Monday, April 6, 2026
PRAY FOR YAH TO OPEN YOUR EYES AND LEAD YOU TO YOUR DESTINY PART 3
Revelation chapter 1
Today we are walking in: PRAY FOR YAH TO OPEN YOUR EYES AND LEAD YOU TO YOUR DESTINY PART 3
Genesis 42:25
Then Yoceph commanded to fill their sacks with grain, and to restore every man's money into his sack, and to give them provision for the way: and thus did he unto them. BERE'SHIYTH (GENESIS) 42:25 את CEPHER.
RESTORE
Today we look to the word: RESTORE- H8421- shuwb- to come back; specifically to reply:—answer, restore, return (an answer).
The Torah testifies………….
Deuteronomy 22:2
And if your brother be not nigh unto you, or if you know him not, then you shall bring it unto your own house, and it shall be with you until your brother seek after it, and you shall restore it to him again. DEVARIYM (DEUTERONOMY) 22:2 את CEPHER
The Prophets proclaim………….
Nehemiah 5:12
Then said they, We will restore them, and will require nothing of them; so will we do as you say. Then I called the priests, and took an oath of them, that they should do according to this promise. EZRA V'NECHEMYAHU (NEHEMIAH) 5:12 את CEPHER
The Writings witness…….
Psalm 51:12
Restore unto me the joy of your yeshu`ah; and uphold me with your free Ruach. TEHILLIYM (PSALMS) 51:12 את CEPHER
There’s a story of a man who spent his whole life climbing the ladder of success—working harder, dreaming bigger, chasing everything the world said would make him happy.
He finally reached the top. But when he got there, he realized the ladder had been leaning against the wrong wall.
He had gained the world, but lost himself.
His smile became his mask, and his achievements became his prison. Every night, surrounded by trophies and titles, he still felt empty. And the haunting question that echoed in his heart was this:
Who am I really?
Now I want to ask you the same question.
Who are you when no one is watching? When the lights go off? When the applause fades? When life gets quiet?
Do you still recognize the person you’ve become? Or have you drifted so far from who Elohiym created you to be that even you cannot find your way back anymore?
We live in a world that constantly tells us who we should be—louder, richer, prettier, busier. But in the process of trying to be everything, we forget who we were made to be.
Many of us are surviving, succeeding, even serving others, yet deep down we feel disconnected from the person we once knew.
You see, it’s easy to become someone you were never meant to be when your identity is shaped by approval instead of purpose. The pressure to perform, to fit in, to prove yourself—it slowly erodes the image of Elohiym inside you until you wake up one day realizing you’ve lost the real you.
But here’s the truth: Elohiym never intended for you to live like that.
In Revelation 1:6, the Cepher says that Elohiym “has made us kings and priests unto Him.” That means you were never meant to live small, broken, or confused about your worth. You were made to carry divine authority, purpose, and identity.
Yet somewhere along the way, the noise of the world drowned out the whisper of Elohiym. Somewhere between pain and pressure, you began to forget who you are in Him.
Friend, this is not just another message about finding yourself. This is a divine reminder to rediscover who Elohiym says you are before it’s too late.
Because every day you spend living outside of your true identity is a day stolen from the purpose you were created to fulfill.
Time is moving, and the world is waiting for the version of you that reflects heaven—not the one shaped by fear or failure.
So as we begin this journey together, open your heart. Allow Elohiym to peel back the layers, to reach into the places where you’ve hidden your real self.
Because this message is not about becoming someone new. It’s about returning to the person Elohiym formed in His image from the very beginning.
Now, let’s take a step deeper.
Before you can reconnect with the real you, you must first identify the false one.
You see, one of the greatest tragedies in life is not dying—it’s living every day as someone you were never created to be.
Many people are walking around wearing masks they’ve forgotten they even put on. They wake up, go through routines, meet expectations, chase achievements, and yet somewhere deep inside they know something is missing.
They’ve lost touch with their true selves—the one Elohiym designed before pain, pressure, and performance took over.
When you look around today, you’ll see how society subtly trains us to trade authenticity for acceptance. We start comparing ourselves to others, measuring our worth by followers, finances, or appearances.
Slowly, the real you fades into the background, and a version shaped by fear and approval takes center stage.
The danger is that we begin to believe that this false version is who we really are.
But it’s not.
It’s a disguise—one that looks successful but feels empty.
Let me share a story.
There was once a young man who worked his way to the top. He had the house, the influence, the applause. But every night he couldn’t sleep. His mind was loud with anxiety. His heart was restless. And his soul felt hollow.
He had everything people said he needed, but he had lost the one thing that mattered most—peace.
And the reason? He built success around who people expected him to be, not around who Elohiym created him to be.
Maybe that sounds familiar.
Maybe somewhere in your own life, you’ve been chasing things that were never yours to chase just to prove your worth.
