Good Morning Sunshine! It Gives Your Father Joy, To See You Living From Heaven’s Perspective!

Luke 12:32 (NLT) ~ “So don’t be afraid, little flock. For it gives your Father great happiness to give you the Kingdom.”

Jesus concludes this life-changing conversation with His disciples not by giving them a strategy, but by revealing the heart of the Father. After walking them through the layers of anxiety, identity, provision, and thought patterns, He speaks this tender assurance: “Don’t be afraid, little flock.” It is not just instruction; it is an invitation. A reminder that you are not forgotten sheep scattered on your own, but you are held, seen, and led by a faithful Shepherd. Every day of this journey has pulled back another layer of fear and lifted you into the truth of Kingdom living. On Day One, you were reminded not to worry because life is more than your daily concerns, and you are more valuable than you realize.

On Day Two, Jesus told you to look at the ravens, unclean, unqualified birds who don’t sow or reap, yet are daily fed by God, and He said, “You are far more valuable than them.” On Day Three, you saw the lilies grow effortlessly, clothed in beauty greater than Solomon’s robes, without toil, without shame. They were simply cared for. On Day Four, Jesus addressed the real battleground, your thoughts. He said don’t let these needs dominate your mind, because your Father already knows what you need. And now, He says: “Don’t be afraid.” Not because the world isn’t broken. Not because the need is gone. But because the Kingdom is yours, and your Father is joyful about giving it to you.

This is more than comfort, it’s commissioning. The Kingdom is not just a future place of promise. It is present peace, righteousness, joy, and provision. It is Heaven’s reality manifesting in your earthly journey. And Jesus says that the Father takes great delight in placing that Kingdom into your hands. He’s not a reluctant giver. He’s not withholding to test you. He finds joy in seeing you walk in what was already designed for you.

This is the shift that brings all the other days into focus.  You don’t have to worry (Day One), because the Kingdom contains all you need. You don’t have to perform for provision (Day Two), because Kingdom inheritance isn’t earned, it’s received. You don’t have to strive for beauty or approval (Day Three), because you’re already clothed in glory and righteousness. You don’t have to be dominated by fear-filled thoughts (Day Four), because Kingdom truth governs your mind. You only need to receive what your Father delights to give, His Kingdom (Day Five). Living from Heaven’s perspective doesn’t deny that needs exist. It declares that needs don’t dictate your identity or your peace. 

Living from Kingdom reality means waking up each day knowing you are a son or daughter of God, not a spiritual beggar waiting for scraps. You are loved, not overlooked. Secure, not striving. Covered, not forgotten. This is the posture of peace, resting in the joy of your Father. You can be fearless not because you control everything, but because the One who does loves you fiercely. He is not burdened by your needs; He delights in meeting them. The Kingdom isn’t far off, it’s already being poured into your life every time you trust Him more deeply, surrender more fully, and walk more boldly. Today, lift your eyes. You are part of something eternal, unshakable, and freely given. Don’t be afraid, little flock. You belong to the Father, and the Kingdom belongs to you.

Let’s Pray:

Abba Father, I come before You in awe of Your love. You are not just my Creator; you are my Shepherd. My Provider. My Peace. My King. And today, I receive this word like living water to my soul: “Don’t be afraid, little flock. It gives Your Father great happiness to give you the Kingdom.” I rest in Your joy. Thank You for walking me through every layer of fear this week. Thank You for reminding me that I don’t have to live worried, because my life is more than what I see. You’ve called me valuably, even when I feel uncertain. You’ve shown me ravens and lilies and reminded me that I’m even more loved than they are. You’ve renewed my mind, pulled down fear, and replaced it with truth. Father, I confess that I’ve often lived like I had to earn Your attention or chase down Your provision. But You’ve already prepared it for me. You take joy in blessing me. You’re not waiting for perfection. You’re looking for trust. And today, I trust You. Father, let Your Kingdom reign in my mind. Let it govern my emotions. Let it rule over my choices. I receive the peace of the Kingdom, the joy of the Kingdom, the power of the Kingdom. I receive the identity of a son, of a daughter, no longer driven by fear, no longer burdened by performance. Father, let my life become a resting place for Your presence. Let the evidence of the Kingdom be seen in how I walk, how I speak, how I love, and how I trust. You are not withholding from me. You are rejoicing over me. So, I say yes to Your Kingdom. Yes to peace instead of panic. Yes to worship instead of worry. Yes to surrender instead of striving. Yes to the voice of my Shepherd who says, Don’t be afraid.” Thank You for giving me the Kingdom. Thank You for giving me Yourself. In Jesus Christ Mighty Name, my Shepherd, my King, and the joy of my soul. Amen! 

Blessings…

Love Dr. Jean

Have A Blessed Weekend…

Good Morning Sunshine! What Are You Feeding Your Mind?

Luke 12:29–30 (NLT) ~ “And don’t be concerned about what to eat and what to drink. Don’t worry about such things. These things dominate the thoughts of unbelievers all over the world, but your Father already knows your needs.”

Here you are on Thursday, in the second week of June 2025, and you are standing in the middle of a heart-shifting truth: God never intended for you to carry what only He can cover. From the beginning of this passage in Luke 12, Jesus has been peeling back the layers of worry, fear, striving, and lack. He told you not to worry about everyday life (Monday), He showed you ravens who receive without working for it (Tuesday), and lilies clothed in beauty without striving (yesterday). 

Now God is reaching even deeper, into your mind, to reveal what truly fuels your anxiety, your dominating thoughts. Jesus says that worry and fear aren’t just passing feelings. They become mental dictators when left unchecked. “These things dominate the thoughts of unbelievers…” Worry takes over where trust has not yet been planted. It occupies your thoughts like a ruler on a throne. And Jesus confronts it with tenderness and authority, urging you to examine not only what you feel, but what you’re feeding yourself. 

