven, but it is so much more! In Christ, we have zoe right now. Those who belong to the Son of God have the right to eternal life here on earth. Zoe starts here and continues for eternity.


“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.” John 10:10


“Whoever believes in the Son HAS eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God’s wrath remains on them.” John 3:36


 


So as a born-again believer, REJOICE and REST in the knowledge that you are a new creation and you have the life of God – eternal life – in you.


 


What does zoe do for you?

— The zoe life of God brings life to man to make him divine and a new specie. 2 Corinthians 5:17, 2 Peter 1:4


— Zoe enables us to know God and have an intimate relationship with Him. Without His divine nature, we cannot fellowship with God. But because of zoe, we can commune directly with Him. John 17:3


— Because of zoe, we are able to reflect Christ; the one true light. As his life (zoe) is the light of men, when we receive him, spiritual darkness is dispelled. John 1:4, 1 John 5:11,12


— When you partake of God’s divine nature, you become His vessel of love on earth. God is love, therefore as recipients of His divine nature, we become His love ambassadors. He has poured His love into our hearts and He has given us His Spirit of love. 2 Timothy 1:7, Romans 5:5


— Zoe enables us to work in God’s divine power and authority. 2 Timothy 1:7, Ephesians 1:19, Ephesians 3:20


— Zoe sets us free from the devil, sin, and eternal damnation. Through your life and conduct, others will be able to tell that you have the life of God in you. John 5:24, Romans 8:2, 1 John 5:18


— Zoe empowers us to live life abundantly. To the full. Free from oppression and sickness. John 10:10


Conclusion

Although we have the awesome powerful life of God within us, it will only impact our lives to the extent that we allow it to. Therefore, we must choose daily to walk by faith in light of these precious promises given to us by God.

If you have not yet accepted Jesus as Lord, my prayer is that you open your heart to receive God’s free gift of eternal life.

And if you already have the gift of eternal life, I pray that the eyes of your heart will be enlightened so that you will know that you have the life and nature of God in you. I also pray that you will allow God’s divine nature and power within you to dominate you and overflow through you to others. AMEN!!!

Bambara: Madamu Guyon: A ka delili tun ye farati ye kosɛbɛ, Louis XIV yɛrɛ y’a to a y’a minɛ .

 Madamu Guyon: A ka delili tun ye farati ye kosɛbɛ, Louis XIV yɛrɛ y’a to a y’a minɛ .

Aw ye Faransi musocɛ salen dɔ ka maana fɔbali sɔrɔ min ye tɔɔrɔ ɲini Ala fɛ ani k’a sɔrɔ a bɛɛ lajɛlen na -min bilala kaso la siɲɛ naani k’a sɔrɔ a ma kiri tigɛ, min jalakilen don Faransi egilisi fangatigiba fɛ, a farikolo tiɲɛna ni sɔgɔsɔgɔninjɛ ye, k’a denw bɔsi a la, k’a tɔgɔ bɔ a la, ani k’a ka hɔrɔnya bɔsi a la- ani min ye zaburuw da Bastille nɛgɛberew fɛ ni hɛrɛ ye min ɲɛfɔli tɛ se ka kɛ, min ye kaso gɛlɛya garadiw y’u tulo digi a ka da la ka kasi k’a sɔrɔ u m’a dɔn mun na. Nin sɛbɛnnikɛlan barikama in kɔnɔ, Madamu Jeanne Guyon ka maana bɛ fɛn jira Ala bɛ min bɔ ni dɔ sababu fɛ min ma a yɛrɛ di kɔlɔlɔw dɔrɔn ma, nka a y’a yɛrɛ di taabolo bɛɛ ma - cogo min na mɔgɔ ye muso ka sɛbɛnw makun minnu ye farafinna jamanaw ni san kɛmɛ caman tigɛ walasa ka John Wesley, Hudson Taylor, Watchman Nee, Pennsylvanie Quakers, ani ɲɛnamaya taabolo jugumanba labɛn farafinna saba kɔnɔ — ani a bɛ musaka min bɔ tiɲɛ na walasa ka diɲɛ fɛn bɛɛ tunun ko i mago bɛ min na walasa ka fɛn kelen sɔrɔ diɲɛ tɛ se ka min di ani a tɛ se ka min ta.


