What’s Words Got to Do With It? Do Ask God About Our Problems or Speak to the Problems? cover art

What’s Words Got to Do With It? Do Ask God About Our Problems or Speak to the Problems?

What’s Words Got to Do With It? Do Ask God About Our Problems or Speak to the Problems?

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In this episode, we explore the biblical balance between praying to God and speaking directly to the obstacle under God’s authority.Yeshua did not only teach His followers to pray about mountains. He said, “Say to this mountain, be removed.” In Luke 17, He said faith like a mustard seed could speak to a sycamine tree and command it to be uprooted. In Mark 11, He connects faith in God, speaking to the mountain, believing prayer, and forgiveness.The episode compares these passages with Yeshua rebuking the storm, speaking to sickness, commanding demons, and calling Lazarus from the tomb. It also follows the same pattern after the resurrection, where Peter tells the lame man to rise, prays and then commands Tabitha to arise, and Paul commands a spirit to come out in the name of Jesus.We also look back to the Old Testament: Moses crying out at the Red Sea before God tells him to speak to the people and stretch out the rod, Moses being told to speak to the rock, Joshua commanding the sun and moon, Elijah speaking concerning rain, Elisha speaking healing over the waters, and Ezekiel prophesying to dry bones.The core point is simple: words are not magic, but words spoken in faith under God’s authority matter.Prayer is communion, surrender, wisdom, and dependence. Command is faith acting under delegated authority. When we do not know God’s will, we pray. When God’s will is clear, we speak and obey. When unsure, we pray first, then command only what agrees with God’s revealed will.Main takeaway:
Faith does not replace prayer, and prayer does not erase authority. Speak to God, then, when He leads, speak to the mountain.

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