You can be doing everything “right” externally and still be consumed internally. You can speak words of faith with your mouth but rehearse worst-case scenarios in your mind. You can sing “Great is Thy Faithfulness” on Sunday and still spiral in fear on Monday. Jesus is teaching you that transformation begins when your minds are renewed by truth, not ruled by fear. Think about what you have already been told, your life is more than food or clothing. You’re not defined by your needs but by your value. God feeds the ravens who don’t sow or store, they just show up and trust that provision will be there. God clothes the lilies in glory and splendor, without them working for it. 

And here’s the point: If He’s already doing all of that, why are you letting fear lead your thoughts? This is the crossroads, either your thoughts will be dominated by need, or they’ll be governed by trust. Either fear will drive your decisions, or faith will direct them. The difference isn’t just external, it’s internal. Your mind is the gate to your peace. What gets in your thoughts eventually gets into your heart, and what gets into your heart shapes how you live.

Jesus is not just talking about worry; He’s addressing identity. He says, “But your Father already knows your needs.” Not just “God knows”, but your Father. This is a relationship, not a contract. The unbeliever doesn’t have this assurance, which is why their thoughts spiral with fear. But you, His child, you don’t have to live like that. You have a Father who knows, sees, and provides. His awareness of your needs is constant, and His willingness to meet it is delightful.

So, ask yourself, what is dominating your thoughts today? Is it the echo of your need or the voice of your Shepherd? Is it the panic of “what if,” or the peace of “even if”? God is calling you back to a sound mind, one that is filled not with worry, but with wisdom and wonder. A mind that doesn’t rehearse fear but meditates on truth. A mind that doesn’t cling to control but surrenders to the Father who already knows. If God provides food for ravens and clothes for lilies, how much more is He watching over your heart, your household, your tomorrow?  The shift begins with your thoughts. Let trust take the throne where fear once ruled. Let truth evict anxiety. And let your mind be the place where peace is planted and protected.

Let’s Pray:

Heavenly Father, I bow before You, acknowledging that my mind has often been a battlefield where fear has had too much power. I have let my thoughts be consumed by what I don’t know, what I can’t control, and what I haven’t yet seen. But today, I bring my mind back under Your authority. I want Your Word to dominate my thinking, not my worries. Thank You for every truth You’ve revealed so far. You told me that life is more than food and clothing, and You reminded me that I am more than what I fear. You showed me the raven, and taught me that You provide for the unlikely, the unqualified, and the unclean, and I am far more valuable. You pointed me to the lilies and whispered that beauty comes from surrender, not from stress. You showed me again and again that I am cared for. Known. Covered. And now, God, You’re touching the part of me that’s hardest to surrender, my thoughts. My inner world. The place where what I say and what I think haven’t always matched. Forgive me, Father, for meditating on fear more than Your promises. For feeding my mind with doubt, even while lifting my hands in worship. Cleanse my mind. Purify my thoughts. Tear down every lie that has rooted itself in anxiety and uproot every stronghold that’s blocking Your peace. I speak to every racing thought, every internal voice of worry, and I declare: You are not my shepherd, Jesus is. I will not let these things dominate my thinking. My Father knows. My Shepherd leads. And my King provides. Fill my mind with reminders of Your faithfulness. Bring back every testimony of Your provision. Let my thoughts rehearse Your victories, not my vulnerabilities. Help me to renew my mind with Your Word, to meditate on what is true, noble, right, and pure. And let peace guard my heart and mind through Christ Jesus. I surrender my mind back to You, Father. I choose faith over fear, truth over torment, and trust over control. Thank You that I am not abandoned to figure it all out. You already know my needs, and You have never failed me. In the mighty name of Jesus Christ Name, my Anchor, my Answer, and the Keeper of my mind, I pray. Amen! 

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! You Are Dressed In His Glory, Which Is The Beauty Of Being Cared For By God!

Luke 12:27–28 (NLT) ~ “Look at the lilies and how they grow. They don’t work or make their clothing, yet Solomon in all his glory was not dressed as beautifully as they are. And if God cares so wonderfully for flowers that are here today and thrown into the fire tomorrow, he will certainly care for you. Why do you have so little faith?”

There is something disarming and sacred about a field full of lilies. They do not strive. They do not labor. They do not toil. Yet they grow. Quietly, steadily, effortlessly, rooted in soil they did not choose, watered by a sky they do not control. They grow without striving, and they bloom without stress. And Jesus is telling you to look at them.

He doesn’t just want you to notice their beauty, He wants you to absorb their message. He wants you to see the Father’s care stitched into every petal, to understand that provision is not earned but given. These lilies do not weave fabric, yet they wear divine design. They do not spin thread, yet they are clothed in beauty that puts Solomon’s royal wardrobe to shame. If that’s what God does for flowers that last only a short time, how much more will He do for you?

There is something healing in knowing that beauty and value do not require hustle. The lilies are beautiful because God made them so. They are covered because God chose to clothe them. Their glory is not self-made; it is God-given. This breaks the cycle of proving yourself. You are not dressing yourself in righteousness, provision, or purpose, but God is. His hand clothes you in what you need, right when you need it.

Jesus isn’t just making a comparison; He’s extending an invitation. He wants you to live as freely as the lilies. To trust the unseen process of growth. To believe in the invisible hand that nourishes roots before anything is seen above the surface. To know that just as God wrapped lilies in splendor, He is wrapping your life in purpose, provision, and beauty, even when you feel buried.

But Jesus also asks a piercing question: “Why do you have so little faith?” This isn’t an accusation, it’s a heart check. Faith withers when you believe the lie that you have to make everything happen for yourself. Faith shrinks when you forget that you are not abandoned to figure it all out. Fear flourishes where faith has been choked out. And Jesus, with love in His voice, calls you back to trust.

There is divine beauty in being cared for. God is not a distant observer; He is an intentional Father. He notices what withers. He sees what blooms. And He never lets your season of silence go to waste. You are more than a passing flower. You are His masterpiece. He has clothed you with strength and dignity. And when you feel exposed, uncertain, or overlooked, you can remember this: you are still covered.