A ka gafe kɔnɔ min tɔgɔ ye ko A Short and Easy Method of Prayer, a ka kalan tun sinsinnen bɛ lamaga saba kan minnu tun ka nɔgɔn fo u kɛra fɛn caman tigɛli ye.


¶Fɔlɔ, i ka tɛmɛsira deli, i kana kɛ kunnafoni kama, nka i ka ɲɔgɔn sɔrɔ. A kalan dɔɔni dɔɔni, tɛmɛsira damadɔw dɔrɔn fo daɲɛ kelen walima kumasen kelen ka maga i dusukun na. O kɔ, a dabila. Aw bɛ a jɔ pewu. I ka o kuma minɛ nɔgɔya la. Aw ka lafiɲɛ o kɔnɔ. Aw kana a sɛgɛsɛgɛ. A to a ka i balo. Laɲini tɛ dɔnniya ye. O ye ka kɛ yen.


¶A filanan, jateminɛ nɔgɔman. Tile gansan bɛɛ kɔnɔ, baara kɛli, taama, tobili, i hakili jigin nɔgɔya la kɔnɔna na ka taa Ala ka dɔnniya dususumanin na min sigilen bɛ i kɔnɔ. I hakili bɛna yaala-yaala. O de bɛ makɔnɔ. O wale ye ka segin ni dususuma ye siɲɛ caman k’a sɔrɔ i ma i yɛrɛ jalaki. Lafaamuyali min bɛ taa ɲɛ ni dususuma ye. Aw bɛ yan. O de bɛ bɔ.


¶Sabanan, ka bila. Aw kana kɔlɔlɔw dɔrɔn di Ala ma, nka aw ka alako ta fan fɛ taabolo bɛɛ yɛrɛ di Ala ma. I ka a ɲini ka i yɛrɛ ka senuya dilan dabila. Baara bɛɛ kɛ ka dafa. Nin tun tɛ abada kunkanbaaraw bilali kɔ, nka i k’o kɛ k’a sɔrɔ i ma kɔnɔna cɛsiri kɛ ni kɔnɔnafili ye, k’a sɔrɔ i ma jɔrɔ a nɔfɛkow la, k’a sɔrɔ i ma i yɛrɛ jalaki tuma o tuma n’i ma se. Aw bɛ kurunbokari dabila kosɛbɛ ten. Aw ka da sisan ko la.


Madamu Guyon y’a fɔ ka jɛya.

Delili ye dafalenya ni kuntigiya nisɔndiya kun ye. Ka kɛ mɔgɔ dafalenw ye cogo min na, o ye ka ɲɛnamaya kɛ Ala ɲɛ kɔrɔ.


O tun ye farati ye. Diɲɛ kɔnɔ, dannaya kɔrɔ tun ye laadalakow ni sigida ka yamaruya ye min ka gɛlɛn, dannaya kɔrɔ tun ye laadalakow ni sigida ka yamaruya ye, a tun b’a fɔ mɔgɔ gansanw ye, baarakɛlaw, jagokɛlaw, baw, sɛnɛkɛlaw, ko u mago tɛ o si la walasa ka Ala dɔn k’a ɲɛsin u yɛrɛ ma, dusukun dafalen dɔrɔn, hakili jiginna dɔrɔn, sago min y’a yɛrɛ di dɔrɔn. A y’a ka gafe sɛbɛn. A jɛnsɛnna i ko tasuma. A n’a ka hakili ta fan fɛ ɲɛmɔgɔ, Fa LaCombe, taara Alpes kuluw cɛma, Jenɛfu, Turin, Grenobyl.

