Friday, January 9, 2026

Everything Is "LOGOS"

 Everything Is "LOGOS" 

Once You Learn to Speak Like Jesus Did, Nothing Remains the Same

Your speech is UNBELIEVABLY POWERFUL....call things that be not as though they are! Speak health and healing over yourself.... blessings and peace. 

What Does the Greek Word “Logos” Mean?

The Greek word logos simply means “word.”


• Most people think words are just sounds, just communication, just noise. 

• But Jesus never spoke like that. When he spoke, sickness left, storms stopped, bread multiplied, reality rearranged itself. 

• And here's the uncomfortable truth. Most people never learn. 

• Jesus did not change the world by effort. He changed it by logos

• Once you understand this, you'll never speak the same again. 

• Let's get started. Before we go any further, there are two foundational principles you must understand. If you miss these, everything that follows will sound interesting, but it won't work. 

• These are not opinions. They are patterns scripture reveals from the very beginning. 

• Principle one, the visible world was created through words. 

• According to the Bible, the world you see, the physical three-dimensional reality we live in, was not created by effort, force, or struggle. It was created through words. 

• Genesis does not say, "God wrestled chaos into order." It says, "God said, and it was so." 

• Light appeared because it was spoken. Order emerged because it was declared. 

• This establishes a foundational truth. Words are not commentary on reality. 

• They are instruments that shape it. From the very beginning, scripture shows us that speech is not passive. It is creative. 

• Principle two, words carry the nature of the one who speaks them. 

• In scripture, words are never neutral. They carry intention, authority, and the inner state of the speaker. 

• This is why the same words spoken from fear produce nothing while words spoken from alignment produce change. 

• A word is only as powerful as the source it comes from. This is why the Bible says death and life are in the power of the tongue. Notice something important. 

• Scripture does not say the tongue has some power. It says it has the power.

• The power to release life or death. Why would the Bible place that level of weight on the tongue? 

• Because words don't just express what you think. They release what you are aligned with. 

• The tongue reveals the inner world and the inner world determines the outcome. 

• So listen to this again carefully. The Gospel of John opens with a sentence that changes everything. 

"In the beginning was the word (logos) and the word (logos) was with God and the word (logos) was God." ~ John 1:1

• That word word is not speech. It is logos. John is writing in Greek. So he uses the word logos. But the idea did not originate in Greek philosophy alone. 

• Jesus was Jewish. His listeners were Jewish. Their thinking was shaped by Hebrew language and scripture. 

• In ancient Hebrew thought, the closest root concept to logos is daba

• Daba does not mean a word as a sound. It means word  and action combined. 

• In Hebrew understanding, a word is never passive. 

• A word is something that does. That's why in Genesis, God doesn't describe creation. He speaks and creation responds. God said, "And it was so." 

• In Hebrew thinking, a word carries intention, authority, power and outcome. 

• A word is not information. It is force released with purpose. 

• So when John says "in the beginning was the logos,"  he is saying before creation there was divine intention. 

• Before matter there was divine order. 

• Before form there was meaning with power to act. 

• And that logos was not created. It was God. This means Jesus did not merely speak words. 

• He expressed the active order of God itself. When he spoke, reality didn't respond to sound. It responded to  authority aligned with creation's design. That is logos. 

• And once you understand this, you begin to see why Jesus spoke the way he did and why his words changed everything. 

• If you pay attention to scripture carefully, you'll start to notice a pattern. 

• Jesus never begged, never panicked, never spoke from lack. He didn't say, "God, please heal them if you can." He said, "Be healed." 

• Why? Because Jesus never spoke toward God. He spoke from God. 

• His words didn't come from need. They came from union. Onesness with God. Thinking with God. Walking with God. As God, I AM. 

• Jesus' inner state was already settled before he ever opened his mouth. There was no uncertainty in him about the Father's will, power, or presence. 

• That's why scripture records him saying, "The words that I speak to you are spirit, and they are life. Spirit first, then life." 

• Jesus wasn't using words to persuade heaven. He was releasing what heaven had already authorized. 

• He didn't speak to create alignment. He spoke because alignment already existed. That's what made the difference.

