Thursday, February 26, 2026

DON’T FORGET THE GIVER



Deuteronomy chapter 8










Today we are walking in: Don’t Forget The Giver










Genesis 1:29




And God said, Behold, I have given H5414 you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat.



















GIVE
















Today we look to the word-GIVE- H5414 nathan-- to give, grant, permit, ascribe, dedicate, pay wages, entrust, give over, deliver up, yield produce, report
















The Torah testifies...............




Deuteronomy 3:18




And I commanded you at that time, saying, The LORD your God hath given H5414 you this land to possess it: ye shall pass over armed before your brethren the children of Israel, all that are meet for the war.

















The prophets proclaim..................




Isaiah 40:29




He giveth H5414 power to the faint; and to them that have no might he increaseth strength.
















The writings bear witness...........................



Psalm 84:11




For the LORD God is a sun and shield: the LORD will give H5414 grace and glory: no good thing will he withhold from them that walk uprightly.















DON’T FORGET THE GIVER




Imagine with me for a moment. You were on your knees, tears flowing, your voice trembling as you cried out to ELOHIYM for that one thing your heart so desperately longed for. Maybe it was healing for a sick loved one. Maybe it was a breakthrough in your finances. Maybe it was a spouse, a child, or even peace of mind after years of turbulence. And then suddenly ELOHIYM came through. The doors opened. The miracle arrived, and what you once dreamed of became your reality. But here’s the piercing question I want to ask you today: when that blessing arrived, did you remember the One who gave it to you, or did you get so caught up enjoying the gift that you forgot the Giver?




Now, pause and let that question sink in, because it is not just a casual reflection. It is a warning straight from Scripture. In DEVARIM 8:11, the Word of ELOHIYM says, “Beware that thou forget not YAHUAH thy ELOHIYM, in not keeping His commandments and His judgments and His statutes which I command thee this day.” Think about that word, beware.




ELOHIYM was not whispering. He was sounding an alarm. Why? Because He knew the human heart. He knew how quickly we can cry, fast, pray, and plead when we are in need. But the moment He blesses us, comfort creeps in. Pride rises up. And suddenly the urgency to seek Him fades away.




Furthermore, when I look at my own life, I realize how easy it is to fall into this trap. There was a time I prayed earnestly for a door to open in my career. And when it finally opened, I became so busy with the work that I had less time to pray. Isn’t it fascinating how the very thing ELOHIYM gives us can become the distraction that takes us away from Him?




Maybe you can relate. Maybe there was a season when you promised ELOHIYM, “YAHUAH, if You just answer this one prayer, I’ll serve You like never before.” And then when the blessing came, you slowly drifted. This is exactly what Mosheh warned the children of Yashar’el about. Don’t let the land of milk and honey make you forget the ELOHIYM who brought you out of Mitsrayim.




Moreover, we must understand that forgetting ELOHIYM doesn’t always mean outright denying Him. It often looks like subtle neglect. Missing prayer because of long hours at the job He gave you. Withholding gratitude because you assume it was your intelligence that got you that promotion. Choosing pleasure over worship because life is finally comfortable. Forgetfulness is rarely loud. It is often silent, gradual, and dangerous. And this is why this message is urgent.




Interestingly, we live in a culture that celebrates achievement more than remembrance. Society will applaud you for climbing the ladder of success. But Heaven is asking a different question: did you remember the One who placed the ladder beneath your feet?




This speech is not meant to condemn you, but to awaken you. To remind you that every answered prayer is not just a blessing, but a test. A test of loyalty, a test of remembrance, a test of whether you love the gift more than the Giver.




Finally, as we dive into this journey together, I want you to prepare your heart, because over the next few minutes, we are going to confront ourselves with truth, examine real-life scenarios, and look at the biblical principles that will keep us aligned with ELOHIYM even in seasons of abundance. Remember, DEVARIM 8:11 is not just ancient text. It is a present-day command: “Beware that thou forget not YAHUAH thy ELOHIYM.” So let’s lean in. Let’s open our spirits, and let’s allow the RUACH HAQODESH to search our hearts.




Gratitude is the language of remembrance. When you truly remember where you came from and who brought you to where you are, thanksgiving flows naturally. But when you forget, entitlement creeps in. And this is why the principle of gratitude is not optional. It is foundational.




The psalmist reminds us in TEHILLIYM 103:2, “Bless YAHUAH, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits.” Notice, it doesn’t say, “Bless YAHUAH, O my soul, and remember a few of His benefits.” No. It says all—every single one of them—from the smallest daily mercies to the greatest miracles.




Now, let’s be honest. How often do we forget to say thank you for the little things? You woke up this morning. Did you say thank you? You breathed without a machine. You walked. You saw. You spoke. Did you pause to acknowledge the Giver? Sometimes we reserve our gratitude for the dramatic moments, the big breakthroughs. But ELOHIYM expects us to live in a constant posture of thanksgiving, because gratitude keeps our hearts humble, and humility keeps us connected to Him.




In addition, think about the children of Yashar’el. Each time ELOHIYM delivered them—whether from Mitsrayim, from hunger in the wilderness, or from their enemies—they celebrated briefly, but soon after they complained and forgot. Isn’t that just like us? We cry when we’re in the valley, but once we’re on the mountaintop, we act as though we climbed it alone. Gratitude, therefore, must be intentional. You must decide daily to look back and say, “YAHUAH, I see what You’ve done, and I will not forget.”




Another important dimension here is that gratitude is not just expressed in words, but also in actions. When you thank ELOHIYM, you don’t just say it—you show it. You keep His commandments. You honor Him with your resources. You serve others out of the abundance He has given you. In MISHLEI 3:9–10, the Bible says, “Honor YAHUAH with thy substance and with the first fruits of all thine increase; so shall thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy presses shall burst out with new wine.” Gratitude opens the door to sustained blessings, while forgetfulness can cause those blessings to slip away.




Furthermore, let’s bring this closer to home. Have you ever seen someone who once prayed desperately for a job and the moment they got it, their devotion dried up? They no longer had time for assembly, prayer, or even family, because the job consumed them. What happened? They forgot the ELOHIYM who answered their prayer.




But I’ve also seen the opposite. People who, after receiving blessings, increased their devotion, deepened their service, and became even more generous. And guess what? ELOHIYM kept lifting them higher because they understood the principle of remembrance through gratitude.




Also, let me emphasize this: gratitude is a discipline. It doesn’t always come naturally. Sometimes your mind will try to focus on what you don’t yet have rather than what ELOHIYM has already done. That’s why David had to command his own soul: “Bless YAHUAH, O my soul.” He was speaking to himself, pulling his focus back to ELOHIYM’s goodness. You and I must do the same daily. Train our minds to count blessings, not just problems.




Finally, gratitude transforms your perspective. It shifts you from a survival mentality to a growth mentality. When you remember ELOHIYM in all things, you realize that every blessing is not just for enjoyment, but also for stewardship. Gratitude anchors your heart. It fuels your faith. And it prepares you for even greater responsibility, because ELOHIYM knows that if you remain thankful, you will never forget who your true Source is.




So as we move forward tonight, I want you to ask yourself a simple but profound question: am I truly living in remembrance through gratitude, or have I allowed the comfort of blessings to silence my thanksgiving? TEHILLIYM 103:2 is a mirror for us all: “Bless YAHUAH, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits.” May this principle shape our daily walk so that no matter how high we rise, our hearts remain bowed in remembrance.




It is a sobering reality that one of the greatest tests of faith is not in lack, but in abundance. Many people think trials will break them. But the truth is blessings can be even more dangerous if you do not know how to handle them.




Why do people forget ELOHIYM after receiving what they prayed for? The Bible gives us clear reasons, and life around us confirms it every single day.




To begin with, pride is the number one thief of remembrance. DEVARIM 8:17 says, “And thou say in thine heart, My power and the might of mine hand hath gotten me this wealth.” Notice where the problem starts—in the heart. The moment success enters, the heart whispers, “I did this. It was my intelligence, my connection, my strategy.” And when pride takes the credit, gratitude disappears.




I have seen men and women who once knelt in tears, begging ELOHIYM for help. But once the blessing came, they strutted with their heads high as though Heaven had nothing to do with it. Pride convinces us that we are self-made, but in reality, we are ELOHIYM-made.




Likewise, comfort can lead to complacency. Think about it. When you were in the wilderness of struggle, your prayers were sharp. Your fasting was intense. Your dependence on ELOHIYM was undeniable. But once the promised land flows with milk and honey, the urgency to cry out fades away. This is why prosperity is more dangerous than adversity for many believers. Struggles push us closer to ELOHIYM, while success often tempts us to drift away. The danger is not in the blessing itself but in the comfort it brings, if we are not watchful.




In addition, distractions are another reason people forget ELOHIYM. Blessings come with responsibilities. Marriage brings the duty of caring for a spouse. Children require time and energy. Jobs demand commitment. Businesses require constant attention. These responsibilities are not sinful, but they can become idols if they steal time that should be given to ELOHIYM.




YAHUSHA warned about this in MARQUS 4:19: “And the cares of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, and the lusts of other things entering in, choke the word, and it becometh unfruitful.” Blessings, if not managed wisely, can choke your relationship with ELOHIYM.




Moreover, entitlement sneaks in when we forget the journey. Some people begin to believe that ELOHIYM owed them the blessing. They stop seeing it as a gift and start treating it as a right. Have you ever heard someone say, “Well, I worked for it, so I deserve it”? Of course, hard work matters. But even the strength to work comes from ELOHIYM. When entitlement replaces humility, remembrance is lost.




Let me give you a real-life picture. A young man once testified about how he prayed tirelessly for ELOHIYM to bless him with a business breakthrough. He told ELOHIYM, “If You open this door for me, I will serve You like never before.” ELOHIYM heard him. Doors opened. Clients flooded in. But within months, the same man who was in every prayer meeting could no longer be found. His reason: “I’m too busy now.” The very blessing became his excuse. And eventually, the business that had once flourished began to crumble because he disconnected from the true Source.




Conversely, think about King Shalomah. He started by asking ELOHIYM for wisdom. ELOHIYM was so pleased with his request that He added wealth and honor beyond measure. But later in life, Shalomah’s heart turned to foreign gods because of the distractions of prosperity and relationships. MELEKIYM RI’SHON 11:4 tells us, “For it came to pass, when Shalomah was old, that his wives turned away his heart after other gods: and his heart was not perfect with YAHUAH his ELOHIYM, as was the heart of David his father.” His story is a classic example of how even the wisest man can forget ELOHIYM when blessings are mismanaged.




Furthermore, one subtle reason people forget ELOHIYM is impatience after the blessing. This may sound strange, but here’s what I mean. They receive something small, and instead of waiting on ELOHIYM to expand it, they run ahead in their own strength—cutting corners and relying on human schemes. In chasing more, they forget who gave them the little they already had.




Ultimately, forgetting ELOHIYM after blessings boils down to misplaced focus. When the eyes shift from the Giver to the gift, danger is inevitable. The gift was meant to glorify ELOHIYM, not replace Him. That’s why DEVARIM 8:11 warns us with urgency, because ELOHIYM knew that human nature tends to exalt the gift above the Giver.




So let me ask you today: what is that blessing in your life that has the potential to distract you from ELOHIYM? Is it your job, your family, your finances, your health, your relationships? None of these are bad, but if they occupy the throne of your heart, they can lead to forgetfulness.




In closing this section, remember this truth: blessings are not just rewards. They are responsibilities. And the responsibility is this: never let the presence of the gift make you absent from the presence of ELOHIYM.




When we talk about forgetting ELOHIYM versus remembering Him, the Bible is rich with stories that serve as both warnings and encouragements. These examples are not just history lessons. They are mirrors reflecting the choices we face every day. Each story shows us the consequences of forgetfulness and the rewards of remembrance.




Take Shalomah for instance. At the beginning of his reign, he was a young king overwhelmed by the responsibility of leading ELOHIYM’s people. When ELOHIYM appeared to him and asked, “What shall I give thee?” Shalomah didn’t ask for riches, long life, or the defeat of his enemies. Instead, he humbly requested wisdom to govern rightly. That humility touched ELOHIYM’s heart so deeply that He gave Shalomah not only wisdom, but wealth and honor beyond measure.




Yet later in life, with abundance surrounding him, Shalomah’s heart shifted. MELEKIYM RI’SHON 11:4 says, “For it came to pass, when Shalomah was old, that his wives turned away his heart after other gods: and his heart was not perfect with YAHUAH his ELOHIYM, as was the heart of David his father.” Imagine that: the man who once bowed in humility ended up bowing to idols. His downfall was not because ELOHIYM failed him, but because he forgot the ELOHIYM who raised him.




On the other hand, think about the ten lepers in LUQAS 17. They stood at a distance, desperate and unclean, and cried out, “YAHUSHA, Master, have mercy on us.” And the Bible says, “As they went, they were cleansed.” Ten men received healing. But only one returned to give thanks. And YAHUSHA asked the piercing question, “Were there not ten cleansed? But where are the nine?” LUQAS 17:17. That story reveals something profound. Most people forget, but those who remember receive something greater. The one who returned didn’t just get healed—he was made whole. Gratitude opened a door for him that the others missed.