“Tiɲɛba don, kabako don hali ni sɔsɔli tɛ a la, ko an ka nisɔndiya bɛɛ — waati ta fan fɛ, hakili ta fan fɛ ani banbali — bɛ fɛn kelen de la, o ye ka an yɛrɛ bila Ala bolo, ani k’an yɛrɛ to a bolo, ka kɛ an fɛ ani an kɔnɔ i n’a fɔ a b’a fɛ cogo min na.” — Madamu Guyon ye

it is time to discern the Lord's body, stand on your legal rights, and walk in absolute spiritual authority.

 Spiritual Revelation of the communion table with the LORD JESUS CHRIST 

Adam ate and died. You eat and live .


ADAM ATE AND DIED 

YOU EAT AND LIVE 

EAT HIS FLESH & DRINK HIS BLOOD 

HOW TO ENGAGE THE COMMUNION 


Most of the body of Christ has reduced the Lord's Table to a religious memorial or a funeral service for someone who is dead. But the Communion was never intended to be a ritual of "remembrance" for a historical event - it was designed to be a legal portal and a vital connection to the current, pulsing life of God. 

In this teaching, we dive deep into the mystery of the Communion, looking at the spiritual laws of life and death that govern human biology and spirit. In the Garden of Eden, death entered the human race through a physical act of eating. Adam consumed a nature of death. In His infinite wisdom, God designed the solution to enter through the exact same channel: Adam ate and died; you eat and live. 

Discover the difference between Old Testament Atonement (a temporary covering) and New Testament Remission (the complete stopping of being for your past). Learn how partaking of the bread and the cup legally transfers your "Health Rights" and initiates a vital spiritual blood transfusion of Zoe - the absolute life of God - into your physical members.

"Verily, verily, I say unto you, Except ye eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink his blood, ye have not life in yourselves."- John 6:53 

If you have been struggling with sickness, fear, or a sin-consciousness that keeps you under condemnation, it is time to discern the Lord's body, stand on your legal rights, and walk in absolute spiritual authority.


Respected reader, I want to ask you something that I think most believers have never seriously considered. 

When was the last time you took communion and actually expected something to happen? 

Not as a ritual, not as a quiet moment of remembrance before moving on with the service. 

I mean, when was the last time you broke that bread and lifted that cup of wine with the settled conviction that you were participating in something legal, something living, something that was actively transferring the life of God into your physical body

For most believers, and I say this not to condemn, but because I lived it myself  for years, the answer is never. Because nobody ever taught us that communion was anything more than a memorial, a looking back, a moment of reflection on what Jesus did 2,000 plus years ago. 

And so we approach the Lord's table the way you approach a graveside service quietly, somberly, thinking about someone who is no longer here. But Jesus is not dead. 

 And the table he instituted was never meant to be a funeral service. I remember the first time this hit me. I was sitting in a service years into my Christian walk, someone who had studied the Word of God seriously. 

And the communion elements were being passed around and I was doing what I had always done, holding the bread, thinking about the cross, feeling appropriately solemn. 

And then a thought settled into my spirit so clearly it almost felt audible. 

You are eating life right nowDo you understand what you are holding? 

 It stopped me completely because I realized in that moment that I had been treating the most powerful legal instrument available to the believer as a religious formality. I had been sitting at a table loaded with divine provision and leaving hungry every single time. That is the condition of most of the body of Christ today.

 The modern church has reduced the Lord's communion table to a memorial service and in doing so it has robbed the believer of access to one of the most powerful legal realities of their redemption. 

John 6:53, Jesus said, Verily, verily, I say unto you except ye eat the flesh of the son of man and drink his blood ye have not life  in yourselves

Except ye eat, ye have not life in yourselves. This is not poetic language. This is not metaphor designed to create an emotional response. This is a legal statement about a spiritual reality

Jesus Christ was describing a transaction, a transfer, a specific mechanism through which the life of God enters the physical members of the believer. And the disciples who heard it understood immediately that Jesus was saying something radical. 