• When Jesus spoke, reality didn't hear desperation. It heard authority. 

• So, here's the question we have to ask ourselves. Could this be why when most of us pray, we feel like we're pushing words into the air? Could this be why we keep explaining our problems to God and having no tangible outcomes? 

• The difference isn't volume. It isn't passion. It isn't sincerity. 

• It's position. 

• Most of us speak toward God hoping something will happen. Jesus spoke from God knowing it already had. 

• And until that shift happens from need to union, from effort to alignment, our words will sound religious, but they won't sound authoritative. That's the gap. 

• And this is how to close that gap. 

Step one, settle the inner state first

• Jesus never spoke first. He rested first. He withdrew. He prayed. He aligned. But Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed. Luke 5:16. 

• This detail matters more than most people realize. Jesus didn't withdraw because he was weak. 

• He withdrew because authority requires alignment. 

• Before miracles, before commands, before confrontation, Jesus returned inwardly to the Father. not to ask if God would act, but to remain grounded in who he was and what the Father was doing. 

• Before you speak, be still. Stillness is not silence for silence's sake. It is the act of settling the inner world. 

• If your heart is anxious, your words will be fragmented. 

• If your mind is scattered, your words will be diluted. 

• If your spirit is unsettled, your words will lack weight. 

• But when the inner world is calm, when fear has quieted and trust has taken its place, your words carry authority without effort. Stillness aligns you. 

• And alignment is what gives words power.

• Stillness comes before speech. 

Step two, speak from identity, not need. 

• Jesus never spoke as someone trying to get something. He spoke as someone who already had authority. 

Father, I thank you that you have heard me. ~ John 11:41. 

• He said this before Lazarus came out. 

• That detail is not poetic. It's instructional. 

• Jesus thanked his Father before the outcome appeared. Not because he was pretending, but because he already knew the Father's will. This is crucial. 

• Jesus didn't speak to change God's mind. 

• He spoke to release what was already decided. 

• Need-based speech sounds like striving. 

• Identity based speech sounds like certainty. 

• A beggar asks hoping to be noticed. 

• A son speaks knowing he is already heard. 

• This doesn't mean arrogance. It means relationship. 

• When you speak from need, your words ask for permission. 

• When you speak from identity, your words carry authorization. 

• Speak as a son of God, not as a beggar. 

• Because authority does not come from how badly you want something. It comes from knowing who you are and where you stand. 

• And when identity is settled, speech becomes effortless and effective. 

Step three, call don't describe. 

 Most people describe problems, Jesus called outcomes. 

• Description keeps you anchored to what is. 

• Calling aligns you with what is meant to be. 

• Jesus didn't narrate the storm. He didn't analyze the wind. He didn't explain the danger. He said, "Peace be still." That matters. 

• Description gives power to circumstances. 

• Calling gives authority to truth. 

• Scripture says, "Call those things which do not exist as though they did." ~ Romans 4:17.

• Calling is not pretending. It is not denial. It is agreement with heaven's perspective. 

• You are not ignoring reality. You are speaking from a higher one. 

• Fear reports what it sees. Faith declares what God has already determined. When you call, you are not forcing an outcome. You are aligning your speech with God's intention. You speak what God sees, not what fear reports. 

Step four, let words match walk.

• Jesus words carried power because his life  matched them. 

• There was no contradiction between what he said and how he lived. 

• No divided allegiance, no hidden resistance. 

• Scripture warns, "A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways." ~ James 1:8. 

• Double-mindedness weakens words. When your mouth declares one thing, but your habits, decisions, and actions declare another, your speech loses weight. 

• Reality responds to integrity, not vocabulary. This doesn't mean perfection. It means consistency. 

• Your walk doesn't need to be flawless. It needs to be aligned. 

• When your actions agree with your words, your words stop sounding hollow. They carry credibility.

• Your word is your faith, and your action is your works.  

• Faith + work = reality.

• And when credibility is present, reality listens.

Logos is alignment made audible. 

• If this resonated, type " I speak. "

• It moves in the comments. 

• Because once words come from the right place, nothing remains the same.


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