Additionally, Yoceph is a shining example of remembrance. He was betrayed by his brothers, sold into slavery, falsely accused, and thrown into prison. Yet even in the lowest points, Yoceph never forgot ELOHIYM. When Pharaoh summoned him to interpret a dream, Yoceph didn’t seize the moment for self-promotion. He said in BERE’SHIYTH 41:16, “It is not in me: ELOHIYM shall give Pharaoh an answer of peace.” Yoceph remembered ELOHIYM in the pit, in the prison, and in the palace. Because he did not forget, ELOHIYM lifted him to the second most powerful position in Mitsrayim, and through him nations were preserved during famine. Yoceph’s life teaches us that remembrance is not a one-time act. It is a consistent lifestyle.




Equally important is the example of the children of Yashar’el in the book of SHOFTIYM. SHOFTIYM 2:10–12 says, “And also all that generation were gathered unto their fathers: and there arose another generation after them, which knew not YAHUAH, nor yet the works which He had done for Yashar’el. And the children of Yashar’el did evil in the sight of YAHUAH, and served Ba‘alim; and they forsook YAHUAH ELOHIYM of their fathers.” A whole generation forgot ELOHIYM, and the result was destruction, oppression, and defeat. When a people forget, they lose their identity and their inheritance. Forgetfulness is costly, not just for individuals, but for entire generations.




Likewise, DANIYEL shows us another side. Taken as a captive to Babel, DANIYEL rose to prominence in a foreign land. Yet even when the king decreed that no one should pray to any god or man except him for thirty days, DANIYEL remained steadfast. DANIYEL 6:10 says, “Now when DANIYEL knew that the writing was signed, he went into his house; and his windows being open in his chamber toward Yerushalayim, he kneeled upon his knees three times a day, and prayed, and gave thanks before his ELOHIYM, as he did aforetime.” DANIYEL remembered ELOHIYM in the midst of pressure, in the face of death, and in the presence of lions. Because he remembered, ELOHIYM shut the lions’ mouths and elevated him further.




What a contrast: Shalomah, who forgot ELOHIYM in his abundance, and DANIYEL, who remembered ELOHIYM even in exile. The lepers, who were healed but forgot, and the one who remembered and was made whole. Yoceph, who remained faithful in every season, and the Yashar’elites, who forgot ELOHIYM and lost everything.




So the question comes to you and me: which example will our lives resemble? Will we be like Shalomah, consumed by blessings and lured away by distractions? Or like Yoceph, who carried remembrance from the pit to the palace? Will we be like the nine lepers who enjoyed the gift but ignored the Giver? Or like the one who returned to give thanks and received fullness?




Therefore, let this be engraved in your heart: the measure of true success is not what you have, but how much you remember ELOHIYM while having it. Those who forget may rise temporarily, but they fall eventually. Those who remember may be tested, but they are sustained eternally.




Forgetting ELOHIYM is not just a small slip of memory. It is a dangerous pathway that leads to destruction if left unchecked. The Bible does not treat it as something casual. It is presented as a matter of life and death, destiny and ruin. When you forget ELOHIYM, you don’t just lose focus—you open yourself to losses that you never imagined.




Let’s walk through some of these dangers together, because understanding them will awaken us to the seriousness of the subject.




To begin with, the first danger is spiritual emptiness. When ELOHIYM is forgotten, the soul begins to dry up. Think of it like a plant cut off from its roots. It may look green for a little while, but soon it withers. In SHOFTIYM 2:10–12 we are told about a generation that arose which knew not YAHUAH, nor yet the works which He had done for Yashar’el. The result: they forsook ELOHIYM, served Ba‘alim, and lost their covenant covering. Spiritual emptiness is dangerous because it creates a vacuum, and that vacuum will always be filled—if not by ELOHIYM, then by idols, addictions, or worldly distractions.




Next, there is the danger of losing divine protection. You see, when you remember ELOHIYM, His covering remains over your life. But when you forget Him, you step out from under His shield. In the Tanakh, every time Yashar’el forgot ELOHIYM and turned to idols, their enemies overcame them. Their victories disappeared. Their security vanished, and they found themselves oppressed. What’s the lesson here? Forgetting ELOHIYM makes you vulnerable. The blessing that once made you untouchable can suddenly become the very thing that exposes you.




Moreover, there is the danger of pride leading to a fall. MISHLEI 16:18 warns us, “Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall.” When you forget ELOHIYM, pride subtly takes over. And pride is always the doorway to downfall.




Think about King Nevukadnetstsar. He walked in his palace and said, “Is not this great Babel, that I have built for the house of the kingdom by the might of my power, and for the honor of my majesty?” And before the words could even leave his mouth completely, ELOHIYM humbled him, and he ate grass like an ox until he acknowledged that the Most High rules over the kingdoms of men. Forgetfulness blinded him to reality until ELOHIYM broke it.




In addition, another danger is losing the joy of blessings. When you forget ELOHIYM, the blessing itself can turn bitter. A job that was once an answer to prayer becomes a burden. A marriage that was once a dream becomes a battlefield. Wealth that was once exciting becomes a source of worry and fear. Why? Because without ELOHIYM, blessings lose their meaning. QOHELETH 5:10 says, “He that loveth silver shall not be satisfied with silver; nor he that loveth abundance with increase: this is also vanity.” True joy comes from remembering the Source, not just enjoying the supply.




Furthermore, the danger extends to generations. SHOFTIYM 2 shows us that when one generation forgets ELOHIYM, the next inherits the consequences. Parents who fail to remember ELOHIYM in times of abundance often raise children who don’t know Him at all. This is why we see families where the fire of devotion is strong in one generation but cold in the next. Forgetfulness doesn’t just affect you. It writes a script for your children. That’s why Mosheh was so passionate in his warnings. He understood that remembrance was not just a personal choice, but a generational safeguard.




Also, forgetting ELOHIYM leads to misplaced priorities. When ELOHIYM is forgotten, success becomes more important than faithfulness. Possessions matter more than purpose, and image outweighs integrity. People begin to chase shadows, neglecting the eternal for the temporary. YAHUSHA said in MATTITHYAHU 16:26, “For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” Forgetfulness makes you chase the world and lose your soul in the process.




Finally, the greatest danger of forgetting ELOHIYM is eternal separation. It doesn’t just end in losses here on earth. It carries weight in eternity. If blessings lead you to neglect ELOHIYM, if comfort makes you drift from Him, then eternity itself is at stake. That’s why IVRIYM 2:1 says, “Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any time we should let them slip.” Forgetting ELOHIYM is not a small slip. It is letting eternity slip through your hands.




So, let me ask you: what is the cost of forgetting ELOHIYM in your life right now? What protection might you be losing? What joy is turning bitter? What generational legacy might be at risk? If you see any sign of forgetfulness, this is the time to realign, because the dangers are far too costly to ignore.




When ELOHIYM blesses you, the real work begins. Not in maintaining the gift, but in keeping the Giver at the center. This is where many stumble. They think the assignment ends when the prayer is answered. But the truth is: answered prayer is the beginning of a new test—the test of loyalty.




How do you ensure that blessings don’t become distractions, that success doesn’t silence devotion, and that ELOHIYM remains at the center of it all? Let’s walk this through together.




To start with, thanksgiving must become a lifestyle, not just an event. The Apostle Paul says in TASLONIQIYM RI’SHON 5:18, “In everything give thanks: for this is the will of ELOHIYM in MASHIACH YAHUSHA concerning you.” Notice he says in everything, not just in the difficult seasons, but also in the seasons of abundance. Gratitude is like oxygen for your relationship with ELOHIYM. It keeps your heart alive and humble. When ELOHIYM blesses you with a new home, fill it with worship. When He answers with a new job, dedicate your first day to Him. When He gives you children, raise them at His altar. Thanksgiving keeps ELOHIYM enthroned in the center of your blessing.




Equally important, you must guard your time with ELOHIYM fiercely. Success comes with new demands—emails, meetings, responsibilities, family duties. All of these are important, but none can replace your secret place with ELOHIYM. DANIYEL 6:10 tells us that even after rising to power, he kneeled upon his knees three times a day and prayed and gave thanks before his ELOHIYM, as he did aforetime. Did you see that phrase? As he did aforetime. Promotion didn’t change his pattern. Blessings didn’t replace his devotion. If you want to keep ELOHIYM at the center, you must refuse to negotiate away your prayer altar, no matter how busy life gets.




In addition, one of the strongest ways to keep ELOHIYM central is by using your blessings to serve others. MISHLEI 3:9–10 says, “Honor YAHUAH with thy substance, and with the first fruits of all thine increase: so shall thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy presses shall burst out with new wine.” When you dedicate part of your increase to ELOHIYM’s kingdom, you are saying, “YAHUAH, this blessing is not mine. It belongs to You.” I’ve seen people who remained unstoppable in their success because they understood this principle. They didn’t hoard; they honored. They didn’t cling; they contributed. The moment you learn to bless others with what ELOHIYM gave you, you build a safeguard against pride and forgetfulness.




Moreover, accountability helps keep ELOHIYM at the center. When you are surrounded by people who remind you of your vows to ELOHIYM, who call you back to your devotion when you drift, you remain aligned. Too many people fall because they isolate themselves once success arrives. They feel untouchable, and in that isolation, they drift. Surround yourself with men and women who love ELOHIYM enough to tell you the truth, who remind you not to let blessings make you blind.




Another powerful key is testimony. CHIZAYON 12:11 says, “And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony.” Every time you share your testimony, you are not just encouraging others—you are reminding yourself of where ELOHIYM brought you from. The more you testify, the less likely you are to forget. When the leper returned to thank YAHUSHA, he became a living testimony of ELOHIYM’s goodness. And YAHUSHA rewarded him with wholeness. Testimony keeps the memory of ELOHIYM alive in your spirit.




Furthermore, practical habits keep ELOHIYM in focus. Set reminders if you must. Journals of answered prayers. Family prayer altars. Moments of silence before meals. Songs of worship during commutes. These little acts build a rhythm of remembrance. Don’t wait until Sabbath or a gathering to remember Him. Weave Him into your everyday routines.




Finally, humility is the anchor of remembrance. No matter how high ELOHIYM lifts you, stay low before Him. Never forget that without Him, you are nothing. Never stop bowing your heart in surrender. Humility says, “YAHUAH, it is You, not me. It is grace, not my effort. It is Your favor, not my intelligence.” And the Bible says in YA’AQOV 4:6, “ELOHIYM resisteth the proud, but giveth grace unto the humble.” When you stay humble, you ensure that ELOHIYM keeps pouring grace into your life. And you keep Him where He belongs—at the very center.




So I challenge you today: don’t let your blessings replace your ELOHIYM. Let your blessings remind you of Him. Keep thanksgiving alive. Guard your altar. Honor Him with your substance. Testify often. Surround yourself with accountability. And above all, stay humble—because the true sign of maturity is not how high you rise, but how deeply you stay rooted in Him while rising.




Marvelous. Now that we’ve set the foundation with examples of forgetting ELOHIYM after answered prayers, let’s flip the lens and begin to highlight the blessings that come when we remember Him. Because you see, ELOHIYM is not only interested in answering prayers. He is deeply concerned with what we do afterward. Do we remain grateful? Do we keep Him first? Do we still run to Him for direction? Or do we only come back when trouble arises?




I want us to look at DEVARIM 8:18, which says, “But thou shalt remember YAHUAH thy ELOHIYM: for it is He that giveth thee power to get wealth, that He may establish His covenant, which He sware unto thy fathers, as it is this day.” This is so powerful because it shows that remembrance is tied directly to covenant. When you remember ELOHIYM, you are not just giving thanks—you are actively walking in covenant relationship with Him.




You’re saying, “YAHUAH, I know that my success, my promotion, my family, my healing, my provision—none of it came by my own strength. It came from You.” And that acknowledgment keeps Heaven’s windows continually open over your life.




Think about Yoceph. After all the pain, betrayal, slavery, and prison, Yoceph finally found himself elevated to the palace in Mitsrayim. He could have easily said, “Now I’m free. I made it because of my wisdom. I interpreted dreams so well.” But instead, Yoceph gave glory to ELOHIYM, even in the face of Pharaoh. When Pharaoh said, “I hear you can interpret dreams,” Yoceph replied in BERE’SHIYTH 41:16, “It is not in me: ELOHIYM shall give Pharaoh an answer of peace.” Yoceph remembered ELOHIYM. And because of that, his position was secured, his influence expanded, and generations were preserved from famine.




Likewise, when you remember ELOHIYM in your moment of answered prayers, you are securing your future blessings. You are saying to Heaven, “I’m not stopping here. I’m not just after the gift. I’m after the Giver.” And the beautiful thing is this: when ELOHIYM sees that you treasure Him above the things He gives you, He trusts you with more. That’s why MATTITHYAHU 6:33 says, “But seek ye first the kingdom of ELOHIYM, and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.” The remembrance of ELOHIYM is the true key to sustainable success.




Now, let me bring this home with a simple relatable story. A young woman once prayed earnestly for a job. She fasted, she prayed, she stayed faithful, and ELOHIYM opened a door for her in a company that was far beyond her qualifications. She was so happy testifying everywhere. But after some months the job consumed her, and she stopped attending assembly, stopped praying, stopped reading the Word. One day she was laid off unexpectedly. And in tears she cried out, “YAHUAH, why did You allow this?” And in the stillness of her heart, she felt ELOHIYM say, “You asked Me for the job, but when I gave it, you forgot Me.” That moment transformed her life. From then on she vowed never to place the blessing above the Blesser again. Today she has a thriving career and she balances her work with her faith, because she learned the principle: remembrance sustains the blessing.




