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I went to the age and ministry of the Father to share what I have
I went to the age and ministry of the Father to share what I have
You said you “went to the age and ministry of the Father to share what you have.” I don’t doubt your sincerity or passion. But here’s the truth: God does not reveal what He has declared sealed. And no matter how spiritual the language sounds, if it contradicts the plain words of Jesus, it’s not from the Father—it’s from the flesh or worse.
Jesus said: “No one knows the day or hour—not the angels, not even the Son, but only the Father” (Matt 24:36). He didn’t say, “Unless you ascend high enough.” He said no one. That’s not up for reinterpretation by mystical experience or private revelation.
And when the angel told Daniel, “Shut up the words and seal the book until the time of the end” (Dan 12:9), that wasn’t a riddle for us to crack. It was a boundary we are meant to honor. That seal isn’t broken by charts, feast-day math, or dreams claiming new timelines.
I say this with a trembling heart: God’s mysteries are not toys. The moment we start attaching calendars to His return, we turn prophecy from a call to holiness into a code to decipher. And that is deadly. It breeds false hope, crushed faith, and spiritual pride.
Yes—God’s Feasts matter. Yes—the numbers in Daniel and Revelation are real. But they are signposts, not stopwatches. They point us to the glory of Christ and the judgment to come—not to exact dates we can name in advance.
You say you received a revelation. I ask you: does it align with the revealed Word of God, or does it elevate your insight above it? Paul said, “Even if we or an angel from heaven preach a different gospel, let him be accursed” (Gal 1:8). No dream, vision, or spiritual ascent outranks the Word of God. Ever.
We’re not called to guess the day—we’re called to be found faithful when it comes. The Bridegroom isn’t looking for the one with the best calendar. He’s looking for those with oil in their lamps (Matt 25).
Prophetic ministry without scriptural submission is witchcraft in disguise. And when we call our own imagination “revelation,” we trade the fear of the Lord for the worship of our own insight.
So yes, share what God has shown you. But test it. Submit it. Weigh it. And never, ever exalt it above what is written.
Because if the fear of the Lord doesn’t anchor our prophecy, then no matter how spiritual it sounds—it’s just noise.
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