John 6 verse 60.  Many therefore of his disciples when they heard this said, "This is a hard saying. Who can hear it?" 

They were not confused about the poetry. They were confronted by the claim because what Jesus Christ was describing sounded impossible. 

And yet Jesus Christ said it with the calm certainty of someone describing a law because that is exactly what it is. A law.

Adam died by eating. And God in His infinite legal wisdom designed the solution to come through the same channel. Not through a feeling, not through a prayer, not through a spiritual experience that bypasses the physical. 

But through eating, through a specific, deliberate, faith filled act of taking something into your body that carries the life of God and receiving that life into your physical members. 

Adam reached out his hand and took the forbidden fruit. And in that moment, not symbolically, but actually, he consumed a nature. The nature of spiritual death entered him through his mouth. And from that moment, the entire human race was  infected. Spirit first, then soul, then body. Death working from the inside out. 

 And God looked at that legal reality. We are and designed a redemption that answered it on exactly the same terms. 

 If death entered through the mouth, life would enter through the mouth. 

If a man ate and died, a  man would eat and live. That is the mystery of the Lord's table. And it is not a mystery designed to stay hidden. It is a mystery designed to be revealed to every believer who is willing to approach the Lord's table not as a funeral attendee but as covenant heir claiming what legally belongs to them

Today we are going to show you exactly what that looks like, what the bread 🍞 actually is, what the cup 🍷 actually is, and how to take communion in a way that activates the full legal reality of what Jesus Christ purchased for you at Calvary. 

Starting with the law that governs it all. To understand what is actually happening at the communion table, you have to understand the law that governs the entire human race. It is not a theological concept. 

A law as real and as consistent as the law of gravity,   as inescapable as the law of sewing and reaping.

 The law is this. What you consume, you become. Not in a nutritional sense, in a spiritual sense. 

At the deepest level of your being, at the level of your spirit, you are shaped by what you take in. 

What you feed becomes your nature. 

What you ingest becomes your reality. 

 And this law was operating in the Garden of Eden long before any theologian gave it a name. 

Genesis 2:17, God said to Adam, "Of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it. For in the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die. 

 [ but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat from it you will certainly die."]

Not, "if you eat it, I will punish you with death." 

Not, "eating it will make me angry enough to take your life." 

In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die, the eating itself would produce the death, not as a consequence imposed from outside, as a nature received from inside. 

And that is exactly what happened. Adam reached out his hand. He took the fruit. He consumed it. And in that moment, not the next day, not gradually, over time, but in that moment, spiritual death entered his spirit, the life of God that had animated him from within was cut off. He became a different kind of being, a being ruled by his senses, five common senses , a being governed by fear, a being separated from the Father at the deepest level of his existence. And every human being born after Adam inherited that same nature. Romans 5:12. 

 Wherefore, as by one man's sin entered into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned. Death passed upon all men. 

 Not because they all made the same choice Adam made, because they were all born into the same nature Adam produced by his choice, death by eating. 

Now, here is where the revelation from the blood covenant becomes so precise and so powerful.  

 God never changes his methods. God is the same yesterday, today, and forever. 

And if death entered the human race through the physical act of eating, then God in His perfect legal wisdom would design life to re-enter the human race through the physical act of eating, not around it, not above it, through it, on the same terms by the same mechanism, through the same channel. 

And this is what Jesus was revealing in John chapter 6 when he stood before the crowd and said, "Unless you eat my flesh and drink my blood, you have no life in you." He was not being dramatic. He was not using shocking language to grab attention. He was describing the legal symmetry of redemption. 

 Adam ate the nature of the enemy. You eat the nature of the Father. 

Adam consumed death through his mouth. You consume life through your mouth. 

The same law that opened the door to death is the law through which the door to life was designed to swing back open. 

 John 6:54-57. 