My friend, forgetting ELOHIYM after answered prayers leads to dryness, but remembering Him leads to abundance, security, and covenant blessings. When you consistently put ELOHIYM first after receiving what you prayed for, you not only keep the blessing—you multiply it, because ELOHIYM knows He can trust you. He knows your heart is aligned with His kingdom, not just with your desires.




So, as we continue in this journey, I want you to reflect on this: have I truly remembered ELOHIYM in the seasons where my prayers were answered, or did I get carried away by the blessing and forget the One who gave it?




Because the truth is remembrance is not just about saying, “Thank You, YAHUAH.” It is about daily prioritizing Him, honoring Him with your time, your resources, your obedience, and your life. That’s the foundation of rule number one. When ELOHIYM blesses you, the real test is not in the waiting. The real test is in the receiving.




It is one thing to cry on your knees, “YAHUAH, bless me with a job. Bless me with a family. Bless me with opportunities.” But it is another thing to remember Him when those blessings finally arrive. The danger is that blessings can sometimes become distractions. And the very thing you prayed for can pull you away from the ELOHIYM who gave it. It’s why the Bible warns us in DEVARIM 8:10–11: when you have eaten and are satisfied, praise YAHUAH thy ELOHIYM for the good land He has given you. Be careful that you do not forget YAHUAH thy ELOHIYM, failing to observe His commands. What a reminder. ELOHIYM is saying, “Yes, I will bless you, but when I do, don’t forget Me.”




Interestingly, keeping ELOHIYM at the center of your blessings is not about religion. It is about relationship. Think of it this way: if a friend gave you a precious gift and the moment you received it, you abandoned that friend and only enjoyed the gift—how would that feel? Painful, right? Yet many of us do this to ELOHIYM without even realizing it.




We get the breakthrough, but we stop showing up in prayer. We get the promotion, but we become too busy for assembly. We get the family, but we stop teaching them the fear of YAHUAH. We allow the blessing to replace the Blesser.




Practically, how then do we keep ELOHIYM at the center? First, we must develop the discipline of gratitude. Gratitude is the anchor that keeps us from drifting into pride. Every morning when you wake up, don’t just rush into the day. Pause and say, “YAHUAH, I acknowledge You as the Source of everything I have.” That’s why TEHILLIYM 103:2 declares, “Bless YAHUAH, O my soul, and forget not all His benefits.” Gratitude re-centers your heart on ELOHIYM as the true Source.




Furthermore, we must dedicate our blessings back to Him. If ELOHIYM gives you wealth, let that wealth serve His kingdom. If ELOHIYM gives you influence, let that influence point others to MASHIACH. If ELOHIYM gives you children, raise them in the way of YAHUAH. In SHEMU’EL RI’SHON 1:27–28, Channah declared, “I prayed for this child; and YAHUAH hath granted me my petition which I asked of Him: therefore also I have lent him to YAHUAH.” Notice: Channah received the blessing, but immediately gave it back to ELOHIYM. That is how you keep ELOHIYM at the center. You treat blessings as stewardship, not ownership.




Also, let me emphasize the power of continued obedience. It is not enough to serve ELOHIYM when you are in need. You must serve Him even when your barns are full. Many forget ELOHIYM because they confuse blessings with a license to live as they please. But YAHUSHA said in MATTITHYAHU 6:33, “Seek ye first the kingdom of ELOHIYM, and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.” And notice: it doesn’t say seek the things. It says seek Him first—even after the things arrive.




Think about Shalomah. He started well with wisdom and riches that came directly from ELOHIYM. But when he allowed the blessings to drift him away, his heart was divided and he ended up worshiping idols. His story is a warning that blessings without ELOHIYM at the center can destroy us.




But on the other hand, look at David. Yes, he made mistakes, but he always returned to ELOHIYM. Always acknowledged Him as the true Source. That’s why the Bible calls him a man after ELOHIYM’s own heart.




So, I want to challenge you: don’t let the gifts make you forget the Giver. Don’t let success make you silent in worship. Don’t let answered prayers replace your prayer life. Don’t let prosperity bury your humility. Always find ways to invite ELOHIYM into your blessings. Dedicate your career to Him. Dedicate your marriage to Him. Dedicate your plans to Him. That way the blessing will never consume you, because ELOHIYM remains at the center.




Now let me ask you: what is that one blessing in your life right now that you need to rededicate to ELOHIYM? Is it your career, your family, your health, your opportunities? If you keep ELOHIYM at the center of it, I promise you, not only will He sustain it, He will multiply it—because He knows you have not forgotten Him.




Family, let me tell you something powerful. Success without ELOHIYM’s purpose is like a river that overflows but never waters a farm. It looks impressive, but it produces nothing of eternal value. Every blessing you receive—whether it is in your career, your marriage, your wealth, or your health—is not given just for your enjoyment, but for your assignment.




ELOHIYM does not just decorate our lives with blessings for show. He equips us with blessings for His kingdom’s agenda. That means your promotion, your financial increase, your marriage, even your healing is tied to something bigger than you. It is tied to ELOHIYM’s eternal plan.




Now consider DANIYEL. The Bible tells us in DANIYEL 6:10 that even when DANIYEL rose to great power in Babel—when he was governor, honored, respected, and had influence—he did not forget the Source of his blessing. Scripture says, “Now when DANIYEL knew that the writing was signed, he went into his house… and prayed, and gave thanks before his ELOHIYM, as he did aforetime.” What does that tell you? Success did not change him. Promotion did not silence him. Favor did not distract him. DANIYEL kept ELOHIYM at the center, aligning his success with ELOHIYM’s purpose.




Likewise, if your marriage is flourishing, it should showcase MASHIACH’s love and patience. If your business is prospering, it should fund kingdom projects and help the poor. If your health is strong, it should be used to serve others and glorify ELOHIYM in your body. Every aspect of your life must point back to Him, or else the blessing becomes an idol instead of an instrument.




So let me ask you this: what part of your blessing is ELOHIYM benefiting from? When people look at your life, do they see a testimony that advances ELOHIYM’s kingdom? Or do they see someone who has received from ELOHIYM but has forgotten Him in the process?




This is where alignment comes in. It is not enough to just thank ELOHIYM for what you have. You must surrender what you have back into His purpose. When you do that, your success will never choke your spirit. Your prosperity will never replace your prayer life. And your blessings will never overshadow the Blesser.




Therefore, I challenge you today: realign. Take stock of your life. Ask yourself, “YAHUAH, this blessing You gave me—how can it serve Your kingdom? This job, this marriage, this wealth, this influence—how can it bring You glory?” Because when you keep ELOHIYM’s purpose at the center, no success will ever derail you, no blessing will ever destroy you, and no promotion will ever pull you away from His presence.




When ELOHIYM begins to lift you, there’s a subtle danger that follows: forgetting the very One who made it possible. This is why Mosheh warned Yashar’el in DEVARIM 8:10–11. When you have eaten and are full, when your herds and flocks multiply, when your silver and gold is multiplied, then beware, lest you forget YAHUAH thy ELOHIYM. It’s easy to remember ELOHIYM in the valley—when bills are unpaid, when your body aches, when you have nowhere else to turn. But the true test is not in the valley. It is in the palace. The test is not in lack. It is in abundance.




Because abundance whispers, “You did this. You earned this. You deserve this.” And if you’re not careful, pride takes the place of humility, and self takes the place.




Think about King Sha’ul. When he was small in his own eyes, ELOHIYM exalted him. But when success got to his head, he disobeyed and lost the kingdom. On the other hand, look at David. Even when he became king with power, wealth, and influence, he never stopped inquiring of YAHUAH. He danced before ELOHIYM with all his might, reminding himself and everyone else that the throne did not belong to him. It belonged to ELOHIYM.




Let me ask you this: when the promotion comes, when your business explodes, when your marriage blossoms, when healing springs forth—will you still run to ELOHIYM with the same desperation you had in your wilderness season? Or will you relax, saying, “I’m fine now, YAHUAH. I’ll call You when I need something.”




My friend, the most dangerous moment in a believer’s life is not when they have nothing. It is when they have everything. Because that is when the temptation to forget ELOHIYM is strongest. That is why YAHUSHA said in MATTITHYAHU 6:33, “Seek ye first the kingdom of ELOHIYM, and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.” The priority does not change when the blessings arrive. ELOHIYM must still be first.




So here’s the challenge: don’t just thank ELOHIYM for the blessings—use the blessings to glorify Him. Let your wealth become a tool to fund the Besorah. Let your influence open doors for kingdom advancement. Let your marriage reflect MASHIACH and His assembly. Let your health and strength be used in service to ELOHIYM. Because the only safe way to handle blessings is to return them back to the One who gave them.




My friends, let us pause and face a sobering truth. Success without ELOHIYM at the center is not true success. It is a ticking time bomb.




Throughout Scripture, we see countless examples of people who rose high but fell hard because they forgot the One who lifted them. DEVARIM 8:18 warns us clearly, “But thou shalt remember YAHUAH thy ELOHIYM: for it is He that giveth thee power to get wealth, that He may establish His covenant, which He sware unto thy fathers, as it is this day.” Do you see it? ELOHIYM is not only the Source of your blessing, but He also attaches purpose to it—His covenant, His kingdom, His agenda. When you detach the blessing from the Blesser, you set yourself on a dangerous path.




Moreover, history confirms this biblical reality. Nations that once honored ELOHIYM and prospered, but later rejected Him, crumbled in pride. Individuals who once prayed fervently for a breakthrough, but later grew comfortable and abandoned ELOHIYM, eventually found themselves empty, restless, or destroyed by the very blessing they thought would bring them peace.




Beloved, blessings are dangerous when they become idols. A marriage can become an idol if it takes ELOHIYM’s place. A business can become an idol if you put it above prayer. Even ministry itself can become an idol if you begin to pursue the work of ELOHIYM more than the ELOHIYM of the work.




Consequently, this is why ELOHIYM repeatedly called Yashar’el to remembrance. Time and again He said, “Do not forget Me when you enter the land, when you build houses, when you eat and are full, when silver and gold are multiplied.” Forgetting is the first step to falling. Pride blinds us. Comfort dulls us. Success without surrender destroys us. This is why Shalomah, the wisest man of his time, ended up worshiping idols. Success without humility will always breed downfall.




In addition, let me ask you a personal question. What would happen if ELOHIYM withdrew His hand from your success right now? Would your marriage still stand? Would your business still thrive? Would your health still remain strong? If the answer is no, then why would you ever think of sidelining the very ELOHIYM who holds it all together?




Hear me, friends. Your future is too fragile to build it on pride. Your destiny is too valuable to risk it on forgetfulness. The danger of success is not success itself, but forgetting the ELOHIYM who gave it.




Therefore, guard your heart when ELOHIYM blesses you. Stay low while He lifts you high. Stay on your knees while He positions you on mountains. Keep His Word before your eyes when the spotlight is on you. Keep His Name on your lips when men are applauding you. The more He blesses you, the more you should decrease so that He may increase.




For the safest place in the blessing is at the feet of the King.




My friend, every blessing ELOHIYM gives you is not meant to terminate on you. It is not simply for your comfort, your pleasure, or your reputation. Every blessing is an assignment, not just enjoyment. If you treat blessings as mere enjoyment, they can become distractions. But when you see them as divine assignments, they turn into weapons in ELOHIYM’s hands.




Think about it. Your marriage is not just for companionship. It is a platform for showing the world ELOHIYM’s love. Your career is not just a means of earning a living. It is a stage where ELOHIYM’s wisdom and excellence must shine. Your health is not just for you to look good, but for you to run your race and finish strong in His kingdom purpose.




Furthermore, wealth is not just so that you can accumulate possessions and live in luxury. No. It is a tool to advance ELOHIYM’s work on the earth—to fund missions, to build lives, to rescue the poor, to change destinies. That is why when ELOHIYM blesses you, He is asking, “How much of this blessing are you willing to return to Me?” Because blessings without alignment can quietly draw you away from the One who gave them.




Now consider DANIYEL. The Bible says in DANIYEL 6:10 that when he heard the decree forbidding prayer to any god except the king, he still went up to his room, opened his window toward Yerushalayim, and prayed three times a day, just as he had always done. Here was a man elevated to the highest levels of power in Babel, yet he refused to allow the throne to take the place of ELOHIYM on the altar of his heart. That is what alignment looks like. Promotion didn’t dilute his devotion. Success didn’t silence his sacrifice. He rose to power, but he stayed faithful.




Moreover, I want you to pause and reflect. What part of your blessing is ELOHIYM benefiting from? Is He benefiting from the marriage He gave you? Is He benefiting from the career He opened for you? Is He benefiting from the wealth He entrusted to you? Or has the blessing become a god you serve instead of a gift you steward? That question, if answered honestly, can redirect your entire life.




Therefore, I challenge you to realign. If your blessing has become the center, move it aside and place ELOHIYM back at the center. Because blessings without purpose are like rivers without banks. They will overflow and create destruction. But blessings aligned with ELOHIYM’s kingdom agenda will flow like streams of living water, refreshing not just you, but everyone around you.