Even in seasons of transition, He is the One dressing your life with favor, Grace, and Glory. He knows what you’re going to need before you do. And He is already tending to the soil of your tomorrow. You are not forgotten. You are not hidden. You are being prepared and adorned for what’s ahead. So, grow like the lilies, slowly, silently, but beautifully. Don’t chase the world’s validation. Receive Heaven’s covering. You don’t need to make your own way. You just need to stay planted and trust that your Father is faithful to clothe you in what glorifies Him.

Let’s Pray:

Father, I thank You that I am seen by You. Just as You watch over the lilies of the field, You are watching over me. You clothe them in beauty, and You cover me in grace. You adorn them with splendor, and You robe me in mercy. I don’t have to fight for attention. I don’t have to strive for affection. I am already chosen, already loved, already covered. Father, forgive me for believing I had to clothe myself, for wrapping myself in fear, worry, or self-made protection. Forgive me for every time I forgot that You are my Source. That You are the One who decorates my life with favor, purpose, and provision. I lay down the garment of fear, the covering of anxiety, the cloak of heaviness, and I receive Your robe of righteousness and peace. Father, teach me, Lord, to grow like the lilies. Help me to trust the soil You’ve planted me in, even when I don’t understand it. Help me to believe that I am becoming more beautiful with every quiet yes to You. Teach me to see growth as a sign of Your care. Let me bloom without panic. Let me flourish in faith. Father, I believe You are clothing me for where I’m going. You are dressing my life in joy, wrapping me in peace, and preparing me to carry Your glory. Remind me that I am not thrown together, I am intentionally designed. I am not left bare; I am divinely covered. So even when I don’t feel it, I choose to say: I am cared for. I am clothed. I am growing. Let the beauty of my life point back to the beauty of my Creator. And let the world see that the One who cares for the lilies has not forgotten about me. In Jesus’ name, Amen! 

Blessings…

Love Dr. Jean….

Good Morning Sunshine! You Don’t Have To Perform To Receive God’s Provision!

Luke 12:24 (NLT) ~ “Look at the ravens. They don’t plant or harvest or store food in barns, for God feeds them. And you are far more valuable to him than any birds!”

We live in a culture that applauds performance and celebrates productivity. But the Kingdom of God invites us to a different rhythm, one that begins with resting in our identity before moving into activity. In Luke 12:24, Jesus pauses to teach you a powerful lesson about trust using one of the most unlikely creatures: the raven. Known for its harsh cry and scavenger nature, the raven seems like an odd example of God’s care. Yet Jesus uses the raven to illustrate the effortless way creation depends on the Creator.

The raven does not sow. It does not reap. It has no barns, no banks, no budgets, and yet it eats. Why? Because God feeds it. This is not a metaphor about laziness, but a call to faith. Jesus isn’t saying you shouldn’t work; He’s saying you must understand who the true Source is. Too often you confuse the channel with the source. Your job is a channel. Your gifts are channels. But your Provider is God and God alone.

God’s provision is not based on how “deserving” you feel. That’s why Jesus says look at the raven, a bird considered ceremonially unclean under Jewish law. He deliberately chooses a creature that others would overlook or even avoid demonstrating that nothing disqualifies you from His divine care.

You may feel broken, imperfect, or messy, but even ravens eat because of God’s goodness. And you are far more valuable. That phrase, “far more valuable”, is the heartbeat of this passage. Jesus is confronting the lie that is easily forgotten or left behind. He is establishing identity before action. When you truly believe you are valuable to God, fear begins to lose its grip. Worry starts to unravel. And suddenly, you stop chasing security and start living from it!

There is beauty in trusting God for today! The raven is fed daily! It doesn’t hoard or worry about next week. It lives in the moment, dependent on provision from a faithful hand. What would your life look like if you truly believed God was already in tomorrow, and that today’s portion is sufficient for today? Jesus reminds you that peace comes not from knowing all the answers, but from knowing you are held by the Answer.

Trusting like the raven doesn’t mean you do nothing, it means you stop doing everything from fear. There is holy activity that flows from rest, and then there is anxious activity that flows from worry. The raven invites you into the first. God is not only able to provide, but He also takes pleasure in doing it. And His supply is not limited to food or finances. He provides peace for your thoughts, rest for your bodies, wisdom for your decisions, and strength for your battles.

You don’t have to manipulate anything or anyone to get blessings into your hands. You don’t have to store up every possibility in fear of what might happen. You simply need to look up, and live open. The raven’s daily provision is Heaven’s daily reminder: You are not forgotten. You are not a burden. You are not alone. You are far more valuable, and God has already made arrangements to meet all of your needs!

Let’s Pray:
Abba Father, I thank You for this gentle but powerful reminder, that even the raven, unloved by man and overlooked by the world, is fed by You. You are the God who sees what no one else values, and You are the God who never forgets what belongs to You. I belong to You. Father, forgive me for the times I’ve tried to earn what You wanted to give. For the late nights of overthinking and the early mornings of fear-driven striving. Forgive me for tying my identity to my output and measuring my worth by what I can do instead of who I am in You. I’ve tried to plant and harvest, store and save, manage and control, but I’m tired. And You’re showing me that I don’t have to carry the pressure to perform anymore. Father, teach me the freedom of the raven’s rhythm. Teach me to trust You for today’s bread without being tormented by tomorrow’s unknowns. Quiet the noise that tells me I’m behind or not enough. And awaken me to the truth that I am more valuable than anything that flies, walks, or blooms on this earth. Let that truth settle deep in my bones until my heart begins to rest again. I receive Your provision, not just for my physical needs, but for my emotional and spiritual ones too. Feed my hope again, Lord. Fill my cup with peace again. Quench my thirst for control with the living water of Your sovereignty. I surrender the fear that has disguised itself as wisdom. I release the need to explain, to understand, to fix. I yield to You, the One who feeds ravens and clothes fields and still knows every detail about me. Father, remind me daily, Holy Spirit, that provision flows from promise, not performance. Let me work from rest, not for rest. Let me walk in grace, not in grasping. Let me steward what You give, not strain to get what You never called mine. You are enough. You are with me. And You are already working on what I haven’t even prayed yet. So today, I breathe out worry and breathe in trust. I take my hands off what I’ve been holding and place it all back into Yours. Provide for me, not only what I want, but what I truly need. And let me never forget that I am seen, sustained, and secured in the hands of my Father. In the Name of Jesus Christ, my Shepherd, my Sustainer, and my Supplier, I pray. Amen!