 He that eateth my flesh and drinkketh my blood hath eternal life. For my flesh is meat indeed, and my blood is drink 9:46 indeed. He that eateth my flesh and drinkkeeth my blood abideth in me and I in him. As the living father sent me, 

9:55 and I live because of the father, so he that eateth me, he also shall live because of me, he also shall live  because of me. Not he shall go to heaven when he dies, he shall live. Present tense, active tense. Now the same life that flows from the Father to the Son flows from the Son to the one who eats. 

 This is the Zoe life, the God kind of life, the life that is not subject to sictkness, not subject to fear, not subject to the domination of the enemy. 

 And it enters you the same way death entered Adam through your mouth, through eating, through a deliberate, faithfilled act of receiving what God has provided at the Lord's table. Now, I want you to sit with the weight of this for a moment. 

The entire history of human suffering, every sickness, every death, every generation born into the bondage of a fallen nature traces back to one act of eating, one moment at one tree, one man reaching out his hand and God's answer to all of it is another tree, another body, another act of eating. The cross was not just an event in history. 

It was the legal counter to the garden and the table. The communion table is the point of uot through which that counter becomes personally real in your life. Every time you take that bread, you are reversing what Adam did. Every time you lift that cup, you are receiving what the garden took away. 

 That is not religion. That is the law of God working exactly the way he designed it. So now we understand the law. What you consume, you become. Adam ate death, we eat life. 

But I want to get very specific now about what the bread actually is and what the cup actually is. Because this is where most believers are still operating in the dark. And 11:52 operating in the dark at the table is according to Paul one of the most dangerous places a believer can be. 1 Corinthians 11: 29 and 30. For he that eateth and drinketh, eateth and drinketh judgment unto himself, if he discern not the body. For this cause many among you are weak and sickly, and not a few sleep. Weak sickly. And some had died, not because they were unworthy, not because God was punishing them, because they failed to discern the body. They came to the table and saw bread when they should have seen a legal transfer of health. Let me say that again. They saw bread when they should have seen a legal document signed in the body of Christ that said, "Your sickness has no more right to stay." The bread is not a symbol of what Jesus went through. 

 It is a point of contact with what he legally purchased for you through what he went through. And there is an enormous difference between those two things. 

Isaiah 53:4 and 5. Surely he hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows. He was wounded for our transgressions. He was bruised for our iniquities. The chastisement of our peace was upon him. And with his stripes, we are healed. 

He bore our griefs. He carried our sorrows. He was wounded. He was bruised. He was chastised. Past tense. Already done. 

 Already legally accomplished. Which means when you take that bread, you are not asking God to heal you. You are claiming a healing that has already been legally purchased. You are making a demand on a transaction that was completed at Calvary. You are saying because his body was broken, my body is made whole. Because he was struck, I am released. That is not arrogance. That is covenant. 

  A covenant people never beg for what the covenant has already guaranteed. A soldier who has been given a legal right to occupy a territory does not ask permission to enter it every time. He enters it because the legal right has already been established. When you take the bread in that  consciousness, something changes. The Lord's table stops being a funeral and becomes a legal proceeding, a covenant meal between a father and his child, a moment of legal exchange where you present the broken body of Christ as your legal  ground for wholeness and receive what that body purchased. Now, let us talk about the cup. The cup is even more staggering when you understand what was uncovered from the blood covenant

Most of the religious world treats the cup 🍷 as a symbol of the blood of Jesus. And even those who understand it goes beyond a symbol often think of it in terms of forgiveness. The blood washes away sin. The blood covers transgression. But a distinction that changes everything. In the Old Testament, sin was merely covered. The word atonement in the Hebrew, cafa, means to cover, like a temporary bandage over a wound. The blood of bulls and goats placed a covering over sin, but it could not remove it. It had to be repeated year after year because it was never permanent. But the blood of Jesus Christ does not cover. It remits. Remission means the stopping of being, the legal termination of existence. 

When you take that cup, 🍷 you are not participating in a covering. You are participating in a remission, a legal declaration that the old nature, the sin nature, the death nature, the nature that Adam passed to every human being has been legally terminated. 