Heavenly Father, we thank You for the Word we have received today. We thank You because You are the Giver of every good and perfect gift. YAHUAH, we recognize that without You, we are nothing. Every success, every blessing, every open door is because of Your mercy and Your grace.




Father, we ask that You help us to never forget You in times of plenty. Guard our hearts against pride, selfishness, and distraction. Teach us to always return the glory to You. Let our wealth be used to bless others. Let our influence advance Your kingdom, and let our lives continually reflect Your light.




YAHUAH, we surrender our plans, our careers, our families, and our future into Your hands. Align us with Your purpose. Help us to remember that every blessing is an assignment, and every victory is for Your glory.




I declare over everyone here: you will not forget ELOHIYM in your abundance. You will not be destroyed by the very blessing meant to elevate you. YAHUAH will keep you, prosper you, and cause you to finish well in YAHUSHA’s name.




Now, thanks be unto ELOHIYM, who always causes us to triumph in MASHIACH YAHUSHA. In YAHUSHA’s mighty name we pray. Amen.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

YAH ISN’T SILENT HE’S LAWFUL



Psalm chapter 103













Today we are walking in: YAH ISN’T SILENT HE’S LAWFUL










Exodus 16:4



Then said Yahuah unto Mosheh: Behold, I will rain bread from the heavens for you; and the people shall go out and gather a certain rate every day, that I may prove them, whether they will walk in my Torah, or no. Shemoth (Exodus) 16:4





LAW





Today we look to the word LAW-- H2706-choq-- statute, ordinance, limit, something prescribed, due, prescribed task, prescribed portion, action prescribed (for oneself), resolve, prescribed due, prescribed limit, boundary, enactment, decree, ordinance, specific decree, law in general, enactments, statutes, conditions, enactments, decrees, civil enactments prescribed by Yah










The Torah testifies...............



Genesis 26:5




Because that Avraham obeyed my voice, and did guard my watch, my commandments, my statutes, and my Torah. Bere'shiyth (Genesis) 26:5







Exodus 16:28




And Yahuah said unto Mosheh: How long refuse ye to guard my commandments and my Torah? Shemoth (Exodus) 16:28







Exodus 24:12



And Yahuah said unto Mosheh: Come up to me into the Mount and be there: and I will give you caphire stones, and a Torah, and commandments which I have written; that you may teach them. Shemoth (Exodus) 24:12















The prophets proclaim..................



Ezekiel 22:26




Her priests have violated my Torah and have profaned my holy things: they have put no difference between the holy and profane, neither have they showed difference between the unclean and the clean, and have hid their eyes from my Shabbaths, and I am profaned among them. Yechezq'el (Ezekiel) 22:26







Hosea 8:1




Set the shofar to your mouth. He shall come as an eagle against the house of Yahuah, because they have transgressed my covenant, and trespassed against my Torah. Husha (Hosea) 8:1







Micah 4:2




And many nations shall come, and say: Come, and let us go up to the mountain of Yahuah, and to the house of the Elohai of Ya'aqov; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths: for the Torah shall go forth of Tsiyon, and the Word of Yahuah from Yerushalayim. Miykah (Micah) 4:2


















The writings bear witness............




2 Chronicles 33:8




Neither will I anymore remove the foot of Yashar'el from out of the land which I have appointed for your fathers; so that they will take heed to do את all that I have commanded them, according to the whole Torah and the statutes and the ordinances by the hand of Mosheh. Divrei Hayamiym Sheniy (2 Chronicles) 33:8




Psalm 78:5




For he established a testimony in Ya'aqov, and appointed a Torah in Yashar'el, which he commanded our fathers, that they should make them known to their children: Tehilliym (Psalms) 78:5







Proverbs 29:18




Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that guards the Torah, happy is he. Mishlei (Proverbs) 29:18

















YAH ISN’T SILENT HE’S LAWFUL




Ladies and gentlemen, there is a question that has echoed through every civilization, every culture, every generation since the dawn of human history. It is the question whispered in hospital rooms, cried out in war zones, murmured at gravesides, and debated in universities. It is the question asked by believers and skeptics alike. And the question is this: If Yah is good, and if Yah is powerful, why does evil continue?

Now that question sounds simple, but it is one of the most misunderstood questions on earth, and the reason it remains unanswered for most people is because they are asking a governmental question with an emotional framework. They are asking a question of law, authority, and jurisdiction, but they are expecting an answer of sympathy, rescue, and reaction. And when Yah does not respond the way they expect, they conclude that He is absent, weak, indifferent, or slow.

Let me say this very clearly at the beginning of this teaching: Yah’s silence is not absence, and Yah’s patience is not powerlessness. The problem is not that Yah cannot stop evil. The problem is that we have not understood why Yah governs the way He does.

The Bible says in Psalm 103:19, “The Most High has established His throne in heaven, and His kingdom rules over all.” That verse does not say His emotions rule. It does not say His reactions rule. It says His kingdom rules. In other words, Yah does not operate as a crisis manager. He operates as a King. And a King governs by law.

Now, religion has taught us to see Yah primarily as a Savior who rushes in to fix problems. But the Bible introduces Yah first as a Creator King. Genesis 1:1 does not say, “In the beginning Yah rescued.” It says, “In the beginning Yah created.” Creation is an act of intention, not reaction. And everything Yah creates, He creates with purpose, structure, and order.

So when we ask, “Why doesn’t Yah just end evil?” what we are really asking is, “Why doesn’t Yah violate His own system?” And that is the question we must confront honestly tonight.

Let me say something that may trouble your theology but will free your understanding: Yah does not rule the universe by power alone. He rules it by principle. Power without principle is tyranny. Principle without power is weakness. Yah combines both. And because He is holy, He will never sacrifice principle to demonstrate power.

The Bible says in Numbers 23:19, “Yah is not a man, that He should lie; nor a son of man, that He should repent. Has He said, and will He not do it? Has He spoken, and will He not make it good?” That verse is not about promises only. It is about consistency. Yah does not contradict Himself. Yah does not panic. Yah does not improvise. Yah does not change the rules mid-game.

So when evil continues, it is not because Yah has lost control. It is because control has been delegated, and delegation carries legal consequences.

Now follow me carefully. Please don’t rush ahead of me. Stay with me, because the greatest danger in theology is misunderstanding the nature of Yah’s authority. Proverbs 19:21 says, “Many are the plans in a man’s heart, but it is the Most High’s purpose that prevails.” That means Yah’s purpose will prevail, but it does not mean it will prevail illegally.

You see, Yah’s purpose is eternal, but His process is legal. And legality takes time. This is why the prophet Habakkuk cried out in Habakkuk 1:2–3: “O Most High, how long shall I cry, and You will not hear? Even cry out to You, ‘Violence!’ and You will not save. Why do You show me iniquity and cause me to see trouble?” Habakkuk was not questioning Yah’s power. He was questioning Yah’s timing.

And Yah’s response was not emotional comfort. Yah’s response was revelation. He said in Habakkuk 2:2–3, “Write the vision and make it plain… for the vision is yet for an appointed time… though it tarries, wait for it; because it will surely come.” In other words, Yah told him, “I am not late, I am lawful.”

The problem with our generation is that we want immediate outcomes without understanding eternal systems. We want Yah to act outside of time, but we live inside of time. We want Yah to override human decisions, but Yah gave humans authority. We want Yah to stop evil, but we do not want to accept responsibility.

Let me shock you with a statement that is absolutely biblical: Yah will not correct what humans are authorized to manage. That does not mean Yah is indifferent. It means Yah is faithful to His word.

Psalm 115:16 says, “The highest heavens belong to the Most High, but the earth He has given to the children of men.” Notice what it does not say. It does not say the earth was loaned. It does not say the earth is shared. It says it was given.

So the question of evil is not a question of Yah’s goodness. It is a question of human government. It is not a question of heaven’s power. It is a question of earth’s responsibility.

This is why Yahusha did not begin His ministry by casting out demons everywhere indiscriminately. He began with a message. Matthew 4:17 says, “From that time Yahusha began to preach and say, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven has come near.’” Repent does not mean cry. Repent does not mean beg. Repent means change the way you think. Why? Because if you think wrongly about authority, you will pray wrongly about evil.

The issue is not whether Yah can end evil. The issue is how Yah ends evil without destroying His own government. And until you understand that, you will keep blaming heaven for what was assigned to earth.

Now stay with me, because this is where most theology collapses. Most people meet Yah emotionally before they ever meet Him constitutionally. They meet Him as a rescuer before they understand Him as a ruler. And that imbalance is the root of confusion about evil, suffering, authority, and responsibility.

Let me make a statement that is absolutely biblical but rarely taught: Yah did not come to earth first to save you. He came first to restore a kingdom. Salvation is not the mission. It is the method. Redemption is not the agenda. It is the strategy. The agenda is government.

The Bible never introduces Yah as president. He is never called prime minister. He is never described as chairman of a board. From Genesis to Revelation, Yah uses one title consistently: King.

Psalm 47:7 says, “For Yah is the King of all the earth…” not the therapist of the earth, not the emergency responder of the earth—the King. Kings do not rule by emotion. Kings rule by law.

And this is why you must understand that Yah’s actions are governed by His nature, and His nature is lawful. Isaiah 33:22 says, “For the Most High is our Judge, the Most High is our Lawgiver, the Most High is our King; it is He who will save us.” Notice the order: Judge, Lawgiver, King, then Savior. We reverse the order in religion, and that is why we are confused.

You see, when you see Yah only as Savior, you expect rescue every time you fail. But when you understand Him as King, you recognize that laws have consequences. And consequences are not cruelty. They are governance.

Let me say this slowly: a king who violates his own laws ceases to be a king. He becomes a tyrant. And Yah is not a tyrant. Yah is righteous.

Psalm 89:14 says, “Righteousness and justice are the foundation of Your throne.” Not miracles, not mercy alone—righteousness and justice. That means Yah’s throne is built on order, not impulse.

Religion wants Yah to intervene emotionally. Kingdom thinking understands that Yah intervenes legally. This is why Abraham could not argue Yah out of His judgment without appealing to justice. In Genesis 18, Abraham said, “Will not the Judge of all the earth do right?” Abraham did not say, “Will you feel sorry?” He appealed to law, and Yah responded.

Now here is where many believers struggle: they assume that because Yah has power, He must use it whenever pain appears. But power restrained by principle is what makes Yah trustworthy.

Titus 1:2 says Yah “cannot lie.” That verse does not say Yah will not lie. It says He cannot. Why? Because His nature is bound to truth. In the same way, Yah cannot act unlawfully even to achieve a good outcome.

That is why Yah does not fix problems the way humans do. Humans solve problems by shortcuts. Yah solves problems by systems.

Let me help you understand this: when a king establishes a law, that law governs even the king. This is why King Darius could not save Daniel from the lion’s den even though he loved him. Daniel 6 tells us that the king labored all night trying to find a way to rescue Daniel, but the law had already been signed. The king’s power was not greater than the law he authorized. That story is not about lions. It is about government.

And if a human king is bound by his own decrees, how much more the eternal King whose word created the universe?

Psalm 138:2 says, “You have magnified Your word above all Your name.” That means Yah’s reputation is protected by His consistency.

So when evil continues, it is not because Yah does not care. It is because Yah cares too much about order to destroy the very structure that guarantees justice.

Now let me dismantle a dangerous belief. Many people say Yah can do anything. That sounds spiritual, but it is inaccurate. Yah can do anything consistent with His nature. Hebrews 6:18 says it is impossible for Yah to lie. So clearly there are things Yah cannot do—not because He lacks power, but because He refuses to contradict Himself.

Therefore Yah cannot end evil by violating authority. He cannot override delegated dominion without nullifying His own word.

And once you understand that, the entire Bible begins to make sense. This is why Yah does not rush. This is why Yah does not panic. This is why Yah does not respond to every prayer with immediate intervention.

Isaiah 55:8–9 says, “My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways…” Yah thinks in terms of generations, not moments. He governs in terms of eternity, not urgency.

So if you want to understand evil, stop asking, “Why doesn’t Yah do something?” and start asking, “What system did Yah establish, and who is responsible within it?” Because until you see Yah as King, you will keep misunderstanding Him as absent. And once you see Him as King, you will realize something sobering: He is not waiting on heaven. He is waiting on earth.

Now listen very carefully, because what I am about to share with you is one of the most powerful principles in the entire Bible and at the same time one of the most ignored. Many people love the blessings of Yah, but very few understand the government of Yah. And you cannot understand why evil continues until you understand how authority works.

Authority is not power. Authority is legal permission. Power is the ability to act. Authority is the right to act. You can have power and still be illegal.

That is why a police officer can stop a truck with a whistle. He does not have more power than the engine, but he has authority.

Now the moment you understand that, you begin to understand Yah. In Genesis chapter 1, Yah made a decision that governs everything happening on earth right now. Verse 26 says, “Then Yah said, ‘Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; and let them have dominion over all the earth.’” Please notice something carefully. Yah did not say, “Let Us rule the earth.” He said, “Let them have dominion.”

Dominion means ruling authority, sovereign jurisdiction, legal control. That verse is the delegation document. From that moment on, Yah made humans the legal managers of earth—not angels, not demons—humans.