Blessings…
Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! Don’t Worry, God Delights In Providing For You! 

Luke 12:22–32 (NLT) ~ “Then, turning to his disciples, Jesus said, “That is why I tell you not to worry about everyday life—whether you have enough food to eat or enough clothes to wear. [23] For life is more than food, and your body more than clothing. [24] Look at the ravens. They don’t plant or harvest or store food in barns, for God feeds them. And you are far more valuable to him than any birds! [25] Can all your worries add a single moment to your life? [26] And if worry can’t accomplish a little thing like that, what’s the use of worrying over bigger things?[27] Look at the lilies and how they grow. They don’t work or make their clothing, yet Solomon in all his glory was not dressed as beautifully as they are. [28] And if God cares so wonderfully for flowers that are here today and thrown into the fire tomorrow, he will certainly care for you. Why do you have so little faith?[29] And don’t be concerned about what to eat and what to drink. Don’t worry about such things. [30] These things dominate the thoughts of unbelievers all over the world, but your Father already knows your needs.[31] Seek the Kingdom of God above all else, and he will give you everything you need. [32] So don’t be afraid, little flock. For it gives your Father great happiness to give you the Kingdom.”

Jesus speaks into the most tender parts of your life, your needs, your fears, and the unknowns. In this passage, He gently turns to His disciples, not to condemn them for their worry but to release them from it. He names the very things that keep you up at night, food, clothing, daily provision. And then He tells you, “Don’t worry about everyday life.” Why? Because life is more, more than the temporary, more than the visible, more than the anxiety that tries to grip you in silence. He invites you to zoom out from your immediate concerns and see the bigger picture, for your life is valuable, and you are seen by God.

Jesus then draws your attention to nature, pointing to the ravens, birds that do nothing to earn their meals, yet they never miss one. These birds don’t hustle, they don’t store, and they don’t strive, and yet God feeds them. And then He delivers the heart-melting truth, “You are far more valuable to Him than any birds.” This is where worry begins to lose its grip. You are not forgotten. You are not unseen. You are not on your own. You are deeply valued by the Creator of heaven and earth.

He continues with a question that cuts through the fog of anxiety, “Can all your worries add a single moment to your life?” Not only does worry fail to help, but it also actually robs you. It steals time, peace, and clarity. If it can’t even add a moment, why should it dominate your days? The truth is, worry is weighty, but it is also fruitless. And Jesus is showing you a better way, not one of ignorance, but of faith that trusts God even when the need still exists.

The lilies, Jesus says, don’t spin or sew or design their own beauty. They simply grow. And somehow, in their dependence, they are adorned more radiantly than King Solomon in his royal attire. If God cares so intentionally for wildflowers, here one moment and gone the next, how much more will He clothe you? But the issue, Jesus notes, isn’t the need; it’s your faith. You doubt not because God has failed, but because fear often speaks louder than your faith does, unless you intentionally silence fear with truth.

Jesus lovingly acknowledges that these concerns dominate the thoughts of those who don’t know God. But you have a Father. And not just any father, your Father already knows what you need. You don’t have to convince Him to care. He already does. You don’t have to rehearse your pain to be heard. He already sees. He doesn’t need a reason to provide; He needs a heart willing to trust. This is the shift from striving to surrender. He instructs you to “Seek the Kingdom of God above all else.” That means aligning your focus not on what you lack but on Who you love. When you seek His Kingdom, His reign, His ways, His Will, He promises that everything else will be added. This is not a trade; it’s a transfer. 

When you give God first place, He gives you what you could never earn, peace, provision, direction, and purpose. What the world chases, the Father gives to those who seek Him. And then comes the most beautiful assurance: “Don’t be afraid, little flock.” Jesus calls you little, not to diminish you, but to remind you that you are sheep under the care of a Good Shepherd. You don’t have to figure everything out. You just have to follow the One who already has. And this Shepherd doesn’t just feed and protect; He delights in giving you the Kingdom. He finds joy in blessing you. His heart is not reluctant, it’s radiant with generosity.

Today, release your worries not into the air, but into His hands. He’s not overwhelmed by what overwhelms you. Your needs do not intimidate Him. He has already seen the road ahead and prepared the provision for it. Let go of the fear. You are far more valuable than you know, and He is far more faithful than you can imagined.

Let’s Pray:

Father God, I come before You today with a heart that longs to rest but is often restless. You see the unspoken fears, the private tears, the unvoiced questions about whether there will be enough, enough money, enough strength, enough time, enough grace. But You, Lord, are not just the God of enough; You are the God of more than enough. You are Jehovah Jireh, my Provider. I thank You for turning my eyes from the pressure of performance to the peace of Your promise. Forgive me for the times I’ve tried to carry what only You are meant to hold. I’ve worried about the future, forgotten Your past faithfulness, and doubted Your present goodness. But today, I choose surrender. I release my grip on every need I’ve been silently clutching. I give You my what-ifs, my how-wills, my when-Lords. I give You the fear that wakes me up at night and the pressure that weighs down my mornings. Remind me, Lord, that the ravens never wonder if food will come. The lilies never worry about their wardrobe. And if You care for them, You certainly care for me. I silence the lies that say I am unseen, unsupported, and unworthy. I declare that I am valuable to You. I am chosen, cared for, and held. And even when I don’t see the answer, I will stand on Your Word that tells me You already know my need. Teach me to seek Your Kingdom above all else, not just in church on Sunday but in the choices, I make every day. Let my thoughts, my desires, and my priorities reflect trust in You. Grow my faith until fear has no place left to rest. Let Your peace becomes my protection. Let Your joy becomes my strength. Lord, I believe that it brings You joy to provide for me. That truth changes everything. You are not reluctant or resistant; You are rejoicing over me with songs of deliverance. Today, I open my hands and heart to receive, not just Your provision, but Your presence. I invite You into my lack, and I trust You to lead me into overflow. In the Mighty Name of Jesus Christ, my Shepherd and my Peace, Amen! 

