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The Unlimited God in Limited Places

Guest Speaker: Randy Needham

At Spruce Grove Community Church | April 12, 2026


Honoring the House

“Let the elders who rule well be counted worthy of double honor.” — 1 Timothy 5:17

Awesome, thank you. I have really enjoyed being an honorary Sprucer this week and just spending time with you all. Honestly, I’ve loved hanging out with you guys so much.


You know, I have to be careful, because I tend to fall pretty deeply in love with people. And I just want to say—you have something very special here. The leadership in this house is extraordinary. There is such a beautiful presence of Jesus in your midst, in your hearts.


This is an amazing place.

I’m going to carry the essence of what you’re doing here—the memories, everything—the privilege of being in your house. I really receive being among you, and it means a lot to me.

So thank you again—Brother Mark, Wendy, and all of you. The pastors here are just extraordinary. I’m so amazed. Every once in a while, I meet people—pastors—and I think, “Wow, they’re really good pastors… I would actually like them to be my pastors.” And I think about them later.

You can just see through the lens of the purity and sincerity of God in people like that.

So thank you. Thank you for the heart you have carried in this region all these years, and for what you have done.


Image relating to the message
Image relating to the message

The Assignment of the Father’s House

I’m going to get right to it today. I really feel like I have an assignment here as we continue talking about the Father’s house this morning.

But I also feel like I’m going to leave a part of my heart here with you.

This touches something very, very deep in me. It is honestly one of the most beautiful things I have ever stepped into in my life.

I continually see Jesus.

I continually encounter Him.


Jesus Already Opened Heaven

“And behold, the heaven was opened unto him.” — Matthew 3:16

And one of the things I would really encourage you with is this:

We don’t have to open heaven—Jesus already opened heaven.

Our journey is to walk with Him.

And if you walk with Him, you will always encounter the open heaven—because Jesus is the open heaven.


Beholding the King in His Beauty

“Your eyes will see the King in His beauty.” — Isaiah 33:17

In the Bible, in Isaiah 33:17, it says, “Your eyes will see the King in His beauty.”

Make Jesus your beauty.

See Him every day.

Because really, only one thing is needed:

Where is Jesus?

Where is the cross?

What are we doing?

Are we following Him?

And you might say, “I can’t do that.”

Oh yes, you can.

Yes, you can—if everything in your life comes into alignment with that.

Then it says, “They will see a land that is very far off.”

It’s amazing—when you behold Jesus, something begins to transform in your soul and in your mind.

You’re no longer looking down at the limitations of this world—where you’re from, what you do, your abilities.

Suddenly, you are beholding the King of Glory—who can do anything.

I’m going to say that again:

We are beholding the King of Glory—who can do anything.


Following the Lamb Wherever He Goes

“These are the ones who follow the Lamb wherever He goes.” — Revelation 14:4

And this will take us out of our comfort zones. Way out of our comfort zones.

But I’ve found something.

How many of you want to follow Him to the ends of the earth?

How many of you want to be those people?

How many of you want to be the ones who say, “Wherever the Lamb goes, I will follow Him”?

Deep down, we all say, “Yes, I want that.”

But let me tell you how you get there:

It’s not by bravery.

It’s not by your ability.

It’s not because you’ve got everything together.

There’s only one way.

You behold Him.

And you fall deeply—completely—head over heels in love with Him.

So much so that you say:

“I will not be separated from You. Wherever You go, I will follow You—because You are life. You have the words of life. You are everything I’m looking for.”


The Five-Star and the No-Star Will of God

“In Your presence is fullness of joy.” — Psalm 16:11

I teach people sometimes about what I call the five-star will of God and the no-star will of God.

And both are important in our lives.

How many of you like the five-star will of God?

That’s the dream, right? That’s the vision board—that’s everything.

Let me put it this way:

How many of you like going to a five-star resort?

You walk in, they know your name, everything is taken care of. They welcome you, everything feels perfect.

You go in, and there’s a beautiful view—maybe the ocean, maybe the mountains.

And you’re just like, “God loves me. I’m Daddy’s little girl. Every prayer is answered. This is amazing.”

And you know what? That’s real.

We need that.

We need to know that He found us in the mess.

He found us broken, addicted, ashamed—and then suddenly, we are brought into His goodness.

And in that place, we encounter His love in such a beautiful, tangible way.