Psalm 8 confirms this when it says, “You have crowned him with glory and honor and made him to have dominion over the works of Your hands. You have put all things under his feet.”

Now here’s the principle you must never forget: when authority is delegated, the delegator does not interfere without permission. That is how authority works. If Yah interfered every time humans made a mistake, then humans would never truly have authority.

This is why Yah does not micromanage the earth. This is why He does not override human will. This is why He does not stop every evil act. It is not because He approves of it, but because He honors what He delegated.

Let me say it another way: Yah is not responsible for what He authorized you to manage. That statement alone answers half of your questions about suffering, injustice, and chaos.

Now religion has told us that Yah is in control. That sounds comforting, but it is misleading. Yah is in charge, not in control. Control implies manipulation. Charge implies authority structure. If Yah were in control, prayer would be unnecessary, obedience would be irrelevant, and responsibility would be meaningless.

But the Bible says in James 4:2, “You do not have because you do not ask.” Why would you need to ask if Yah was controlling everything? Because authority on earth requires human agreement.

Now let me show you something powerful. Yahusha said in Matthew 18:18, “Whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.” Please notice the direction. He did not say, “Whatever is bound in heaven will be bound on earth.” He said, “Earth first.” Why? Because heaven responds to earth’s authority. That should shock you. Heaven is not waiting to act. Heaven is waiting for authorization. That authorization comes from those who were given dominion.

Now here’s why evil thrives. Evil does not dominate by power. It dominates by permission. Darkness never defeats light. Darkness only exists where light is absent. And light does not need permission to shine, but it does require presence.

So when people ask, “Why doesn’t Yah stop the violence, the corruption, the injustice?” the uncomfortable answer is because those with authority are silent, passive, distracted, or ignorant of their role. Yah will not govern what He commanded you to govern.

This is why Adam’s decision was so devastating. Adam was not just a man. Adam was a government. When Adam disobeyed Yah, he did not just sin. He transferred authority.

Romans 6:16 says, “Do you not know that to whom you present yourselves slaves to obey, you are that one’s slaves whom you obey?” Authority follows obedience. Adam handed legal access to an illegal spirit. Satan did not steal the earth. He was invited. And once invited, Yah could not evict him without a legal process.

This is why Yahusha came not as a spirit, but as a man. Because only a man could legally reclaim what a man lost. John 1:14 says, “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” Yah did not come as lightning. He came as legality.

So when you ask why Yah does not just step in, the answer is simple but sobering: Yah already stepped in. He stepped in through you.

The real tragedy is not that evil exists. The tragedy is that citizens do not understand their authority.

Until you grasp this law of delegated authority, you will keep praying for Yah to do what He told you to do. And that prayer will always feel unanswered.

Now listen to me carefully, because this is where people accuse Yah of weakness when in fact they are witnessing His holiness. Most believers define holiness as moral purity alone. But holiness is far deeper than behavior. Holiness is absolute consistency. Holiness means Yah is totally faithful to Himself. Yah never contradicts His own word. Yah never violates His own laws. Yah never breaks covenant even when it costs Him.

The Bible says in Psalm 119:89, “Forever, O Most High, Your word is settled in heaven.” That means once Yah speaks, even He does not move it. Heaven itself is governed by what Yah has already said.

That is why Isaiah 45:23 says, “I have sworn by Myself… the word has gone out of My mouth in righteousness and shall not return.” Yah does not recall His words. He fulfills them.

Now understand this: Yah is not limited by power. He is governed by law. And law is not above Yah. Law comes from Yah. But once Yah establishes law, He submits Himself to it. That is what makes Him trustworthy.

Hebrews 13:8 says, “Yahusha Hamachiach is the same yesterday, today, and forever.” Consistency is not weakness. Consistency is integrity.

This is why Yah cannot act illegally, even to stop evil. If Yah violated His own word to produce a good outcome, He would destroy the moral foundation of the universe. The end does not justify the means in the kingdom of Yah. Righteousness governs results.

Let me show you this in scripture. In Genesis 9, after the flood, Yah made a covenant with humanity and said He would never again destroy the earth by water. Later generations became just as wicked, if not more wicked. But Yah did not break His covenant. Why? Because Yah’s word outlives human behavior.

Psalm 89:34 says, “My covenant I will not break, nor alter the word that has gone out of My lips.” Now think about that. Yah watched humanity descend into violence, idolatry, injustice, and rebellion—yet He did not erase them. Why? Because once Yah gives His word, He will not revoke it.

That is why mercy exists. That is why patience exists. That is why judgment is delayed. It is not because Yah is confused. It is because Yah is faithful.

This is why people misunderstand Yah’s silence. Silence does not mean inactivity. Silence often means law is still working.

Ecclesiastes 8:11 says, “Because the sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil.” That verse does not blame Yah. It explains humanity. The delay of judgment reveals hearts. It exposes intent. It proves whether obedience is genuine or forced.

Now hear this carefully: immediate punishment produces fear. Delayed judgment produces revelation. Yah is not interested in fear-based compliance. He is interested in voluntary alignment with His will.

This is why Yah allows time. Time is not Yah’s enemy. Time is Yah’s instrument. Time reveals what power alone cannot. Time shows who truly loves righteousness and who merely fears consequences.

The prophet Ezekiel records Yah saying in Ezekiel 18:23, “Do I have any pleasure at all that the wicked should die… and not that he should turn from his ways and live?” Yah does not delight in destruction, but neither will He cancel law to avoid it.

So when evil continues, understand this: Yah is not ignoring evil. Yah is recording it. Revelation 20 speaks of books being opened. Books imply documentation. Documentation implies legality. Yah judges by record, not rumor.

Now let me say something that will mature you spiritually: If Yah acted every time evil appeared, you would never learn responsibility. If Yah removed every consequence, you would never learn wisdom.

Proverbs 22:3 says, “A prudent man foresees evil and hides himself, but the simple pass on and are punished.” Notice Yah did not say He would remove the evil. He said the wise learn to respond correctly within reality.

So holiness does not mean Yah rushes to fix everything. Holiness means Yah remains faithful to truth, law, and justice no matter how uncomfortable it feels to us.

This is why Romans 3:25 says Yah “passed over former sins in His forbearance.” Passover does not mean ignored. It means temporarily restrained judgment until the proper legal resolution arrived. And that resolution required something extraordinary. It required a man.

Now listen very carefully, because this is where most people misunderstand the fall of man. Religion has taught us that Adam made a mistake. But the Bible does not describe Adam’s act as a mistake. A mistake is accidental. Adam’s decision was intentional. And more importantly, it was legal.

What happened in the garden was not merely disobedience. It was a transfer of authority.

Genesis chapter 2 records that Yah gave Adam a command. Yah did not suggest. Yah did not advise. Yah legislated. He said, “Of every tree of the garden you may freely eat; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, you shall not eat.” That command was not about fruit. It was about Most Highship. Every law reveals who is king.

Now Satan did not attack Adam with power. He attacked him with words. Why? Because authority is transferred through agreement.

Genesis 3 records that Adam listened, considered, and then acted. That action was not ignorance. It was a choice.

And Romans 6:16 explains the consequence clearly: “Do you not know that to whom you present yourselves slaves to obey, you are that one’s slaves whom you obey?” Authority follows obedience.

Adam was the legal governor of earth. When Adam obeyed another voice, he legally yielded authority to that voice. Satan did not conquer the earth. He was granted access. And because Yah is faithful to law, He did not interfere with Adam’s jurisdiction.

Let me say this plainly: Yah did not lose control. Man surrendered authority. Yah remained King of heaven, but earth became a territory under mismanagement.

This is why Yahusha later referred to Satan as the ruler of this world. Not because Satan created it, but because Adam handed him legal influence.

Now this is why Yah could not simply take it back. Authority once given must be reclaimed legally, not seized emotionally.

If Yah had overridden Adam’s decision, He would have invalidated human dominion altogether. And if human dominion were invalidated, humanity itself would be irrelevant.

So instead of destroying man, Yah chose to redeem man. This is why Genesis 3:15 is so important. Yah said, “The seed of the woman shall bruise the serpent’s head.” Notice something critical: Yah did not say, “I will crush you.” He said, “The seed of the woman.”

Yah announced that the solution would come through humanity, not around it. From that moment on, history became a legal process of restoration. Every covenant, every promise, every prophecy was moving toward one goal: returning authority to man without violating law.

This is why Yahusha had to be born of a woman. This is why He had to be fully human. This is why angels could not save us. Angels have power, but they do not have legal jurisdiction on earth. Only man does.

Hebrews 2:14 says, “Since the children have flesh and blood, He too shared in their humanity, so that by His death He might destroy him who holds the power of death.” Notice the wording. Destroy does not mean eliminate immediately. It means render ineffective legally.

So the cross was not an emotional rescue mission. The cross was a legal transaction. Yahusha did not scream. He declared, “It is finished.” Finished means paid in full. The debt was settled. Authority was reclaimed.

But notice: evil did not disappear instantly. Why? Because authority had to be redistributed, not merely reclaimed.

That is why Yahusha said after His resurrection in Matthew 28:18, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me.” And then He immediately delegated it again. Go therefore—authority reclaimed, then reassigned.

So evil continues not because Yah failed, but because humans must now enforce what Hamachiach accomplished.

Adam’s decision was legal. Hamachiach’s redemption was legal. And everything between the garden and the final judgment is about how authority is used.

This is why blaming Yah for evil is misplaced. The real question is not, “Why did Yah allow it?” The real question is, “Who is exercising authority now?”

And that question brings us to a very uncomfortable truth.

Now, this is the point where many people become uncomfortable because they want a Yah who reacts quickly, but Yah governs correctly. The question is often asked, “Why didn’t Yah just destroy Satan immediately?” And that question reveals a misunderstanding of how justice works in the kingdom.

Let me say this plainly: immediate execution without due process is tyranny, not righteousness. And Yah is not a tyrant. Yah is a judge.

Genesis reveals that Satan was not created as a devil. He was created as a being with rank, responsibility, and assignment. Isaiah 14 and Ezekiel 28 give us insight into his original position—not to glorify him, but to understand the legal implications.

Rebellion did not remove Satan’s existence. It altered his alignment. And misalignment does not cancel existence. It demands judgment.

Now here is the key principle you must grasp: judgment requires evidence, and evidence requires time. Yah does not judge rumors. Yah judges records.

Revelation 20 says, “And books were opened.” Books imply documentation. Documentation implies process. Process implies time. And time implies that Yah is allowing actions to fully mature so that judgment will be unquestionable, irreversible, and eternally just.

This is why Satan is still operating—not because Yah is afraid of him and not because Yah is negotiating with him, but because the legal process is not yet complete.

Yahusha Himself acknowledged this in Matthew 8. When the demons cried out, they said, “Have You come to torment us before the time?” That statement alone tells you something profound. Even demons know there is a scheduled judgment. They know there is a time. They know judgment is coming. They also know it cannot be rushed.

Yah does not judge prematurely because premature judgment creates appeal. Yah judges finally.

Now listen carefully: Yah could destroy Satan instantly, but then the universe would ask a question forever: “Was Yah just?” And Yah will never leave a question unanswered in eternity.

Romans 3:4 says, “Let Yah be true, but every man a liar.” Yah’s judgment silences all argument.

This is why Yah allows Satan to operate within boundaries. Just like Job’s story, Satan could not move without permission, and he could not exceed the limits Yah set. That tells us something important. Evil operates on a leash. It is not sovereign. It is tolerated for a season under law.

Let me say something that will mature you: the delay of judgment is not the absence of justice. It is the perfection of justice. Yah is allowing the full consequences of rebellion to be displayed so that when judgment comes, no one—angel or human—can say Yah was unfair.

Philippians 2 says that every knee shall bow and every tongue shall confess that Yahusha Hamachiach is Most High. Confession means acknowledgment of truth, not forced submission.

Now here is the most sobering part: Yah did not choose to defeat Satan with raw power. He chose to defeat him with obedient humanity. Yahusha did not overcome Satan by calling angels. He overcame Satan by obedience.

Luke 4 shows Yahusha resisting temptation not with miracles, but with law: “It is written.” That tells us something critical. Satan is not defeated by force. He is defeated by alignment.

So Yah did not destroy Satan immediately because the victory was designed to come through restored humans exercising delegated authority correctly. Yah’s plan was never just to remove an enemy. It was to raise sons.

And that means the battlefield is not heaven. The battlefield is earth. And the weapon is not lightning. It is obedience.

Until you understand this, you will keep asking Yah to do what He already authorized you to enforce.

And that leads us to the next revelation: the role of time in kingdom government.

Now stay with me because this is where many people misjudge Yah. They confuse delay with denial and patience with neglect. But in the kingdom of Yah, time is not an enemy. It is a tool.

Time is not evidence of weakness. Time is evidence of confidence. Only a ruler who is insecure rushes judgment. A secure king allows time to reveal truth.

The Bible says in Ecclesiastes 3:1, “To everything there is a season, a time for every purpose under heaven.” That verse tells us something powerful. Purpose is not fulfilled randomly. It is fulfilled seasonally. And seasons require time.

Now understand this: Yah lives outside of time, but He governs within time.

2 Peter 3:8 says, “Beloved, do not forget this one thing: that with the Most High one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.” That verse is not poetic language. It is governmental perspective. Yah is never pressured by clocks. He created time to serve His purposes, not to control Him.