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! The Fire Of God Has Sustained You And Now You Are A Carrier Of Revival! 


2 Timothy 1:6 (KJV) ~ “Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of God, which is in thee…”

Revival is not a one-time experience, it’s a lifestyle of continual surrender, daily intimacy with God, and a heart postured to receive and pour out! When God revives what was dead in you, whether a calling, a dream, or your faith, it’s your responsibility to guard that fire. The same God who restores is also the One who equips you to sustain and multiply what He’s given. 

Revival must be maintained and then released. In John 15:4, Jesus gives us the secret to sustaining revival, abide! Staying connected to the Vine is not optional, it’s essential. You cannot produce lasting fruit without intimacy. If you try to walk out your revival without staying rooted in the Presence of God, you’ll burn out, dry out, or return to what He already delivered you from. 

The same Spirit that revived you must now lead you. In 2 Timothy 1:6, Paul reminds Timothy to “stir up the gift.” That phrase is active, it requires movement, intentionality, discipline. Revival doesn’t stay alive by accident. You must protect your time in prayer, feed your spirit with the Word, and stay around those who provoke spiritual hunger. Don’t just experience the fire, tend to it. Fan it. Guard it. Because revival left unattended becomes a memory instead of a movement! 

But sustaining revival isn’t just for personal preservation. Once you’ve been revived, you’re called to become a carrier of revival for others. Matthew 10:8 says, “Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils: freely ye have received, freely give.” God didn’t bring you back to life so you could sit in silence. He filled you so others could encounter the deliverance and the overflow.

We see this in Elisha’s life. After he received a double portion of Elijah’s anointing (2 Kings 2:9–14), he didn’t retreat, he began to pour out. He healed water, raised the dead, multiplied oil, and broke curses. What he carried flowed outward. Even after his death, his bones revived a man who was thrown into his grave (2 Kings 13:21). That’s what revival residue looks like, power that lingers because a life was yielded! 

Romans 8:19 reminds us that “the earnest expectation of the creature waiteth for the manifestation of the sons of God. “The world isn’t waiting for perfect people, they’re waiting for people revived enough to respond, and bold enough to carry the fire. Your coworkers, your family, your church, and your community need what God breathed into you. You are someone else’s evidence that resurrection is real.

Yet with this power comes responsibility. You must steward your story without slipping back into your past. You must carry your bed, like the healed man in John 5, not as a place to lay back down, but as a testimony of what God brought you out of. You’re not just a healed person; you’re a living altar. Everywhere you go, people should feel what you carry: hope, healing, and the holiness of revival.

Isaiah 61:1 makes this clear: “The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon me… to bind up the brokenhearted… to proclaim liberty…” You were revived for others to rise too. You were restored so that someone else could believe God can restore them. Your scars are proof. Your survival is power. Your revival has purpose beyond you.

So now what do you do? You guard the fire! You give the fire! You walk as someone who’s been lit by the fire and the breath of God! Don’t let fear stop you! Don’t let fatigue silence you! Tend the flame, then take it with you! 

Let’s Pray:

Father, thank You for reviving what I thought was lost. Thank You for breathing life into places I had abandoned, restoring joy where there was sorrow, and resurrecting purpose where I had given up. You didn’t just bring me back to life, you invited me to live again with fire. And now I ask You, Lord, to help me sustain what You’ve given. Teach me to abide in You and Your Word daily. Let me not stray from the Vine. When distractions pull at me, when doubt creeps in, when the enemy whispers old lies, remind me that revival is not based on my emotion, but my connection with You. Keep me tethered to Your truth, submitted to Your voice, and hungry for Your Presence. Help me stir up the gift when it grows quiet. Let prayer be my fuel, and purity be my posture. Father, don’t let this revival stop with me, let it be for my legacy as I say yes to becoming a carrier of revival. Send me to the broken places with the oil of healing. Let my words carry power. Let my story carry hope. Use my hands, my heart, and my mouth to speak life where there is death. Let me be a walking testimony of resurrection power. May those who meet me feel heaven’s touch, not because of who I am, but because I’ve been with You. Father, breathe on me daily. Burn in me deeply. Flow through me boldly. I will protect the fire. I will walk revived. And I will give away what You gave me freely. In the Mighty and Matchless Name of Jesus Christ, I pray, Amen! 

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean…

Have A Blessed Weekend…

Good Morning Sunshine! You Are Alive And Living! Now It’s Time To Step Into Revival! 

Romans 8:11 (KJV) ~ “But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you.”

The journey of revival doesn’t end with seeing something come back to life, it continues with the bold decision to walk in the newness of life. On Tuesday you were asked to remember that God is the Reviver of all dead things, even when the situation seems final. And on yesterday, you were reminded that it’s never too late when God is the One speaking to the bones. Now, today, God is calling you to live again, not just breathe, but to walk fully in the power of resurrection life that is available to every believer through the Holy Spirit! 

There’s a difference between being revived and actually living again. Many have moments of refreshing but never step into their next assignment, because they fear returning to what once hurt them or feel unworthy to carry what God is resurrecting. But Paul reminds us in Romans 8:11 that the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead dwells in us. That means revival is not a one-time event, it is a lifestyle sustained by resurrection power.