Acts 20 :28. Feed the church of God, which he hath purchased with His own blood. His own blood. 

 Not the blood of an animal, not the blood of a man, the blood of God himself, God manifest in the flesh,   poured out to satisfy the claims of justice against the entire human race. 

 And Hebrews 9:12 says, "Neither by the blood of goats and calves, but by His own blood he entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption." Eternal redemption, not temporary, not conditional, eternal

 When you lift that cup,  🍷 you are participating in the blood that purchased eternal redemption. You are declaring that the 'old man' is legally dead, that the new creation is legally alive, that the claims of the enemy against your life have been legally  dismissed because the blood of God himself has already answered every one of them. That is not a memorial. That is a legal proceeding and you are the one making the claim

Now I want to deal with something that I think is the most practical barrier between most believers and the full reality of what the table offers. It is called sin consciousness and it is the reason why most believers approach the communion table feeling unworthy. When the entire point of the Lord's table is to declare that the question of worthiness has already been settled

 Here is how sin consciousness works at the Lord's table. The elements are passed and instead of approaching with the confidence of  covenant heir, the believer approaches with their eyes down, mentally rehearsing every failure of the past week, every shortcoming, every moment where they fell short of what they know God requires. And by the time they take the bread and the cup, they have spent the entire communion moment in a state of spiritual self-condemnation. And we identified this as one of the enemy's most effective strategies against the believer because sin consciousness at the Lord's table does not honor the sacrifice. It dishonors it. 

 Let me say that carefully. When you approach the Lord's table with the primary focus on your own unworthiness, you are implicitly saying that the blood of Jesus Christ was not sutticient to deal with your condition. You are treating the blood of God as though it were no better than the blood of a goat. Something that covers but does not fully resolve. 

Romans 8:1.  There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus. Now no condemnation. Not no condemnation after you have sufficiently mourned your failures. Not no condemnation once you feel worthy enough to approach. Now, no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus. That is your legal standing. And the communion table is where you declare it. 

2 Corinthians 5 21. For he hath made Him to be sin for us who knew no sin that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him. 

Jesus Christ was made sin. You were made righteousness. That is the exchange. That is the legal transaction at the heart of the new covenant. And when you take that bread 🍞 and that cup 🍷 in the consciousness of that exchange, everything changes. You are no longer approaching as someone hoping God will overlook your failures. You are approaching as the righteousness of God in Christ, as someone who standing before the Father is identical to the standing of Jesus Christ himself. Note in the blood covenant that righteousness is not a feeling. It is not an experience you manufacture in a long prayer session. It is a legal fact, a positional reality that exists whether you feel it or not. And the Lord's table is where that legal fact is declared and where the full benefit of it is received. 

Now, here is where this connects to the reign that Romans 5:17 describes. For if by one man's offense death reigned by one, much more they which receive abundance of grace, and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one, Jesus Christ reign in life, not survive in life, not cope in life, reign

And the key word is receive. 

 Those who receive the abundance of grace and the gift of righteousness shall reign. The communion table is the place of receiving. It is the place where you stretch forth your hand, not to take a piece of bread, but to receive the Zoe life that was purchased for you at Calvary. God kind of love. To receive the righteousness that gives you legal standing before God, to receive the abundance of grace that enables you to reign over every circumstance that tries to rise above the knowledge of God. I think about a man I knew once, a believer who had been carrying a physical condition for almost 3 years. He had prayed about it. He had been prayed for. He had done everything the church told him to do and nothing had shifted.When I sat with him and asked how he took communion, he described exactly what l expected. He would take the elements quietly, think about what Lord Jesus Christ had done, feel grateful, and move on. He had never once approached the table as a legal proceeding. He had never once taken that  bread and said, "Because His body was broken, my body is made whole." He had never once lifted that cup 🍷 and declared, "The life of God is in my blood right now." Sickness has no legal right to remain in a body filled with Zoe

When he began to take communion daily in his home alone with full understanding of what he was doing, things began to shift. Not overnight, but they shifted because he stopped eating bread and started eating life. That is the difference the table makes when you discern the body. So, how do you actually do this? How do you take communion in a way that activates the  full legal reality of what we have been talking about rather than simply going through a religious motion that leaves you exactly where you started? 