Likewise, in the Cepher, there’s a man who knew this struggle all too well—the prodigal son.
In Luqas 15:11-24, Yahusha tells of a young man who demanded his inheritance and left home in search of freedom and fulfillment. But instead of discovering himself, he lost himself.
He wasted everything trying to live up to a world that promised satisfaction but only delivered emptiness.
Then came a defining moment.
Scripture says, “He came to himself.”
That’s a powerful phrase.
It means there was a version of him that had been buried beneath bad choices, pride, and regret. But in that moment, he remembered who he truly was—a son, not a servant; loved, not lost; chosen, not forgotten.
And maybe that’s what Elohiym is calling you to today—to come back to yourself, to remember who you are in Him.
Because as long as you keep pretending, healing will stay out of reach.
You cannot heal what you keep pretending to be.
You can’t be free while living under a false name.
Elohiym can only bless the real you—the you He formed in love, not the one you built out of survival.
So today, it’s time to stop hiding behind the version of yourself the world demanded.
It’s time to strip away the false identity created by pain, comparison, and sin.
Awareness is the first step toward transformation. Repentance is the bridge that reconnects you to the real you—the one Elohiym has been waiting for you to return to.
Now, as we move forward, I want you to ask yourself sincerely:
Have I been living as who I truly am in Mashiach, or as who life has forced me to become?
Because the moment you can answer that truthfully, you are already one step closer to rediscovering the real you.
It’s one thing to know who you’ve become, but it’s another to remember who Elohiym says you are.
You see, the world will always try to name you based on your mistakes, your past, or your pain. But Elohiym calls you by purpose, not by history.
Somewhere along the journey of life, many of us allowed other voices to define our identity. The opinions of people became louder than the voice of the One who created us.
But hear this:
You are not what happened to you. You are who Elohiym says you are.
From the very beginning, Elohiym made it clear who you were meant to be.
In Bereshith 1:27, it says that Elohiym created man in His own image. That means the real you carries divine DNA.
You were not an accident or an afterthought. You were designed intentionally—with value, with power, with heaven’s fingerprints all over your soul.
Yet the enemy’s first attack has always been on identity.
From the garden of Eden to the wilderness where Yahusha was tempted, Satan’s strategy has not changed. He still whispers, “Are you really who Elohiym says you are?”
Because if he can make you doubt your identity, he can distort your destiny.
That’s why you must go back to the Word.
Eph’siym 2:10 says, “For we are Elohiym’s masterpiece, created in Mashiach Yahusha for good works.”
A masterpiece does not need validation. It already carries the artist’s signature.
You are the evidence of Elohiym’s creativity and grace.
You are not broken beyond repair. You are not forgotten or invisible. You are a vessel of purpose, handpicked by heaven to reflect the image of your Creator.
But remembering who you are requires silence. It requires stillness.
Because Elohiym often whispers identity in moments of quiet.
When you shut out the noise, when you turn off the world’s opinions and sit in His presence, that’s when He reminds you of your true name.
He whispers, “You are Mine. You are chosen. You are enough.”
There’s a story I love about a woman who had spent years trying to fit into places that were never meant for her. She dressed, talked, and lived to please people, but deep down she felt unseen.
One day she said, “Elohiym, show me who I am beyond what people think.”
And over time, as she spent moments in prayer and in the Word, she began to rediscover her worth. She stopped living for approval and started living from acceptance.
That’s the power of identity.
When you know who you are in Elohiym, you stop needing permission from the world to be yourself.
And maybe that’s the call for you today—to stop letting your past, your pain, or your failures name you.
Elohiym is saying, “That is not who you are.”
You are not defined by your mistakes. You are refined through them.
You are not just surviving. You are chosen, redeemed, and restored.
So remember this:
The closer you are to Elohiym, the clearer you see yourself.
Because the more you see Him, the more you discover you were made in His likeness.
You are not lost. You have just been listening to the wrong voice.
And now it’s time to silence those voices and return to the truth that has never changed.
You are.
There comes a point in your journey when remembering who you are is not enough. You must heal from what broke you.
Because the truth is, you cannot walk in divine identity while still bleeding from unhealed wounds.
Many people know what Elohiym says about them, but they still live beneath that truth because their hearts are carrying pain they have never dealt with.
Pain distorts perception. It changes how you see yourself, how you see others, and how you see Elohiym. And until you face it, you will keep living behind emotional walls that block the real you from emerging.
Somewhere in your past, something hurt you. Maybe it was betrayal, rejection, abuse, or failure. Maybe someone’s words made you feel small, unworthy, or invisible.
And since then, you have learned how to survive, but not how to heal.
You wake up strong on the outside, but broken on the inside. You laugh with people but cry in secret. You serve others, yet feel empty when you are alone.
You have built a life that hides your wounds, but deep down you know they are still there.