After Elijah revived the widow’s son (1 Kings 17), the boy wasn’t meant to just return to the same routines, he was meant to live differently as evidence of God’s power. The same happened with the Shunammite woman’s son (2 Kings 4). These were not only personal miracles, but they also became generational markers of what God could do. The story didn’t end with the child sneezing, it began there. 

Revival is not only for your benefit but also for those who will hear your testimony. When God revived the dry bones in Ezekiel 37, it wasn’t just about animation, it was about mobilization. Verse 10 says, “and they lived, and stood up upon their feet, an exceeding great army.” God’s plan was not just to give the bones breath, but to equip and raise up an army. Revival must move you into position. It demands action on your part! 

God didn’t breathe into you for you to sit still, He breathed so you could stand, move, speak, build, serve, restore, and conquer. Stepping into revival also means shedding the garments of your past. Lazarus came out of the tomb alive but still bound in grave clothes. Jesus said, “Loose him, and let him go” (John 11:44). You can be breathing but still bound. You can be revived but not yet released. On this day, your invitation is to not only rise from what buried you, but to shed what used to define you. The grave is no longer your home, and mourning is no longer your mantle! 

Isaiah 60:1 commands: “Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee.” That’s what revival looks like, rising and shining in the glory that now dwells upon you. This is your “live again” moment. It is not enough to just remember what God said or feel His breath once, you must now rise, speak, and walk in the fullness of who He has called you to be.

Every miracle up to this point, every revival in the widow’s home, in the upper room, in the valley of dry bones, was pointing you toward this moment. Not just to tell you God can do it again, but to remind you that He already has. You are standing in the evidence of answered prayer! You are breathing because God declared you shall live! So walk boldly! Hope fiercely! Love deeply! Live again! 

Let’s Pray: 

Father, thank You for the breath that has returned, the strength that is rising, and the Spirit that now dwells within me. I’ve walked through seasons of dryness, death, and delay, but You have proven Yourself faithful. You revived me when I didn’t think I would recover. You spoke life to places I gave up on. And now, Lord, I surrender to the call to live again, not just exist, but to walk with purpose, power, and passion. Father, breathe on me again today, not just to sustain me, but to send me. Let me walk in resurrection power. Help me to shed the grave clothes of yesterday, fear, shame, regret, and silence. Break every chain that still lingers from my tomb. Let Your Spirit quicken every place that still hesitates to move. I declare that I am not the same. The old is gone. The breath of heaven has marked me. Father, I receive the assignment that comes with revival. Like the bones that became an army, raise me up to stand, to serve, and to speak Your word. Let my testimony awaken others. Let my walk reflect Your glory. Let revival not be a moment I remember, but a mantle I carry. I will live again. I will love again. I will believe again. I will rise and shine, because Your glory is upon me. Thank You, Jesus, for calling me out of the tomb. Thank You, Holy Spirit, for dwelling in me with power. Thank You, Father, for loving me back to life. I declare today that this is not the end, it’s a new beginning. I will never be the same. In the Mighty Name of Jesus Christ, Amen! 

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! It’s Never Too Late For God To Revive It! Because You Are Still Breathing! 

Ezekiel 37:5 (KJV) ~ “Thus saith the Lord GOD unto these bones; Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live.”

There’s a distinct difference between something being delayed and something being dead. But even if what you’re facing feels like it’s beyond saving, the God of the Bible is here to remind you of a powerful detail, it is never too late when God is the one doing the reviving. 

In Ezekiel 37, the prophet is led by God into a valley, not of people, but of bones. Dry bones. Disconnected bones. Bones that had been dead a long time. It’s important to note, that God took him there, not to discourage him, but to demonstrate the unstoppable force of divine resurrection. The question God asked Ezekiel wasn’t about His own power, it was about Ezekiel’s faith and vision, “Son of man, can these bones live?” (Ezekiel 37:3). 

And maybe that’s the question God is asking you right now. Can your ministry live again? Can your passion reignite? Can your joy return? Can your family be restored? The enemy wants you to believe it’s too late. But the breath of God doesn’t bow to time. Ezekiel didn’t try to fix the bones; he prophesied to them. He spoke God’s Word to what was unresponsive. You need to speak the Word of God to that thing, situation and or person! 

This is a key spiritual principle, Dead things don’t respond to emotion! They respond to truth! The Word of God carries breath! When you declare what God has spoken, it doesn’t matter how dry the situation is, life begins to stir. “So, I prophesied as I was commanded… and the bones came together” (Ezekiel 37:7). Movement begins where there was once nothing but dust! 

Some of the most miraculous revivals in scripture happened when people thought the time had run out. Sarah was past childbearing age, yet God revived her womb (Genesis 21:1-2). Lazarus was four days dead, yet Jesus raised him up (John 11:43-44). The woman with the issue of blood had suffered twelve years, yet her touch of faith revived her body (Mark 5:29). 

Over and over again, God is showing you that He is not limited by human timelines. You may feel like what you’re praying for has gone too far, been dead too long, or been overlooked too many times. But let this truth settle deep in your spirit: God specializes in late moments that still deliver right on time! He does His best work in places where only He can get the Glory. If He revived Ezekiel’s valley, He can revive yours too!  

Isaiah 43:19 declares, “Behold, I will do a new thing; now it shall spring forth; shall ye not know it?” God is not recycling your past; He’s reviving your future. He’s not just breathing life into what you lost, He’s creating something that exceeds your expectations. The same Spirit that raised Christ from the dead now dwells in you (Romans 8:11). That means resurrection lives inside your praise, your faith, and your obedience.

What’s required now is not panic, but prophecy. Not fear, but faith. Like Ezekiel, you must be willing to stand in the middle of what looks dead and speak life with authority. Prophesy healing to your body. Prophesy restoration to your family. Prophesy new breath to your spirit. Revival is not just an event; it is a response to the Word of the Lord. He has not forgotten you, and He has not abandoned what He started in you.