The Love of God in Hard Places

“When you pass through the waters, I will be with you.” — Isaiah 43:2

But then… there’s another side.

There’s the no-star will of God.

And in that place, it’s not comfortable.

There’s no guarantee of ease.

It might be messy. It might be hard.

You might be in situations where things don’t make sense.

But I’ve found something there too:

The love of God meets you there as well.

And when that divine love really touches your heart—when it breaks you—

Suddenly, the people you once avoided become the most beautiful people on earth.

And all you want to do is go to them.

You want to give them Jesus.

You want to give them everything He has given you.


We Are Called to Go

“Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations.” — Matthew 28:19

And I feel this strongly:

Sometimes in the Western church, there is a mindset of waiting for people to come to us.

But this is biblical:

We are called to go.

To get on a plane if needed.

To go to the broken.

To go to the poor.

To go to the sickest places.

To give everything we have—again and again.

To stand with the persecuted.

To stand with those no one else stands with.

And honestly… I don’t even know where that came from.

I feel like I’m just keeping you right on the edge of your seats right now. Sorry!

I never know what’s going to come out—whether it’s the roll-on-the-floor person or the altar-call moment or something else entirely.

But here we are.


The Lord Has Been Speaking About Bread

“I am the bread of life.” — John 6:35

This is the craziest trip I’ve ever been on.

But I’ll tell you what the journey has been like.

The Lord…

How many of you like it when the Lord speaks to you?

Okay—now I want Him to speak to you here. And I want to deliver this, because He’s been speaking to me about bread for four years.

For four years.

I get caught up in what I would call a holy vortex of heaven, and I realize I’m reliving the same story—just with different people, different places—but it’s all about bread.


Where Shall We Buy Bread?

“Where shall we buy bread, that these may eat?” — John 6:5

So look with me in the Bible, in John chapter 6.

We’ll start at verse 1 and move through the story quickly, because there’s something I want to release to you.

It says:

After these things Jesus went over the Sea of Galilee, which is the Sea of Tiberias. Then a great multitude followed Him, because they saw the signs which He performed on those who were diseased. And Jesus went up on the mountain, and there He sat with His disciples.

Now the Passover, a feast of the Jews, was near.

Then Jesus lifted up His eyes and saw a great multitude coming toward Him.

Come on—let’s lift up our eyes today.

We see Edmonton, we see Canada, we see Cameroon, we see the nations of the world—we see the globe—in Jesus’ name.

And He said to Philip, “Where shall we buy bread, that these may eat?”


An Impossible Situation

“With men this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.” — Matthew 19:26

Philip answered Him, “Two hundred denarii worth of bread is not sufficient for them, that every one of them may have a little.”

Now you’ve got to understand the context here.

We know this story—it’s the feeding of the five thousand.

But did you know that apart from the cross and the resurrection of Jesus Christ, this is the only miracle recorded in all four Gospels?

It is that significant.

And we say five thousand—but that was just the men. When you include women and children, theologians say it was more like fifteen to twenty thousand people.

So here they are—in a wilderness.

A limited place.

A tight place.

No resources.

No food.

An impossible situation.

And what does Jesus start talking about?

Bread.

And immediately, the rational mind kicks in—just like it does with many of us.

Because we begin to think in terms of limitation.

But Jesus is not limited. 


The Unlimited God

“All things are yours.” — 1 Corinthians 3:21

You are in the church of the unlimited God.

You are sons and daughters of the Most High God.

In the Bible, in 1 Corinthians chapter 3, around verses 21–23, it says:

Everything is yours.

Everything Peter had.

Everything Paul had.

Everything they taught.

Everything in life.

Everything in death.

Everything in this age and the age to come.

It’s all yours.

All of it.

There is no limitation in the kingdom of God—except the ones we allow our circumstances to define.


His Heart Is the Multitude

“When He saw the multitudes, He was moved with compassion for them.” — Matthew 9:36

And this is where we must be willing to follow the Lamb of God to fulfill His heart.

What was His heart that day?

There are hungry people here.

He had been teaching all day. It’s getting late. The disciples are dealing with the crowd.

And Jesus says—essentially—“Feed them.”

And the disciples begin to panic.

Have you ever had God invite you into something—and instantly you feel overwhelmed?

Like, “God, I’m from here… my family’s from here… we’ve never done anything like this before. We’ve never thought this way. We’ve never lived this way.”