Because this is the part that most teaching on the communion never gets to. It explains the theology and then leaves you with no idea what to actually do differently the next time the bread and cup are passed. 

22:24 Kenyon was very specific about this and I want to be specific with you. The first thing you have to understand is that you do not have to wait for a 

22:32 church service to take communion. The table is available to you every single day in your home alone before the demands of the day get their hands on you before sense knowledge gets the first word. 

1 Corinthians 11 26. For as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord's death till he come. As often as, not once a month. Not once a quarter. As often asevery day is an invitation to the table. 

Every morning is an opportunity to sit before the Father God as a covenant heir and receive what belongs to you. 

The second thing is to prepare what you say before you take the elements because the Lord's table is a legal proceeding. And a legal proceeding requires a specific declaration. You are making a covenant declaration. speaking the legal realities of your redemption into the 

23:28 atmosphere, giving voice to what the body and blood of Jesus purchased. Here is what that declaration sounds like when you take the bread. You hold the bread and you say, "Father, I thank you that the body of Jesus Christ was broken for me. Isaiah 53 declares that by His stripes I am healed. I discern the body of Christ right now. I am not eating bread. I am eating life. I received the Zoe life of God into every cell of my body. Sickness has no legal right to remain in a body that carries the life of God. Every symptom that has tried to establish itself in my physical members, I command it to leave now in the name of Jesus Christ. Because His body was broken, my body is made whole. 

And then you eat deliberately, consciously as an act of legal reception. And when you take the cup, 🍷 you say, "Father, I thank you for the blood of Jesus Christ. This blood did not just cover my sin. It remitted it.  Legally terminated it. I am the righteousness of God in Christ. There is no condemnation standing against me. The old nature, the Adam nature, the death nature has been legally destroyed. I am a new creation.I receive the life that is in this blood right now. The same life that raised Jesus from the dead is flooding my spirit, my soul, and my body  at this moment. Romans 8 verse 11. But if the spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwelleth in you, he that raised up Christ Jesus from the dead shall give life also to your mortal bodies through his spirit that dwelleth in you. Give life to your mortal bodies now through the spirit that is already inside you. And then you drink deliberately, consciously as a covenant heir and receiving what the blood of God purchased. 

Now I want to speak to someone who has been carrying a physical condition, a sickness, a symptom that has refused to respond to prayer, to declaration, to everything you have tried. I want you to hear this clearly. 

 You have not been failing. You have been eating bread when you should have been eating life. You have been taking the cup 🍷 as a memorial when you should have been lifting it as a legal instrument

Start taking communion daily in your home with full understanding of what you are doing. Hold the bread and declare your healing rights. Lift the cup and declare your righteousness. Do it every morning before your circumstances get the first word. And do not measure it by how you feel in the moment. Measure it by what the Word says is happening in the spirit every time you discern the body and receive the life. 

Because something is happening every time you eat at this Lord's table. Something that your physical senses may not immediately report. Something that is working from the inside out. Spirit first, then soul, then body. 

The same way death worked from the inside out through Adam. But this time in the opposite direction.  Life working from the inside out. Zoe flooding your members. The God kind of life asserting itself over every symptom and every report that contradicts what the body of Christ purchased for you. 

 That is the mystery of the Lord's table. That is what Adam could not access in the garden, but what you have legal access to every single morning of your life. 

 I eat and live . 

Right now as a declaration that you are done approaching the table as a memorial, that from today you are a covenant heir sitting at a covenant table eating life, receiving righteousness and reigning in life through Lord Jesus Christ. 

Adam ate and died. You eat and live. 

So be it.