Today, God is saying: “It’s not too late. I have not changed My mind. I will cause breath to enter it again, and it shall live.” What looks dead is about to become a testimony. What looks empty is about to overflow. Don’t bury it, believe again! 

Let’s Pray:

Father, I thank You that time does not limit You, and that even when it seems too late for man, it’s never too late for You. You are the God who revives dry bones, restores broken things, and raises up what others have already pronounced dead. Today, I come before You and ask for fresh breath in every lifeless area of my life. Speak to the valleys I’ve been walking through. Revive the parts of me that stopped believing. Bring movement where there has only been stillness. God, forgive me for the times I declared something over before You were done with it. Teach me how to prophesy with boldness, like Ezekiel. Let my mouth come into agreement with heaven, even when my eyes see only dryness and delay. Remind me that You see the whole picture, and that Your breath changes everything. Today, I choose to believe that what looks beyond hope is still in Your hands. I speak life to my dry places. I speak revival to my dreams. I speak breath to the bones of my purpose. I receive the wind of Your Spirit now, and I declare that resurrection is not coming, it’s already beginning. I yield to the move of Your power, and I partner with the Word You have spoken. Revive me again, O Lord. Breathe on me, and I shall live. In the Name of Jesus Christ, I pray, Amen! 

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! God Is a Reviver of Dead Things!

1 Kings 17:22 – “And the LORD heard the voice of Elijah; and the soul of the child came into him again, and he revived.”

There are seasons in life where you can feel like something has died, maybe not a person, but a promise, passion, or purpose. It can be a vision that once burned bright but now lies buried under layers of pain and disappointment. It can be a relationship that once flourished but now feels irreparably broken. Or it may even be your own heart that feels numb from grief, loss, or repeated failure. But the good news is this: God is a reviver of dead things. He doesn’t just comfort you in your grief, He breathes life back into what you thought was lost forever.

In 1 Kings 17:21–23, you can find the prophet Elijah confronted with the lifeless body of a widow’s only son. With no natural remedy in sight, Elijah turned to the supernatural. He cried out to God and stretched himself upon the child three times, and the Lord responded. “And the Lord heard the voice of Elijah; and the soul of the child came into him again, and he revived” (v. 22). 

This was not just about a boy’s breath returning, it was about hope returning to a mother’s heart, faith returning to a household, and proof that God hears and God revives. Elisha, Elijah’s successor, carried the same mantle of resurrection. In 2 Kings 4:8–37, the Shunammite woman received a miracle child from God, only to have that very child die unexpectedly. But instead of preparing a burial, she prepared for revival. 

She ran to the prophet, and Elisha responded not with panic, but with power. “He went up and lay upon the child… and the flesh of the child waxed warm” (2 Kings 4:34). What once grew cold was warmed again. The child sneezed seven times, a number of completeness, and opened his eyes. What an image of complete restoration and divine intervention. This power to revive didn’t end with Elijah and Elisha. In the valley of dry bones, God asked the prophet Ezekiel, “Can these bones live?” 

Then He instructed him to prophesy to what was dead. “Behold, I will cause breath to enter into you, and ye shall live” (Ezekiel 37:5). Even dry, scattered, long-forgotten bones are not beyond God’s reach. With one word from heaven, death must bow, and life must rise. In John 11, Jesus Himself stood outside of Lazarus’ tomb and declared, “I am the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live” (John 11:25). This wasn’t just for Lazarus, it is a declaration to the world that resurrection is not just an event, it is a person. Jesus Christ revives not only bodies but souls, callings, faith, and destinies.

What seems buried in your life? Is there a dream you’ve stopped praying about? A ministry you walked away from? A relationship you deemed too far gone? Romans 4:17 tells us that God “quickeneth the dead, and calleth those things which be not as though they were.” God doesn’t just remember what died, He calls it by name and commands it to live again. Even when it seems like time has passed you by, Isaiah 55:11 assures you, “So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void.” 

When God speaks revival, you can trust that His Word will not fail. His timing is precise. His reach is eternal. His power is still active today. You may be looking at lifeless areas in your life with sorrow or silence, but God is calling you to believe again. He is calling you to speak, to stretch, to pray, and to pursue, because the God who revived the widow’s son, the Shunammite’s miracle, Ezekiel’s valley, and Lazarus’ body is still breathing life into dead things. You are not too late, and it is not too far gone. If God said it, there shall be a performance (Luke 1:45).

Let’s Pray:

Father, in the name of Jesus, I come before You acknowledging Your Sovereign power over all things, living and dead. You are the God who breathes life where there is none, the God who speaks to tombs and they tremble, the God who restores what has been scattered. I thank You for being the God who revives dead things,,not only bodies but also broken dreams, silenced callings, faded faith, and dry places in the soul. God, I bring to You every part of my life that feels lifeless. I lay before You every buried dream, every shut door, every prayer I’ve stopped praying. Revive my hunger for You. Revive my intimacy with Your Spirit. Revive the calling on my life that I once feared or ignored. Just as You revived the widow’s son through Elijah, and the Shunammite’s son through Elisha, breathe Your breath into my dead places. Let Your Word come alive in me again. Father, forgive me for the times I doubted Your power to restore. Forgive me for settling in graveyards when You were calling me to resurrection. Teach me to trust You again. Teach me to hope in Your Word. I receive the breath of heaven, the wind of Your Spirit, the fire of Your Presence. I declare that I shall live and not die, and every purpose You’ve spoken over me shall come forth in fullness and power. God, I align with what You’ve announced. I respond to what You’ve spoken. And I wait in faith for what You are confirming. I may have walked through valleys of dry bones, but I believe they are rising. I declare that resurrection power is in motion, and what You’ve begun, You will complete. In Jesus Christ Name, Amen! 

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean

Good Morning Sunshine! God Is Preparing You For The Midnight Move! 