So why does Yah allow time? Because time reveals loyalty. Time exposes motives. Time separates those who obey Yah for reward from those who obey Yah for righteousness. Immediate judgment produces compliance. Delayed judgment produces character.

This is why Yah allows evil to mature. Evil is self-exposing. Sin does not need help to destroy itself.

James 1:15 says, “When desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin. And sin, when it is full-grown, brings forth death.” Notice the phrase full-grown. Sin has a maturation process. Yah allows it to grow so that its fruit is undeniable.

Let me say this carefully: Yah does not rush to stop what He intends to expose.

In Matthew 13, Yahusha told the parable of the wheat and the tares. The servants wanted to pull out the weeds immediately, but the master said, “No, lest while you gather up the tares, you also uproot the wheat with them. Let both grow together until the harvest.” That is not weakness. That is wisdom. Premature judgment often destroys the innocent along with the guilty. Yah’s patience protects the righteous.

Now here’s the uncomfortable truth: time is also given for repentance.

2 Peter 3:9 says, “The Most High is not slack concerning His promise, but is long-suffering toward us, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.” Yah delays judgment not because He enjoys evil, but because He values redemption.

However, patience has an expiration date. Time does not eliminate judgment. It schedules it.

Galatians 6:7 says, “Do not be deceived. Yah is not mocked. For whatever a man sows, that he will also reap.” Sowing happens in time. Reaping happens in time. And harvest is unavoidable.

Now hear this: time does not cancel law. Time enforces law. Every act of injustice, every abuse of power, every hidden sin is being recorded. Time is simply allowing the record to be complete.

This is why Revelation speaks of fullness. When the cup of iniquity is full, Yah judges. Yah does not judge halfway stories. He judges completed narratives.

This is why Yahusha said in Luke 19:44, “You did not know the time of your visitation.” Time comes with opportunity. Missed time becomes judgment.

So when you look at the world and say, “Why is Yah waiting?” the answer is sobering. Yah is allowing humanity to reveal what it truly loves. Yah is allowing leaders to expose their hearts. Yah is allowing systems to show their fruit. And when time is fulfilled, judgment will be swift, final, and unquestionable.

Let me say this to you as a citizen of the kingdom: time is not given to excuse evil. Time is given to empower righteousness. While darkness is exposing itself, light is supposed to be advancing. While evil matures, the kingdom is supposed to expand.

The tragedy is not that time exists. The tragedy is that many believers waste time praying for what they were supposed to enforce.

Which brings us to the next uncomfortable truth: prayer alone does not stop evil.

Now, this is where many sincere believers struggle, because we were taught that prayer is the solution to everything. Prayer is powerful, but prayer is not a substitute for authority. Prayer is not control. Prayer is alignment. Prayer does not replace responsibility. Prayer authorizes action.

Let me say this carefully so you don’t misunderstand me. Prayer is not designed to make Yah do something. Prayer is designed to position humans to do what Yah already authorized.

James 5:16 says, “The effective, fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much.” Notice it does not say the prayer of a desperate man, or a crying man, or a fearful man. It says the prayer of a righteous man. Righteousness is right alignment with law. That means prayer works when the one praying understands his position and authority.

This is why Yahusha never begged the Father. He commanded storms. He rebuked sickness. He cast out demons. Why? Because prayer does not replace dominion. Yahusha prayed to maintain alignment, but He acted to enforce authority.

Many believers are praying for Yah to stop what Yah already told them to stop. They pray against injustice, but tolerate corruption. They pray against darkness, but refuse to shine light. They pray for change, but avoid responsibility.

Let me say this boldly: heaven responds to agreement, not desperation. Yah does not move because you cry louder. He moves when you stand legally.

That is why Yahusha taught His disciples to pray: “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth.” He did not say pray for heaven to fix earth. He said pray for heaven’s government to be manifested through earth’s citizens.

So prayer without obedience is noise. Prayer without action is religious activity. Prayer without authority is frustration.

Now this is the part most people do not want to hear. Yah is not the primary agent stopping evil on earth. You are.

You are not just a believer. You are a citizen. You are not just saved. You are authorized.

2 Corinthians 5:20 says, “Now then, we are ambassadors for Hamachiach, as though Yah were pleading through us.” Ambassadors do not beg foreign governments. They represent authority. An ambassador speaks with the full weight of his government behind him. When an ambassador speaks, the government speaks.

That means when you remain silent in the presence of evil, the kingdom is silent in that territory.

Let me say something strong but true: evil continues where authority is absent. Light does not fight darkness. Light replaces darkness. Darkness never resists light. It only retreats.

This is why Yahusha said you are the light of the world. He did not say you are the prayer group of the world. He said you are the light. Light must be present to function.

Yah will not govern what citizens refuse to govern. Silence is permission. Passivity is endorsement. Ignorance is vulnerability.

So the question is not, “Why does Yah allow this?” The question is, “Why are the citizens inactive?”

Now many people say, “Well Yahusha came—why didn’t He end evil then?” Because Yahusha did not come first to judge. He came to restore legality.

John 3:17 says, “Yah did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.” Condemnation is judgment. Salvation is restoration. You restore before you judge.

Yahusha came to regain authority, not to immediately remove all opposition. He restored access to the kingdom, trained citizens, delegated authority, and then said, “Occupy till I come.”

Occupy is not a religious word. It is a governmental word. It means to administer territory on behalf of a king.

Yahusha did not remove darkness. He installed light. He did not eliminate opposition. He empowered representatives. And the kingdom expands through influence before it concludes through judgment.

Now make no mistake: judgment is coming. Evil will end. Satan will be judged. Injustice will be answered. But it will not happen emotionally. It will happen legally.

Revelation 20 says the books will be opened. Yah will not ask how people felt. He will ask what they did with authority. What did you do with influence? What did you do with truth? What did you do with opportunity? Judgment is not about punishment. It is about accountability.

This is why evil must be allowed to fully expose itself. When judgment comes, it will be final, unquestionable, and eternal.

Let me bring this to a close. Evil continues not because Yah is absent, but because Yah is faithful—faithful to His word, faithful to His laws, faithful to His delegation. Yah is not delaying. Yah is governing.

The greatest tragedy is not that evil exists. The greatest tragedy is that citizens do not understand their role.

Yah is not waiting on heaven. Heaven is waiting on earth.

That’s why Yahusha taught us to pray, “Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth,” not someday, not in heaven—on earth. And that prayer is not a wish. It is a responsibility.

So stop blaming Yah. Stop waiting for rescue. Stop asking heaven to do what earth was assigned to manage. The King has spoken. The authority has been restored. The kingdom has come.

The question is no longer, “Why doesn’t Yah end evil?” The question is, will the citizens

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

STOP WAITING TO FEEL READY



Proverbs chapter 23
















Today we are walking in: STOP WAITING TO FEEL READY
















1 Chronicles 28:9




And thou, Solomon my son, know thou the God of thy father, and serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind H3824: for the LORD searcheth all hearts, and understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts: if thou seek him, he will be found of thee; but if thou forsake him, he will cast thee off for ever.

























MIND













Today we look to the word-MIND-H3824 lebab--mind, knowledge, thinking, reflection, memory















The Torah testifies...............







Genesis 23:8




And he communed with them, saying, If it be your mind H3824 that I should bury my dead out of my sight; hear me, and intreat for me to Ephron the son of Zohar,




Leviticus 24:12




And they put him in ward, that the mind H3824 of the LORD might be shewed them.







Numbers 16:28

And Moses said, Hereby ye shall know that the Lord hath sent me to do all these works; for I have not done them of mine own mind H3824.



















The prophets proclaim..................




Isaiah 26:3




Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind H3824 is stayed on thee: because he trusteth in thee.







Ezekiel 11:5




And the Spirit of the Lord fell upon me, and said unto me, Speak; Thus saith the Lord; Thus have ye said, O house of Israel: for I know the things that come into your mind H3824, every one of them.









Habakkuk 1:11




Then shall his mind H3824 change, and he shall pass over, and offend, imputing this his power unto his god.















The writings bear witness..........................







1 Chronicles 22:7




And David said to Solomon, My son, as for me, it was in my mind H3824 to build an house unto the name of the LORD my God:













Lamentations 3:21




This I recall to my mind H3824, therefore have I hope.







Job 34:33

Should it be according to thy mind H3824? he will recompense it, whether thou refuse, or whether thou choose; and not I: therefore speak what thou knowest.













STOP WAITING TO FEEL READY




My friends, tonight I want to talk to you about something that has quietly crippled an entire generation and most people don’t even know it. We have been taught to depend on something that Elohim never designed life to run on. We have been educated, inspired, trained, and coached to wait on a feeling before we act. We have been told that if you don’t feel like doing it, then you shouldn’t do it. And as a result, we have raised a generation that starts many things but finishes very few.




Let me say it carefully because this is important. The greatest enemy of consistency in your life is not laziness. It is not distraction. It is not lack of intelligence. The greatest enemy of consistency is misunderstanding how life works. You see, when you misunderstand the system, you misuse the product. And when you misuse the product, you damage yourself.




We live in a culture that worships motivation. We have motivational speakers, motivational videos, motivational podcasts, motivational quotes, motivational playlists. We are surrounded by motivation, yet we are surrounded by inconsistency. That alone should tell you something is wrong with the formula. If motivation were enough, we would be the most disciplined, focused, consistent people in history. But we are not. Why? Because motivation is emotional energy, and emotions were never designed to govern life. Emotions are wonderful servants, but they are terrible masters.




The Bible never says, “As a man feels in his heart, so is he.” It says, “As a man thinks in his heart, so is he.” Proverbs 23:7. Thinking governs life, not feeling. Authority governs life, not excitement.




Let me make this very plain. If your obedience depends on how you feel, your obedience will always be inconsistent. Feelings fluctuate. Emotions rise and fall. One day you feel strong, the next day you feel tired. One day you feel inspired, the next day you feel bored. Elohim never designed destiny to be at the mercy of your mood.




This is why the Bible never commands feelings. Elohim does not say feel holy. He says be holy. 1 Peter 1:16. He does not say feel disciplined. He says train yourself to be godly. 1 Timothy 4:7. He does not say feel like forgiving. He says forgive one another. Ephesians 4:32. Every command of Elohim assumes that obedience is possible without emotional agreement.




You see, motivation may excite you, but it cannot sustain you. Motivation can start you, but it cannot keep you. Motivation is like a spark. It can ignite the engine, but it cannot drive the car. And many people are burning out because they are trying to drive their lives on sparks instead of fuel.




Here is the problem. We have taught people to wait for motivation instead of submitting to authority. We have trained people to ask, “Do I feel like it?” instead of asking, “What was I assigned to do?” And the moment you replace assignment with emotion, your life becomes unstable.




The Bible says, “Let all things be done decently and in order.” 1 Corinthians 14:40. Order is a kingdom word. Order precedes power. Order precedes manifestation. Order precedes effectiveness. When order is missing, effort increases. When order is present, effort decreases.




Yahusha never woke up in the morning and said, “I don’t feel like going to the cross today.” He said, “My food is to do the will of Him who sent Me and to finish His work.” John 4:34. Notice He didn’t call it motivation; He called it assignment. Food sustains life. Assignment sustains consistency.




My friends, consistency is not emotional. Consistency is governmental. Consistency is the fruit of authority.




When you understand authority, feelings lose their control over you. When you understand authority, excuses lose their power. When you understand authority, you stop negotiating with your emotions and start obeying your purpose.




This is why Elohim never promised to motivate you every day. He promised to guide you. “Trust in Yahuah with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.” Proverbs 3:5–6. Direction is more important than motivation. Direction keeps you moving when motivation disappears.




So tonight, I want to remove a burden from you. I want to free you from the pressure of trying to feel inspired every day. I want to deliver you from emotional slavery. Because the truth is this: mature people don’t ask how they feel. They ask what is required. Children are governed by feelings. Leaders are governed by responsibility.




And this is the central truth we’re going to build on tonight: motivation is temporary, but authority is permanent. When authority is established, consistency becomes natural. When authority is missing, discipline becomes exhausting.




Now before we go any further, we must do what the kingdom always demands first. We must define our terms, because whenever you misunderstand a word, you will misuse the principle connected to it. And many people are frustrated not because they lack ability, but because they are using the wrong definition.




In our culture, consistency is defined emotionally. We say a person is consistent if they keep showing up, if they keep pushing, if they keep trying. But the kingdom of Elohim does not define consistency by effort. The kingdom defines consistency by faithfulness to an assignment. Let me say it slowly. Consistency is not trying harder. Consistency is staying where you were sent.




The Bible says, “It is required in stewards that one be found faithful.” 1 Corinthians 4:2. Faithful to what? Faithful to an assignment. Faithfulness is not enthusiasm. Faithfulness is loyalty to responsibility. Consistency from a kingdom perspective is obedience to design. It is remaining under a law. It is functioning within authorization.




This is why creation is consistent. The sun does not wake up one morning and decide it doesn’t feel like rising. The ocean does not decide to take a vacation from its boundaries. The seasons do not get tired of changing. Why? Because nature is not emotional. Nature is lawful.




The Bible says, “While the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night shall not cease.” Genesis 8:22. That verse is not poetic. It is governmental. Elohim established systems, and systems operate consistently because they are under authority.




