What an Angel Wants
Today my daughter, Charity Kayembe, will share the next segment in her blog series with us.
Be blessed!
Today my daughter, Charity Kayembe, will share the next segment in her blog series with us.
Be blessed!
Today we're going to have my daughter, Charity Kayembe, share the next segment of her exciting blog series with us.
Today we're going to have my daughter, Charity Kayembe, share the next segment in her exciting blog series with us.
Be blessed!
Today I'm excited to have another blog from my daughter, Charity Kayembe.
Conny is the wife of Robert Hubbard, a CLU graduate. As Robert took the online course, Communion With God, the overflow of revelation poured into Conny's heart, and she too learned to hear from God through two-way journaling. Now Conny has produced a beautiful compilation of her journaling titled, So Loved - Embraced by His Love, Healed by His Word.

Question: There seem to be a lot of articles and stories about people seeing angels lately. I know you teach that we should look for vision and see Jesus with us. Do you believe we should also be seeing angels?
Answer: That’s a great question. I am generally comfortable looking to see whatever the Bible says to be true. So yes, because the Bible clearly teaches angels are with us then that is something I would be open to seeing when I look for vision.
My daughter has received some outstanding revelation from the Lord on this, so I’ve also asked her to share her understanding of the place of angels in our lives. - Mark Virkler
Question: Why doesn’t my church take dreams seriously? I have lots of dreams. In the Bible God gives dreams which counsel, guide, provide gifts and promises. I want this! Why won’t my church teach me about it? I don’t want to have to go to the New Age movement to learn about dreams! I want my church to teach me how to encounter God through dreams.
Answer: “Western Christianity” has chosen to reduce Christianity to a reasoned, logical theology about a God who lives “up there.” Dreams aren’t rational or logical. Dreams constitute a direct encounter with the Living God (Acts 2:17). Therefore, dreams are ignored. The same goes for working miracles, casting out demons, speaking in tongues, angelic and heavenly encounters and every other spiritual experience recorded in Scripture. Why would the Church do this, and is there a way out of this mess?
The rest of this answer will be released as an upcoming Kindle book…
Disappointed: I joined a charismatic group about a year ago and am amazed to see numbers of people slain in the spirit when they are being prayed over. I desire the same but am always disappointed that I don’t get slain. The latest seminar I attended was a week ago and still I didn't get slain in the Spirit.
Dear Disappointed: I fully understand. I too have hungered to fall down under the power of the Holy Spirit as others do, and I have wrestled with this issue over the years. It is finally resolved in my heart and mind. Let me offer a few thoughts the Lord has shared with me.