But here’s the truth:

We have to stop pulling God’s dreams down into our limitations.

And instead—let His dreams lift us into the kingdom we belong to.


A Global Vision Is Normal in God

“Ask of Me, and I will give You the nations.” — Psalm 2:8

My first spiritual father was a man named John Osteen.

I was about 19 years old—maybe younger—when I got saved.

And honestly, I was completely Bible illiterate.

When I first got a Bible and saw “Tribes of Israel” in the back, I thought, “Oh, there are First Nations people in the Bible.”

I didn’t understand anything.

Nothing.

And I walked into this church—it was massive.

But more than that—it carried nations.

Every week, people from around the world would come in. Leaders, believers, people hungry for God.

They would be filled with the Spirit—and then sent back out.

Every Sunday morning, Sunday night, Wednesday—hundreds of people were giving their lives to Jesus.

It was like a picture of heaven.

You would see businessmen, professionals, lawyers—sitting right next to someone who had just come off the streets.

It was the most beautiful mixture of heaven on earth.

And that became my “normal.”

So I walked out of that place with a global vision.

I thought—that’s what church is.

That’s what the Gospel is.

Jesus died for the world.

And we are commissioned to go into all the world—to preach the Gospel and make disciples of all nations.

That is still our commission.


Jesus Is Already on the Throne

“Yet I have set My King on My holy hill of Zion.” — Psalm 2:6

Last year, I took some time off with my wife.

It was actually one of the first extended breaks we had ever taken—we’ve just been going nonstop for years.

And during that time, the nations were raging.

Psalm 2 talks about that—the nations raging, trying to throw off His rule.

But it also says that God has already set His King on the throne.

Jesus is already enthroned.

It’s done.

Nothing happening on earth can undo what has already been established in heaven.

And God sits in the heavens and laughs.

And in that place of prayer, the Lord spoke to me.

He said:

“Matthew 28 is the commission. When are you going to take responsibility for discipling nations?”

And I said, “Me? Me?”

And I had to respond, “Yes, Lord.”

So now we are stepping into that—raising leaders, discipling people, reaching nations—bringing them into the heart of God and into who He has called them to be.


Do Not Reason Away the Heart of God

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding.” — Proverbs 3:5

Now back to Philip.

Philip begins to reason.

And this is where we often miss it.

God reveals His heart—and we try to reason our way out of it.

But this is all about His heart.

What is His heart?

See the multitude.

Have compassion on the multitude.

Respond to the multitude.

Philip says:

“Two hundred denarii is not enough… even for everyone to have a little.”

In other words:

“Lord, we don’t have enough resources.”

“We are in a barren place.”

“There is no supply here.”

“The timing is wrong—it’s late.”

And essentially he is saying:

“Lord… this doesn’t make sense.”

“Your will… in this moment… seems impossible.”

Because even if we had half a year’s wages—or a full year’s wages—it still wouldn’t be enough…


A Lad with Five Loaves and Two Fish

“There is a lad here who has five barley loaves and two small fish.” — John 6:9

One of the disciples—Andrew, Simon Peter’s brother—said to Him, “There is a lad here who has five barley loaves and two small fish, but what are they among so many?”

And Jesus said, “Make the people sit down.”

Now there was much grass in the place, so the men sat down—about five thousand.

And He took the loaves, and when He had given thanks, He distributed them to the disciples, and the disciples distributed them to those who were sitting down.

Now get that.

He blessed it.

He broke it.

He gave it to the disciples.

And the disciples distributed it.

And then verse 12 says:

“So when they were filled, He said to His disciples, ‘Gather up the fragments that remain, so that nothing is lost.’”

And you know the miracle—these baskets weren’t small baskets.

These were large baskets—you could practically stand in them.

And at the end, there was more left over than what they started with.

So this wasn’t just about feeding people—this was revealing the glory of God.


Restricted Places and the Glory of God

“My grace is sufficient for you, for My strength is made perfect in weakness.” — 2 Corinthians 12:9

So we find this story happening in a very restricted place.

And I find, as I travel around the world, people often want to tell me how restricted things are.

They want to explain why something cannot happen.

They begin to discount how big God is.

And I understand that—I really do.

The first church God ever sent us to…

I came out of that context of a massive, global church, full of vision, full of nations.

And then God sends me to pastor… a town of 300 people.

It wasn’t even really a town—it barely showed up on the map.