This is why inconsistency is not primarily a discipline problem. It is an authority problem. Wherever authority is unclear, consistency collapses. Wherever authority is violated, effort increases.




You see, consistency is effortless in the right environment. A fish does not struggle to swim. A bird does not force itself to fly. A tree does not strain to grow. They are consistent because they are operating within their assigned domain.




Yahusha said something very powerful in John 5:19: “The Son can do nothing of Himself, but only what He sees the Abba do.” That is not weakness. That is authority. Mashiach’s consistency flowed from submission. He did not act independently. He acted under instruction. And because of that, His life was stable, focused, and effective.




Let me say something that may shock you. Inconsistency is a symptom of rebellion against design. Whenever you step outside what you were authorized to do, you will need motivation, pressure, reminders, supervision, and constant encouragement. But when you are inside your assignment, obedience becomes natural.




This is why the Bible says His commandments are not burdensome. 1 John 5:3. They are not burdensome because they align with design. The burden comes when you try to obey something that was never assigned to you.




Consistency, therefore, is not willpower. Consistency is agreement with purpose. When you agree with purpose, you don’t have to fight yourself. Your soul settles. Your energy aligns. Your focus sharpens. The inner conflict disappears.




We must stop calling emotional bursts consistency. Consistency is sustained alignment. It is remaining planted. The Scripture says, “Blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, but his delight is in the law of Yahuah. He shall be like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit in season.” Psalm 1:1.




Notice the word planted. Not visiting, not experimenting—planted. Trees don’t relocate every season. They don’t chase trends. They don’t follow feelings. They stay planted. And because they stay planted, they produce fruit consistently.




My friends, the kingdom does not reward effort. It rewards alignment. Elohim never told Joshua, “Try hard.” He said, “Be strong and very courageous. Do not turn from the law to the right or to the left, that you may prosper wherever you go.” Joshua 1:7. Prosperity followed consistency, and consistency followed obedience to law.




So if you want consistency, stop asking, “How can I push myself?” Start asking, “Where am I assigned?” Stop praying for motivation and start praying for clarity. Because once clarity is established, motivation becomes irrelevant.




This is why people burn out in careers, ministries, relationships, and goals. They are forcing what should be natural. They are chasing what they were never sent to pursue. And no amount of motivation can compensate for misalignment.




Consistency is not heroic effort. Consistency is submission to order. And once you understand that, you are ready to confront the next truth. Because now we must deal with why motivation always fails, no matter how inspiring it feels at the beginning.




Now, having defined consistency from a kingdom perspective, we must confront a painful truth because some of the things we love the most are the very things sabotaging our progress. Motivation feels good. It excites us. It gives us hope. It makes us feel alive. But feelings are not proof of truth. Feelings are responses, not foundations.




Let us define motivation honestly. Motivation is emotional stimulation. It is a surge of excitement produced by external input. Someone says the right words. Music plays at the right moment. An image inspires you. A quote stirs your heart. And suddenly you feel like you can conquer the world.




But the problem is this: motivation has an expiration date. The Bible warns us about this kind of instability. James says a double-minded man is unstable in all his ways. James 1:8. Instability is not caused by lack of desire. It is caused by lack of grounding. And motivation does not ground you. It lifts you temporarily.




Motivation is like caffeine. It gives you a quick boost, but when it wears off, the crash is inevitable. That is why many people start strong and finish weak. They confuse emotional ignition with sustainable energy.




Yahusha addressed this problem directly in the parable of the sower. He said, “Some seed fell on rocky ground and sprang up quickly, but because it had no root, it withered under pressure.” Matthew 13:5–6. Motivation produces quick starts. Authority produces deep roots. Anything without roots cannot survive heat.




Let me say something plainly. Motivation fails because it is not designed to govern behavior. Elohim never intended your life to be controlled by emotion. That is why He gave you a will. That is why He gave you commandments. That is why He established laws. Laws exist because feelings cannot be trusted.




Think about it. Elohim did not say, “If you feel like it, do not steal.” He said, “You shall not steal.” Exodus 20:15. He did not say, “If you are inspired, love your neighbor.” He said, “Love your neighbor as yourself.” Mark 12:31. Obedience was never meant to wait for emotional agreement.




Motivation fails because it depends on circumstances. When circumstances change, motivation disappears. When pressure increases, motivation retreats. When routine sets in, motivation fades.




That is why people quit gyms, abandon projects, leave commitments, and break promises—not because they are evil, but because they trusted a temporary force to carry an eternal responsibility.




The book of Ecclesiastes says, “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might.” Ecclesiastes 9:10. Notice it does not say, “Do it when you feel inspired.” It assumes responsibility independent of emotion.




Let me give you a simple analogy. A car cannot run on ignition sparks alone. The spark starts the engine, but fuel sustains movement. Motivation is the spark. Authority is the fuel.




Many people are repeatedly starting their lives but never going anywhere because they refuse to install a fuel system. This is why you can attend a conference, feel empowered, and then return home and collapse. You did not lack information; you lacked authorization. You were emotionally charged but structurally empty.




The Bible says, “The letter kills, but the spirit gives life.” 2 Corinthians 3:6. That does not mean structure is bad. It means structure without authority is dead. Authority gives structure legitimacy. Authority gives action permission.




My friends, Elohim did not design you to live from one emotional high to the next. He designed you to live from assignment to assignment.




That is why Yahusha said, “I must work the works of Him who sent Me while it is day.” John 9:4. He did not say, “I feel like working.” He said, “I must.” Obligation to purpose overrides emotion.




Motivation asks, “How do I feel?” Authority asks, “What was I sent to do?” And the moment you answer the second question, the first question becomes irrelevant.




This is why motivation always fails, because life was never designed to be governed by excitement. Life is governed by law. Destiny is governed by assignment. Consistency is governed by authority.




And now that we have exposed the weakness of motivation, we are ready to move into the foundation that never fails. Because if motivation is not the source of consistency, then what is?




We must now talk about the real power behind sustained action, the authority that gives your life legal permission to function.




Now we have arrived at the foundation. Everything we have said so far was simply preparation for this truth. Because until you understand authority, consistency will always feel like pressure instead of peace.




Authority is the missing ingredient in most people’s lives. And because it is missing, they keep trying to replace it with motivation, discipline, and guilt.




Let us define authority properly, because again, if you misunderstand the word, you will fear it or misuse it. Authority is not power. Authority is the legal right to use power. Authority is permission. Authority is legitimacy. Authority is being officially authorized to function in a specific domain.




This is why Yahusha said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me.” Matthew 28:18. He did not say all power. He said all authority. Power without authority is dangerous. Power without authority is illegal. Power without authority produces stress, fear, and collapse.




Here is the principle you must write down in your spirit: you are consistent in what you are authorized to do, and inconsistent in what you merely desire to do. Desire excites you, but authority anchors you. Desire pulls you emotionally, but authority positions you legally.




When a police officer stands in the middle of the road and raises his hand, traffic stops. Not because of his strength. Not because of his feelings. Not because of his emotions. But because of authority. He may be tired. He may not feel like working. But traffic still stops because authority overrides emotion.




This is why consistency does not come from trying harder. Consistency comes from knowing, “I have the right to be here.”




When you are in your authority, you do not need reminders. You do not need pressure. You do not need hype. You do not need supervision. You function naturally.




Yahusha never struggled to be consistent in His ministry. He did not wrestle with prayer. He did not fight to teach. He did not force Himself to heal the sick. Why? Because He was operating within authorization.




He said, “I do nothing of Myself, but as My Father taught Me, I speak these things.” John 8:28. Teaching was not an effort. It was an assignment.




This is why many people are inconsistent at the very things they claim to love. Love is not proof of authorization. Passion is not proof of assignment. You can be passionate about something you were never sent to do. And passion without authority leads to burnout.




Authority brings rest. The Bible says, “Come to Me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” Matthew 11:28. Notice He did not remove the work. He removed the burden. Work without authority is heavy. Work with authority is light.




Let me say this carefully. When you are outside your authority, everything requires maintenance. You need people to push you. You need external validation. You need applause. You need rewards. But when you are inside your authority, the work itself energizes you.




This is why Yahusha could say, “My yoke is easy and My burden is light.” Matthew 11:30. A yoke does not remove work. It aligns direction. When alignment is correct, effort decreases.




Authority stabilizes your life. Authority gives you confidence that does not depend on success or failure. Authority keeps you moving even when results are delayed. Authority gives you permission to continue when feelings tell you to quit.




My friends, consistency is not a discipline issue. It is a jurisdiction issue. You are inconsistent because you are operating outside your legal domain. And no amount of motivation can fix a jurisdiction problem.




This is why the Bible says, “The steps of a good man are ordered by Yahuah.” Psalm 37:23. Ordered, not random. Not emotional. Not experimental. Order produces endurance.




Once authority is established, consistency becomes natural. Once authority is clear, excuses disappear. Once authority is embraced, emotions lose control.




Now, if authority is the source of consistency, then the next question becomes obvious: how do you know what you are authorized to do?




And the answer to that question brings us to assignment—the most neglected concept in personal development today.




Now listen carefully, because what I am about to share with you is where many sincere people miss Elohim. Not because they are evil. Not because they are lazy. But because they never settle one critical question.




That question is not, “What do I want to do?”

The question is, “What was I sent to do?”




Assignment is the bridge between authority and consistency. Authority gives you permission, but assignment gives you direction. Without assignment, authority has nowhere to function. And without assignment, consistency becomes a battle instead of a lifestyle.




The Bible makes this principle very clear. Yahusha said, “I have finished the work which You have given Me to do.” John 17:4. Notice He did not say the work I decided to do, or the work I enjoyed doing, or the work people expected Me to do. He said the work You gave Me. That is assignment language.




Assignment always precedes responsibility. Responsibility always precedes accountability. And accountability is what produces consistency.




When you are accountable for something you know you were assigned, quitting becomes difficult. Excuses lose their strength. Procrastination loses its power.




This is why many people are inconsistent. They accepted responsibility without assignment. They stepped into roles Elohim never authorized. They committed to paths Elohim never designed. And now they are asking discipline to compensate for misalignment.




Let me say it plainly. You cannot demand consistency from yourself in an area Elohim never assigned you. That is abuse. You are punishing yourself for failing at something heaven never endorsed.




The Bible says, “Many are the plans in a man’s heart, but the counsel of Yahuah—that shall stand.” Proverbs 19:21. Plans are human. Purpose is divine. Consistency flows from purpose, not plans.




This is why Yahusha was never distracted. He was assignment-focused. When people tried to make Him king prematurely, He withdrew. When crowds demanded miracles on demand, He moved on. Why? Because assignment determines timing. Assignment determines boundaries. Assignment determines focus.




He said, “I must preach the kingdom of Elohim to other cities also, because for this purpose I was sent.” Luke 4:43. He did not say because it is popular or because it is rewarding. He said because I was sent.




Sent people are consistent people.




Assignment answers three questions that motivation never can:

Why am I here?

What am I responsible for?

What am I not responsible for?




When those questions are unanswered, people drift. They imitate others. They chase trends. They compare themselves. They try to be consistent at everything and end up consistent at nothing.




The Scripture says, “Let each one remain in the calling in which he was called.” 1 Corinthians 7:20. Remain. Stay. Do not abandon your assignment because someone else’s assignment looks more glamorous.




Consistency requires contentment with calling.




Many people are inconsistent not because they lack discipline, but because they secretly resent their assignment. They admire someone else’s results and despise their own process. And resentment will always undermine consistency.




Yahusha never tried to be Yohanan the Immerser. Yohanan never tried to be Yahusha. Each stayed in assignment. And because they stayed in assignment, they were effective in season.




Assignment also explains why some things exhaust you while others energize you. When you are in assignment, effort produces life. When you are out of assignment, effort produces stress.




That is why the Bible says, “The blessing of Yahuah makes rich, and He adds no sorrow with it.” Proverbs 10:22. No sorrow. No grief. No internal conflict.




My friends, the moment you settle assignment, consistency becomes a consequence, not a struggle. You stop negotiating with your emotions. You stop arguing with your schedule. You stop forcing discipline. You simply show up, because you know you belong there.




But there is still one more layer we must address. Because even when assignment is clear, many people still allow their emotions to override obedience. So next, we must understand why feelings lose their power when authority is truly established in your life.




Now this is where freedom begins, because many of you are exhausted not from work, but from constantly negotiating with your emotions. You wake up every morning having a conversation with how you feel, and feelings are terrible advisers. Feelings have no loyalty. Feelings change with weather, sleep, food, and opinions. And yet many people have handed feelings the steering wheel of their lives.




Let me say this clearly. Authority establishes hierarchy. And in a properly ordered life, emotions are not at the top. Authority sits above emotion. Purpose sits above feeling. Assignment sits above mood. When authority is absent, emotions take over by default.




This is why the Scripture says, “For Elohim has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and a sound mind.” 2 Timothy 1:7. Fear is an emotion. Power, love, and soundness are positions. Elohim does not remove emotions. He places them under government.




Think about a soldier. A soldier does not move based on how he feels. He moves based on command. He may feel afraid, tired, or discouraged. But when the order comes, the order overrides the emotion. That is not cruelty. That is structure. And structure saves lives.