Matthew 25:1–13 NKJV ~ “Then the kingdom of heaven shall be likened to ten virgins who took their lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom. [2] Now five of them were wise, and five were foolish. [3] Those who were foolish took their lamps and took no oil with them, [4] but the wise took oil in their vessels with their lamps. [5] But while the bridegroom was delayed, they all slumbered and slept. [6] “And at midnight a cry was heard: ‘Behold, the bridegroom is coming; go out to meet him!’ [7] Then all those virgins arose and trimmed their lamps. [8] And the foolish said to the wise, ‘Give us some of your oil, for our lamps are going out.’ [9] But the wise answered, saying, ‘No, lest there should not be enough for us and you; but go rather to those who sell, and buy for yourselves.’ [10] And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came, and those who were ready went in with him to the wedding; and the door was shut. [11] “Afterward the other virgins came also, saying, ‘Lord, Lord, open to us!’ [12] But he answered and said, ‘Assuredly, I say to you, I do not know you.’ [13] “Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor the hour in which the Son of Man is coming. 

The parable of the ten virgins in Matthew 25 teaches us more than the necessity of readiness; it reveals a distinction between those who merely know about the Bridegroom and those who are intimately connected to His heart. Five of them were wise, not because they were better, but because they were prepared. They carried extra oil. They lived with expectancy.  They understood that midnight might come suddenly, but it wouldn’t come silently. When it came, it would divide those who were ready from those who were religious. This parable is not just about timing, it’s about relationship.

To be ready at midnight means having a posture of perpetual preparation. The wise virgins weren’t just holding lamps; they had what it took to sustain their light when others ran out. That oil symbolizes intimacy, time spent in prayer, worship, obedience, and daily fellowship with God. You don’t get oil from attending services alone; you get it in the secret place, where lamps are trimmed and hearts are tuned. You get it by knowing the heartbeat of the One who is coming, not just the headlines about His arrival.

When the cry came, “Behold, the bridegroom cometh; go ye out to meet him!” It was too late to go and get more oil. The tragedy was not that the foolish virgins didn’t have lamps. They did. It was that their lamps had no substance, no power to last when it mattered most. In today’s terms, it’s possible to have a form of godliness without power, to know His Word without knowing His Will, and to speak His Name without understanding His nature. That kind of faith won’t carry you through the midnight cry.

Knowing His heart means you don’t just wait on Him, you walk with Him. You don’t just seek His hand, you lean into His whispers. When others are content quoting scriptures, you are living them. You’re not only singing songs about Him, you’re becoming a vessel for Him. You carry oil because you carry a relationship, not a reputation. You’ve learned to be still long enough to hear what others miss and to follow even when He leads through unfamiliar paths. Midnight is symbolic of transition, a shift in the spirit, a change in atmosphere. It’s the hour when things either break open or break down. For the prepared, midnight is not terrifying, it’s transformational. For those who are ready, it’s not too late, it’s right on time. The oil you’ve cultivated in secret becomes your passport into the promise. The door that opens isn’t for the one who shouts the loudest, but for the one whose flame is still burning.

When the Bridegroom said, “I know you not,” it was not because He didn’t recognize them by face, it was because He didn’t know them by intimacy. That is the sobering message of this parable. The time to know Him is not when the door is closing. The time is now. Do you know His heart? Are you in rhythm with His Spirit? Has His Presence become your priority or just a periodic pursuit? Being ready means that your yes to God isn’t conditional. It’s continual. You don’t run out of oil because you’ve made space in your life to be filled daily. You’re not scrambling at the sound of the cry because you’ve been living in anticipation of it. It’s not about fear of being locked out, it’s about the desire to be let in to the glory, into the joy, into the celebration of His appearing.

Are you ready? Is your oil pure? Are you trimmed, filled, and lit? Now is the time to know Him deeply. To cry not just for more information, but for impartation. To desire not just to serve Him but to be with Him. The cry will come at midnight, beloved. And when it does, may your heart be found burning, not just with borrowed words, but with the oil of a life lived close to the Bridegroom’s heart.

Let’s Pray: 

Father, in the name of Jesus, I come before You with a heart that desires to be ready. Not just ready to see You, but ready to know You. I don’t want to live off borrowed oil, secondhand faith, or shallow encounters. I want to walk in the fullness of Your presence and carry the kind of oil that lasts through every delay and every dark season. Teach me what it means to abide. Teach me to trim my lamp daily, to seek You beyond the surface, to crave You more than outcomes. Lord, I repent for every moment I allowed my lamp to grow dim. I repent for busying myself with things that distracted me from intimacy with You. I lay down the performance, the pride, the procrastination, and the pretense. Fill me again. Anoint me again. Let my heart beat with Yours. Let my spirit respond to Your whisper. Don’t let me miss the hour of visitation because I was not positioned in devotion. God, awaken in me a holy urgency. May I not sleep in this season of preparation. May I not be caught unready when You call. Give me discernment to see what others overlook. Give me grace to wait even when it seems like nothing is moving. Keep me in alignment with Your Word, with Your ways, and with Your will. Let my life be a lamp, and my obedience the oil that fuels it. Father, I ask for a deeper hunger, one that drives me into Your presence, not just for what You can give, but for who You are. Birth in me a cry that cannot be silenced, a pursuit that cannot be quenched. Help me to walk daily as if You could come at any moment, not out of fear, but out of deep love and longing. Thank You, Lord, that You are not looking for perfection but for preparation. You are seeking a people whose hearts burn for You. And I want to be one whose flame is still lit when the cry is heard. I say yes to the midnight call. I say yes to the refining oil. I say yes to knowing Your heart above all else. Let my relationship with You be more than what I know, it must be who I am. Let the light I carry come from time spent in the secret place. I declare I am not only a hearer of the Word but a lover of the One who speaks. I am ready, not because of my strength, but because I’ve stayed close to Yours. In Jesus Christ Name, Amen! 

Blessings…

Love, Dr. Jean