Honestly, there were almost more cows than people.

And I didn’t know what to do there.

There was nothing to do.

We were Spirit-filled believers trying to bring the Gospel into that place—and they were rejecting us.

It felt like we were wasting our lives.

I spent seven years there.

Seven years.

And it felt like planting the Gospel into concrete.

Every single day, my circumstances screamed at me:

“You can’t.”

“There’s not enough.”

“There are no resources.”

But they were beautiful people.

Mostly people that others wouldn’t befriend.

Our parking lot—there wasn’t a single complete car in it.

Bless their hearts—they were joyful.

You’d see them driving down the road, waving, their cars barely holding together.

You get the picture—simple, worn-down, but sincere people.


When God Says Build

“Unless the Lord builds the house, they labor in vain who build it.” — Psalm 127:1

And one day, God said to me:

“It’s time to build a building.”

Now my background is in construction—I’m an expert.

So I said, “God, I think You forgot—I’m an expert.”

(And don’t ever tell God that.)

I said, “If I shook every person in this church upside down and collected everything they had, we might get $5,000.”

I said, “This makes me very uncomfortable. This is a bad idea.”

Because everything around me was screaming:

“You can’t.”

I thought I had won the argument with the Lord.

But then…

There was a woman in our church.

She had an incredible story—she had grown up in extreme hardship, raised a large family, endured so much.

But she was one of the most Jesus-filled people I had ever met.

Her eyes carried such deep love.

She was small in stature, and when she spoke to me, she would look up with such innocence and say, “Pastor… has the Lord been telling you to build something?”

And I thought—

“God… You’re telling other people now?”

Because you didn’t tell anyone.

So I went back to the Lord and said:

“This is still a bad idea… but I will obey.”

And it was a constant tension:

Build… don’t build… build… don’t build…

And here we were—in a place where you could barely even find an airport.

It was 45 minutes just to get groceries.

For entertainment, you could go to the dump.

There was nothing there.

And I would ask, “God, what are You doing?”

See, I had come from a place where I had everything.

And God put me in a place where there was nothing.


Do Not Send the Multitude Away

“They do not need to go away. You give them something to eat.” — Matthew 14:16

And then we see this same pattern with the disciples.

They come together, and essentially they say:

“This is a bad idea.”

And they come up with a plan—to go back to Jesus and suggest something different.

And what do they say?

“Send the multitude away.”

And I’ve found this:

Most people in life don’t do that because they are bad people.

They do it because they are very aware of their limitations.

And without realizing it—we send away the multitude.

But that multitude…

was your destiny.

The very thing God is calling you to—it’s beyond you, yes—but not beyond Him.


Never Despise Your Portion

“For who has despised the day of small things?” — Zechariah 4:10

So what do we do?

We look at what we have.

Five loaves.

Two fish.

And we think—it’s nothing.

Let’s be honest—those weren’t large loaves.

That was a little boy’s lunch.

That was a good mother sending her child out with food for the day.

Let me put it in today’s language:

That was a Happy Meal.

And now we’re supposed to feed thousands with it?

And so we feel justified in saying:

“No, God.”

We even feel right saying no.

Because it feels logical.

God says, “Go to the nations.”

And we respond, “God, we’re trying to pay the electricity bill.”

And we think that’s a valid excuse.

But when you send away the multitude—you send away your destiny.

People live unintentionally.

They look at their lives, their limitations, their circumstances—and they compare.

And then they begin to despise their portion.

Never despise your portion.

Never.

If you have an anointing—use it.

If you have a revelation—share it.

If you can write—write and give it away.

If you can preach—preach anywhere you can.

But do not neglect your portion.


A Happy Meal Missionary

“God has chosen the foolish things of the world to put to shame the wise.” — 1 Corinthians 1:27

How many of you remember the great evangelist Reinhard Bonnke?

I had the privilege of meeting him a few times—having meals with him.

The last time I met him, he laid his hand on this shoulder.

I joke and say—I don’t even wash this shoulder anymore.

But his story is powerful.

He had a vision—a blood-washed Africa.

But do you know how his journey started?

He was a missionary in Africa for ten years…

And he was failing.

Miserably.

One day, there was a large crusade organized—an evangelistic gathering.

A well-known evangelist had been invited. It had been advertised—miracles, signs, wonders, blind eyes opening.

The people were already gathered at the crusade grounds.

