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	<title>Confidence in Prayer, Faith, and the Finished Work of Christ | Open Book | May 19, 2026 | CR</title>
	<description>Crystal Rivers | Open Book | May 19, 2026
A believer is called to live with a renewed understanding of life, death, and spiritual authority grounded in the finished work of Christ. The appointment that humanity once held with death and judgment has been fulfilled in Christ, who bore sin and entered death on behalf of all. Because of this, death no longer holds ultimate dominion over those who are joined to him. Life is no longer to be shaped by fear of mortality, but by the assurance that redemption has already addressed the deepest human constraint.

This reality produces a new identity: righteousness. To be made righteous is not merely a moral label but a transformed position that carries privileges, responsibilities, and a new way of living. It redefines expectation, especially in relation to prayer, healing, and divine response. Confidence becomes a key mark of spiritual life—confidence that when requests align with divine will, they are heard, and when they are heard, they are already considered received. Doubt, instability, and fear are therefore not neutral emotions but internal disruptions that weaken spiritual clarity and reception.

Fear, in particular, is treated as an intruder that must not be accommodated. It can arise from circumstances, evidence, memory, or anticipation, but it is not meant to remain. It is confronted through intentional engagement with truth, repetition of scriptural reality, and sustained focus on what is certain rather than what is threatening. Victory over fear is not always immediate; it is often cultivated through persistence until peace replaces agitation. In this process, the Word becomes both anchor and weapon, stabilizing the mind and restoring spiritual direction.

The Word of God is presented not only as instruction for living but as material for inner construction. It builds spiritual capacity, expands inner receptivity, and reshapes perception. As it is meditated upon and internalized, it produces confidence, clarity, and strength. It also aligns the believer with divine instruction in moments of crisis, enabling right response rather than emotional reaction. In moments of confusion or pressure, divine direction becomes essential, as seen in the pattern of seeking guidance before action rather than relying on impulse.

A central expression of spiritual life is communication with God through the Spirit. Prayer in the Spirit is portrayed as more than ritual—it is a channel of mystery, strengthening, and alignment. It enables communication beyond natural understanding and builds inner spiritual capacity. When practiced intentionally, it produces assurance, sensitivity, and a strengthened inner life. Alongside this, calling upon the name of Jesus is emphasized as an act of authority, access, and deliverance. The name represents power that transcends speech; it activates divine operation and brings help, intervention, and rescue.

Spiritual transformation is also described as a progressive process. It is not instantaneous but occurs through repeated exposure to divine truth and active participation with the Spirit. As attention is placed on divine reality, inner change occurs—thought patterns shift, desires are reordered, and behavior is reshaped. This transformation affects not only moral conduct but the entire orientation of life, including how challenges, sickness, temptation, and adversity are interpreted and confronted.

Creation itself is portrayed as awaiting restoration, longing for the full expression of redeemed humanity. The natural world is seen as impacted by human spiritual condition, and its restoration is tied to the emergence of mature spiritual life. In this framework, redemption extends beyond personal salvation into a broader restoration of order, authority, and harmony.

Spiritual authority is therefore expressed through several channels: the Word, the Spirit, prayer, the name of Jesus, and the consciousness of righteousness. These are not separate tools but interconnected dimensions of a single life empowered by divine presence. Healing, deliverance, provision, and moral victory are all framed as outcomes of engaging these realities faithfully.

At the center of it all is the understanding that divine mercy remains active and accessible. Even in failure or weakness, turning toward God produces restoration rather than rejection. Mercy is not an exception to divine character but a consistent expression of it. This produces a posture of humility and dependence rather than self-condemnation or despair.

Ultimately, the life being described is one of confident spiritual participation—where fear is displaced by faith, confusion by clarity, weakness by empowerment, and passivity by intentional engagement. It is a life shaped by the reality of redemption, sustained by communion with the Spirit, and expressed through authority in prayer, word, and identity. a

Zoom every weekday : http://www.caveadullam.org/zoom</description>
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	<author_name>Cave Adullam</author_name>
	<author_url>https://hearthis.at/caveadullam-hl/</author_url>
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