Yet Elohiym never designed you to carry what He already died to heal.
Tehilliym 34:18 says, “Yahuah is near to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”
Did you hear that? Near. Not distant, not disappointed—near.
When your heart breaks, His presence moves closer, not away. He does not avoid your pain. He enters it to restore you from within.
Let me share this.
I once met a woman who was deeply wounded by people she trusted. For years, she carried that bitterness like armor. It kept her safe, but it also kept her stuck.
Every time Elohiym tried to use her, she pulled back because the pain reminded her of what she lost.
One day, she realized she was living her life protecting her pain instead of letting Elohiym heal it.
So she made a decision.
She forgave. She wept. She surrendered.
And that day, peace returned to her heart.
She said, “I didn’t just forgive them. I found myself again.”
That is what happens when you let go. You make space for Elohiym to restore the real you.
Forgiveness is not weakness. It is wisdom.
It is saying, “I refuse to let what happened define who I become.”
Some of you are holding on to memories that have expired, but the pain is still fresh because you keep replaying it.
Elohiym is saying, “Give it to Me. Let Me heal it.”
You see, He cannot bless who you pretend to be. He heals who you truly are.
That is why authenticity is freedom.
The moment you stop pretending everything is fine, healing begins.
And maybe you are listening right now saying, “I don’t even know where to start.”
Start where it hurts the most.
Tell Elohiym the truth. Tell Him what broke you. Tell Him where it still bleeds.
He is not afraid of your pain. He is a Redeemer who specializes in broken things.
So as you breathe through this moment, I want you to whisper this prayer in your heart:
“Yahuah, I’m tired of carrying what You already took to the stake. Heal me. Restore me. Make me whole again.”
Because healing is not the end of your story. It is the beginning of your return.
And every wound that once hurt you will become a testimony that points others back to Him.
Now, as we continue, let’s talk about something powerful—what it truly means to reconnect through relationship, not religion.
You know, one of the greatest misunderstandings in the life of a believer is thinking that being close to Elohiym is about religion.
It is not.
Religion makes you busy for Elohiym. Relationship makes you intimate with Him.
Religion gives you rules to follow. Relationship gives you a heart to love.
And this is where most people lose their way.
They do all the right things outwardly, but inwardly they still feel far from Elohiym. They pray, they serve, they attend, they give—but they do not feel connected.
Because connection does not happen through performance. It happens through presence.
There is something deeply beautiful about knowing Elohiym personally, not just publicly.
When you have a real relationship with Him, He becomes more than a concept.
You begin to experience Him as a Father, a Friend, a Counselor, a Restorer.
Think of what Yahusha said in Yochanon 15:4-5:
“Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself unless it abides in the vine, neither can you unless you abide in Me.”
That word “abide” means to remain, to stay connected, to draw life from Him daily.
It is not a once-a-week visit. It is a daily relationship.
You cannot truly reconnect with the real you without reconnecting with the One who made you, because your identity flows from His presence.
When you drift from His voice, you drift from yourself.
That is why so many people feel lost.
They know religion, but not relationship. They know rituals, but not the rest that comes from intimacy with Elohiym.
I remember hearing about a man who was a faithful church worker for years. Everyone saw him as spiritual, but inside he was dry and weary.
One day, he took a walk early in the morning, sat under a tree, and said, “Elohiym, I don’t even know You anymore. I know about You, but I don’t know You.”
He sat there in silence, tears falling, and for the first time in years, he stopped talking at Elohiym and started listening to Him.
And in that stillness, he felt a warmth in his spirit—a gentle whisper that said, “I never left you. You just stopped abiding.”
That moment changed him forever.
You see, relationship with Elohiym is built in the secret place. It is in the quiet moments when no one is watching.
When it is just you and Him—that is where transformation begins.
That is where the noise of the world fades and the real you starts to reemerge.
The you that listens. The you that trusts. The you that loves without fear.
And maybe Elohiym is inviting you into that secret place again.
Maybe He is saying, “I miss your voice in the morning.”
Maybe He is whispering, “You have been working for Me, but I want you to walk with Me.”
Because when you walk with Elohiym, peace follows.
When you talk with Him daily, purpose flows.
And when you abide in Him, you do not have to chase identity—it flows naturally because you are connected to the Source.
If you want to know who you truly are, spend time with the One who formed you.
The more time you spend in His presence, the more your heart aligns with His truth.
Relationship with Elohiym is not about perfection. It is about connection.
It is not about doing everything right. It is about staying close—even when you fall.
Because when your life is rooted in His presence, fruit begins to show: peace, love, clarity, confidence.
So let this be your reminder:
Do not settle for knowing about Elohiym. Learn to know Him intimately.
Because when you reconnect through relationship, the distance between you and your true self disappears.
The real you thrives in fellowship, not performance.
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