And as Reinhard Bonnke went to pick him up, he saw something shocking.

The evangelist had his backpack on…

He was getting into a taxi…

He was leaving for the airport.

And Bonnke said, “What are you doing? You’re the evangelist. I’m just a missionary. The people are already there waiting!”

And the evangelist said, “God told me—you’re the speaker. I’m leaving.”

So there he was.

A “Happy Meal missionary.”

Standing in front of that crowd.

And he had a choice:

To despise his portion…

To shrink back…

To send away the multitude…

Or—

To take what he had, let God bless it, and step into that moment.

To break his life and give it away to the people Jesus had gathered.

And the world discovered something:

That was not a “Happy Meal.”

That was a globe-shaking, nation-shaking evangelist.

A man who would lead over 70 million people to Jesus Christ.

From a place that looked like nothing.


His Sufficiency, Not Ours

“My grace is sufficient for you.” — 2 Corinthians 12:9

See, it is never about our sufficiency.

It is always about His sufficiency.

But it requires our willingness.

Our vulnerability.

Our surrender.

And this is the core issue:

“Lord, whatever I have—

even if it feels small,

even if it feels insignificant,

even if it makes me feel exposed—

take it.

Break it.

And feed the world with it.”

And I want to say this to you clearly:

Do not despise who you are.

Take what you have…

Let the Lord break you…

Let Him pour you out—anywhere, anytime, any place.

And you will see the glory of God.

You will see what He can do—far beyond what you could ever do.


Jesus Gave Thanks

“And when He had given thanks…” — John 6:11

And sometimes we have this religious idea about how the miracle happened.

Like Jesus just waved His hand… and suddenly—bread everywhere, fish everywhere.

But I began to ask the Lord about this.

Because later, He actually rebukes the disciples.

He tells them—they saw the miracle, but they didn’t understand it.

They wanted out of the situation—but they didn’t receive the revelation.

So that moment matters.

Because there was only one person in that story who gave thanks for that small portion.

Not the disciples.

Not the crowd.

Jesus.

“Thank You, Father.”

He worshiped God with what was in His hands.

And that is all God asks of us.

Worship Him with your portion.

Don’t despise it.

Don’t drop it.

Put it into someone else’s life.

The Bread of Life Is for Everyone

“I am the bread of life.” — John 6:35

Now picture this:

Twelve disciples.

Five loaves.

Two fish.

Jesus blesses it.

And when He blesses it—everything changes.

Every limitation is broken.

Every curse is broken.

That bread carried the capacity to feed not only that crowd—but the whole world.

And Jesus demonstrated this again.

He fed the five thousand—a Jewish crowd.

Then later, He fed four thousand—with seven loaves—a Gentile crowd.

Now catch this:

The first was for the Jews.

The second was for the Gentiles.

Which means this:


The bread of life is for everyone.

If we learn to break the bread of life—it will feed the whole world.

But the bread must be broken.


Never Send Away the Cry of the World

“Come over to Macedonia and help us.” — Acts 16:9

I remember being in that very limited place again.

And an opportunity came from Russia—what later became Ukraine.

I met a man named Slavic.

He was passionate. He wanted to plant churches.

He thought I had money.

But I didn’t.

I had already emptied everything.

And I felt justified saying no.

But all night, I heard his voice:

“Help us… help us… help us…”

The next morning, he was driving me to the airport.

And I was about to say “no.”

The word was forming in my mouth.

And suddenly—the fear of God hit me.

And I thought:

One day, I will stand before the Lord.

And I do not want to stand before Him knowing I sent away His cry.

So I said:

“I will come.

We will help.

We will plant churches.

We will train leaders.”

He was so overwhelmed, he nearly crashed the car.

But here’s the truth:

I had nothing.

I called back home—to that small town, where everything screamed “no.”

And at the exact same time I said “yes”—

A man had walked into our church…and given $35,000 for world missions.

And I just said:

“Jesus… thank You.”

And the Lord spoke to me:

“I died and I rose again. My body is sufficient.

Break My body over the earth.”

“Get the revelation that I am the bread.”

“That My body is enough to feed the entire world.”

“And you will never again send away the cry of the world.”

He said:

“Take My inheritance.

Take My body.

Never send away the cross.”

And from that one “yes”—

Three churches became seventy-five churches.

From one “Happy Meal” that was already gone.

