In John 11:22, Martha speaks a phrase that echoes through the ages:
“But even now I know that whatever You ask of God, God will give You.”
These are not the words of a woman untouched by loss. These are the words of someone who had just buried her brother. Someone staring at what looked like finality—but still choosing faith. This kind of faith doesn’t wait for perfect conditions. It speaks life even in the face of death.
The Atmosphere of Prayer
Prayer is not a reaction. It is not reserved for when we have time on our hands.
Prayer is warfare. Prayer is relationship. Prayer is placement.
We do not pray to fill time. We pray to fill the gap.
As believers, we’re reminded in James 1:6–8 that faith must come without doubt, or else we are like the sea—tossed, blown, unstable. Without faith, we should expect nothing. Without faith, we please no one—not even God (Hebrews 11:6).
And that’s precisely why the enemy targets your prayer life. Because:
Prayer hinders Satan—so Satan hinders prayer.
We must not allow ourselves to decay in devotion.
Because when prayer decays, revival delays.
People Pray, Angels Worship
Heaven is full of worship, but Earth is waiting on intercession.
God gave the power of life and death not to angels, not to governments, not to the environment—but to the tongue (Proverbs 18:21).
That’s why God didn’t discuss light.
He declared: “Let there be light.”
The Fatherhood of God
Jesus begins His model of prayer with these three words:
“Our Father…”
Prayer is built not on religious discipline, but on relational revelation. It’s not about performance—it’s about approach. It’s about knowing who you are speaking to and who you are as you speak.
A Word on Peter
Peter often gets reduced to the man who denied Jesus. But look deeper, and you’ll find layers:
- Peter was brave—he cut off the ear of a soldier.
- Peter was broken—he betrayed Jesus.
- Peter was called—he received the revelation of Christ.
- Peter was restored—Jesus still used him.
In the New Testament, when three are mentioned together, it’s always Peter, James, and John. That was intentional. Jesus didn’t love everyone the same way.
Sometimes, He needed someone to know:
“I love you a little more—for this moment, for this mission.”
What Is the Price of a Soul?
It’s easy to grow passive in a world full of noise.
But we must ask: Who is your Peter?
Who has fallen and needs you to remind them they are still called?
Whoever holds the narrative… holds the nation. And as Daniels begin to rise, they will detonate truth across a compromised culture.
You can curse the darkness—or you can light a candle 🕯️
Blessings,
Prophet Gebhardt

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