This is why Yahusha could pray in Gethsemane, “Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me.” That was emotion. But He immediately followed it with, “Nevertheless, not My will, but Yours be done.” Luke 22:42. Emotions spoke, but authority decided. Feelings expressed themselves, but they did not govern the outcome.




Many people think maturity means suppressing feelings. That is not maturity. Maturity is placing feelings in their proper position. Dawid said, “Why are you cast down, O my soul? Hope in Elohim.” Psalm 42:5. Notice he spoke to his soul. He did not obey it. He governed it.




When authority is established in your life, feelings are acknowledged but not obeyed. You stop asking, “Do I feel like it?” and start asking, “What is required of me?” And that single shift changes everything.




This is why people who live under authority experience peace even under pressure. Their inner world is not chaotic because it is ordered. The Scripture says, “Great peace have those who love Your Torah, and nothing causes them to stumble.” Psalm 119:165. Peace is not the absence of trouble. Peace is the presence of order.




Authority silences excuses. Authority short-circuits procrastination. Authority removes emotional bargaining. When you know you are assigned, feelings lose their power to delay obedience.




My friends, when authority is unclear, emotions argue loudly. When authority is clear, emotions become quiet servants. And once emotions are quiet, consistency becomes possible.




But now let me take you deeper, because authority does not function in chaos. Authority expresses itself through structure. Authority produces systems.




And this brings us to the next critical truth, because many people claim to be under authority, but their lives have no systems.




Now listen very carefully, because this is where many people deceive themselves. They say they are committed. They say they are serious. They say they are under authority. But when you examine their lives, there is no structure. And where there is no structure, authority is absent.




No matter how sincere the confession, authority always produces systems. Systems are visible evidence that authority is present.




Elohim is a God of systems. The universe operates by systems. Your body operates by systems. Time operates by systems. The kingdom of Elohim operates by systems.




The Scripture says, “Elohim is not the author of confusion, but of peace.” 1 Corinthians 14:33. Confusion is the absence of order, and order is the fruit of authority.




When Elohim created the world, He did not create randomly. He created in sequence. He created in stages. He created in cycles. Day one. Day two. Day three. Evening and morning. Seedtime and harvest. Systems reveal submission to law.




That is why nature never burns out. Nature does not resist structure.




Let me say this plainly. People without systems rely on emotions. People with systems rely on order. If you need to feel inspired to act, it is because there is no structure carrying your life.




You do not wake up every morning asking yourself if you feel like brushing your teeth. Why? Because it is systematized.




Yahusha lived a systematized life. He had habits of prayer. He had patterns of teaching. He withdrew regularly. He honored Sabbaths. He operated within rhythms.




The Scripture says, “As His custom was, He went into the synagogue on the Sabbath day.” Luke 4:16. Custom means system. Habit means structure. Structure means authority.




This is why many believers are exhausted. They are trying to live a kingdom life without kingdom order. They want kingdom results with emotional discipline. But discipline without structure is punishment. Structure is mercy.




Systems do not limit you. Systems protect you. The psalmist said, “The boundary lines have fallen for me in pleasant places.” Psalm 16:6. Boundaries are not prisons. They are permissions. They tell you where your authority functions freely.




If your life depends on reminders, alarms, guilt, and pressure from others, it is because authority has not been translated into systems. Authority always seeks expression, and its language is structure.




My friends, when authority is clear, systems become easy. When authority is unclear, systems feel restrictive. That is why people resist routines. They are trying to use structure to compensate for lack of assignment.




Structure without purpose feels like oppression. Structure with purpose feels like freedom.




But now we must address something even more sobering, because inconsistency is not just inconvenient. It is costly. And until you understand the cost, you will keep tolerating patterns that are silently destroying your future.




Now let me slow down here, because this is where many people underestimate the danger of what they call “just a habit” or “just a phase.”




Inconsistency is not neutral. Inconsistency is expensive. It extracts a price over time, and the longer it remains unchallenged, the higher the cost becomes.




The first cost of inconsistency is credibility. The Scripture says, “A good name is better than riches.” Proverbs 22:1. A good name is built on reliability. When people cannot depend on you, trust erodes. And once trust is gone, influence follows it out the door.




Elohim does not promote potential. He promotes faithfulness. “Well done, good and faithful servant.” Matthew 25:21. Not gifted servant. Not excited servant. Faithful.




The second cost of inconsistency is self-confidence. Every time you break a promise to yourself, you weaken your inner authority. You begin to doubt your own word. You start to question your ability to follow through. And eventually, you stop trusting yourself.




The Scripture says, “Let your yes be yes, and your no be no.” Matthew 5:37. That verse applies not only to others. It applies to you.




The third cost of inconsistency is emotional fatigue. People think discipline is tiring. It is not. What is tiring is inconsistency. Starting and stopping. Building and tearing down. Deciding and undeciding.




Ya‛aqob calls this being double-minded, and he says such a person is unstable in all his ways. James 1:8. Instability is exhausting.




The fourth cost of inconsistency is identity confusion. When you are inconsistent, you begin to wonder who you really are. Am I disciplined or lazy? Am I serious or careless? Am I called or just dreaming?




Confusion about identity always leads to insecurity. And Elohim is not the author of confusion. 1 Corinthians 14:33. Confusion is evidence that something is out of order.




And finally, inconsistency costs you time—the one resource you cannot recover. The Scripture says, “Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.” Psalm 90:12.




Every time you quit and restart, you lose momentum. Every delay postpones fruit. Every abandoned assignment creates regret.




Let me say this clearly. Inconsistency is not harmless. It slowly steals your future while making you believe the problem is lack of motivation. No. The problem is misalignment.




This is why Yahusha said, “No one having put his hand to the plow and looking back is fit for the kingdom of Elohim.” Luke 9:62. Looking back is not just distraction. It is divided authority.




Now, having seen the cost, the question becomes urgent. How do we live differently? How do we build consistency that does not depend on feelings? How do we realign with authority so life stops feeling heavy?




That brings us to the practical heart of this teaching.




Now we come to the practical heart of this teaching, because the kingdom of Elohim is not theory. It is application. Yahusha said, “Whoever hears these sayings of Mine and does them, I will liken him to a wise man who built his house on the rock.” Matthew 7:24. Wisdom is not knowing what to do. Wisdom is doing what you know.




If consistency is not built by motivation, then how is it built? The answer is simple, but it is not easy, because it requires surrender. Consistency is built by alignment with authority, submission to structure, and faithfulness to assignment.




The first step is this: settle your assignment. Until you know what you were sent to do, you will keep drifting. The Scripture says, “Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you; before you were born, I sanctified you; I ordained you.” Jeremiah 1:5. Ordination precedes birth. That means your assignment existed before your emotions. Stop asking your feelings for permission to obey your purpose.




The second step is submit to structure. Structure is not punishment. Structure is protection. When Dani’el was taken into Babylon, he did not wait to feel spiritual. The Scripture says Dani’el purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself. Daniel 1:8. Purpose preceded feeling. Structure followed. Conviction and consistency preserved his destiny.




The third step is remove emotional negotiation. Every time you debate with your feelings, you delay obedience. The Scripture says, “To obey is better than sacrifice.” 1 Samuel 15:22. Obedience does not require discussion. When authority speaks, action follows.




The fourth step is stay under accountability. Accountability is not control. It is covering. Even Yahusha submitted to authority. He did not begin ministry until He submitted to Yochanan the Immerser. And when He did, the heavens opened, the Ruach descended, and the Father spoke. Matthew 3:16–17. Accountability releases anointing.




The fifth step is let authority carry you. When you are under authority, you do not have to push yourself every day. Authority pulls you forward. The psalmist says, “YHWH will perfect that which concerns me.” Psalm 138:8. Perfecting is Elohim’s responsibility. Submission is yours.




My friends, consistency is not built by trying harder. It is built by aligning deeper. When alignment is correct, effort decreases. When alignment is wrong, effort increases. That is why Yahusha said, “Apart from Me, you can do nothing.” John 15:5. Nothing means nothing of eternal value.




Once you stop forcing what Elohim never authorized and start obeying what He assigned, consistency becomes a byproduct. You no longer wake up fighting yourself. You wake up focused. Peace replaces pressure. Direction replaces confusion.




And now, as we come to the close, let me bring this together, because consistency is not just about habits. It is about maturity.




Let me end by saying this plainly. Consistency is not discipline. It is identity under authority. Children are governed by feelings. Mature people are governed by responsibility. Leaders are not led by emotion. They are led by assignment.




The Scripture says, “When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish things.” 1 Corinthians 13:11. One of the most childish things we cling to is emotional control over our obedience.




Consistency is a sign that you know who you are, why you are here, and who you are accountable to. That is why Yahusha could say, “I always do those things that please Him.” John 8:29. Always. Not sometimes. Not when He felt like it. Always.




My friends, when you find your assignment, consistency becomes inevitable. When you submit to authority, life carries you. When you stop negotiating with feelings, destiny accelerates.




So let me leave you with two questions—not emotional questions, but kingdom questions. What are you trying to be consistent in that you were never sent to do? And where do you need alignment instead of motivation?




The Scripture says, “Commit your works to YHWH, and your thoughts will be established.” Proverbs 16:3. Established thoughts produce consistent action. Established action produces lasting fruit.




May Elohim restore order to your life. May He clarify your assignment. May He place you under the authority that protects you. And may consistency become your lifestyle—not because you feel strong, but because you are aligned.




You see, my friends, consistency is not merely a human trait. It is a divine mandate. The kingdom of Elohim functions in a realm of constancy. Elohim Himself is constant.




Yahusha the Mashiach is the same yesterday, today, and forever. Hebrews 13:8. If consistency were not important, Elohim would not be consistent. If Elohim were inconsistent, the universe would collapse. His promises are unwavering, and they stand firm forever.




When you align yourself with the kingdom, you align yourself with the most consistent force in the universe. That consistency is not just a routine. It is a reflection of the image and nature of Elohim within you.




You are made in His image, and His consistency is a testimony to the world through your life. So when we talk about consistency, we are not just talking about doing the right thing over and over. We are talking about becoming the embodiment of Elohim’s eternal principles.




In the book of Malachi, YHWH says, “For I am YHWH, I do not change.” Malachi 3:6. His unchanging nature forms the foundation of the kingdom. And as His representatives on earth, we are called to operate in that same steadiness, reflecting His will without wavering.




You are not called to live by fluctuating emotions or circumstances. You are called to live by His unchanging Word. And in His Word, you find stability.




When you become consistent in your alignment with the Word of Elohim, the laws of the kingdom work on your behalf. The Scripture tells us that the earth operates according to laws: while the earth remains, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, winter and summer, day and night shall not cease. Genesis 8:22.




The laws of consistency are eternal, just as the promises of Elohim are eternal. That is why it is not enough to be motivated or emotional. What you need is a mindset grounded in the consistent law of His Word.




Only then can you live in constant victory. You will face challenges. You will face resistance. But when you are rooted in the consistency of the Word of Elohim, that resistance cannot shake you.




It may try to break you, but the truth of who you are in the Mashiach—your identity as a kingdom citizen—will keep you steadfast. That is why consistency is a sign of maturity.




The mature believer is the one who, regardless of the season, stands firm in identity, calling, and purpose.




Now let me get even more practical. You have heard the spiritual foundations of consistency, but what does that look like in everyday life? How does consistency operate in your career, your relationships, your finances, and your walk with Elohim?




Consistency in action means being true to your assignment regardless of your environment. As you are clear on your assignment, it becomes easier to pursue it consistently because you understand your purpose.




This is why the emissary Sha’ul wrote, “I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of Elohim in Yahusha the Mashiach.” Philippians 3:14. Pressing means you will encounter resistance, but you will remain steady.




To live out consistency in action, you must discipline your decisions. Decisions are the foundation of destiny. When your decisions are aligned with the purpose Elohim has placed on your life, you build momentum.




You cannot afford to be double-minded. As Ya‛aqob says, a double-minded man is unstable in all his ways. James 1:8. One foot in and one foot out produces instability.




So the secret is singular focus. A person with a clear assignment is not distracted by the demands of the world or shifting circumstances. They are focused on the upward calling of Elohim.




Consistency in action also means living with integrity. Integrity is alignment between your private life and your public life. “Let your yes be yes, and your no be no.” Matthew 5:37. Consistency means following through.




One of the most critical areas of consistency is your spiritual life. Blessed is the man who delights in the Torah of YHWH and meditates in it day and night. Psalm 1:2. This is not seasonal devotion. It is lifestyle.




Consistency in prayer, in the Word, and in worship is not optional. Yahusha Himself often withdrew to solitary places and prayed. Luke 5:16. If He needed that rhythm, how much more do we?




Consistency also applies to relationships. The kingdom thrives on community. “Iron sharpens iron.” Proverbs 27:17. Unity requires consistency. Serving others consistently is the heart of the kingdom.




In finances, consistency means stewardship. “It is required in stewards that one be found faithful.” 1 Corinthians 4:2. Faithfulness produces increase. Luke 16:10.




As we close, remember this promise: “Let us not grow weary in doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart.” Galatians 6:9.




Your consistency now is sowing into your future—both in this life and in the age to come. Do not give up. Your reward is certain.




So stay consistent. Stay faithful. Walk aligned. And watch as the kingdom of Elohim unfolds in your life, not because you feel strong, but because you are governed by truth and authority.