Years later, this became part of a revival.

My children later met pastors from those churches.

One woman—very quiet, very reserved—ran after them as they were leaving.

And she said:

“Tell your mom and dad…

that I would not have been in heaven…

if they had not come.”

“And tell them—hundreds of thousands…”


Break the Bread and Send Them Out

And He gave them to the disciples to set before the multitude.” — Luke 9:16

We began a small church about 25 years ago.

Today, it has developed into something that reaches globally—but in the beginning, we were just having fun serving Jesus, doing what seemed like crazy things.

And then the nations started coming.

We were just a baby church. The city didn’t really notice us. Honestly, we felt like an underground church—they moved our meeting room every week.

So you literally had to pray to figure out where the church was meeting.

And yet, the nations kept coming through our doors.

Week after week.

And it never stopped.

We would just take a piece of bread—what we had—and send people out again.

Break the bread. Send them out.

Break the bread. Send them out.


When Everything Has Been Given Away

“He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply.” — 2 Corinthians 9:10

Then there was one particular moment.

We had given everything away.

Everything.

We were about to leave the building—we had emptied it, given it all away.

It was 2005.

We were heading to Hong Kong to minister in Asia, and we didn’t even have the money for the trip. We had to believe God just to get there and get back.

And somehow—we made it.

Right before I left, I got a call:

“You’re going to have to move out of the building. Another church is coming in to buy it.”

And in that moment—I just crashed emotionally.

I thought:

“I’m a terrible pastor. I’ve failed.”

I could already see the headlines:

“He gave everything away.”

And now I had to go back and tell the church:

“Our bread is gone.

Our ‘Happy Meal’ is gone.

We gave it all away.”

So there we were—in Hong Kong.

It was Christmas time.

And I knew I was about to go back and deliver that message.


A Testimony Like Noah’s Ark

“I do set My bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a covenant.” — Genesis 9:13

We were taken to a place where they had been trying to build a life-size replica of Noah’s Ark.

It was meant to be a testimony to the Chinese people—of God’s promise of salvation.

But they couldn’t get permission from the government. For ten years, they had tried—and it was impossible.

We stood there on that land.

And we prayed.

And suddenly—it was like heaven came down in that place.

Within two weeks, they received permission to build it.

And God told us:

“Plant your Bible here as a testimony.”

And they placed it in a vault, so that every visitor would pass by the Word of God—a testimony of His promises and what He is doing.


When Heaven Opens in the Middle of Weakness

“My strength is made perfect in weakness.” — 2 Corinthians 12:9

The next day, I was preaching in a Chinese church.

And I’ll be honest with you—it wasn’t what I expected.

Worship that morning…

It was five Chinese grandmothers line dancing with Santa hats.

And I’m standing there thinking:

“I gave my life for this.

I gave my bread away.

Everything is gone.”

And I heard the enemy whisper:

“You’re crazy.

Don’t ever give like this again.

Don’t ever pour out your life like this again.”

But in that moment—

One of our team members stepped forward.

She touched one note.

And suddenly—the presence of God filled the room.

Heaven opened.

You could feel it.

And something broke in me.

A deep love for the people.

And I began to cry out—I didn’t even know what I was praying.

I said:

“God, take everything—our future, our destiny—everything belongs to You.”


The Bread Never Runs Out

“They all ate and were filled.” — Matthew 14:20

And then something unexpected happened.

We never take offerings on the mission field.

We go to give—not to receive.

But everywhere I went—

Someone would hand me money.

$10,000…

$35,000…

It just kept coming.

Unexpected. Unplanned.

By the time I returned home, just days later—we had $50,000.

And I thought:

“Okay… we’re going to be okay.”

But then that very morning—

Someone came with a prophetic word:

“You’re supposed to buy the building.”

And I thought—

“We have nothing. Our bread is gone.”

The property was 27 acres—with a 60,000 square foot building.

I said, “Okay, Lord… we’ll do it.”

I had $50,000.

They said, “The price is $5.5 million.”

I said, “Okay… $5.5 million.”

Then they said, “We need $500,000 down.”

I said, “Okay…”

Thirty days later—

We owned the property.

And miracles followed.

There were unexpected resources—even things like oil wells on the land that produced income.

The Gospel began to go out from there around the world.

At one point, we didn’t need part of the land—about five acres.

So we made a bold move.

We said:

“We’ll sell part of the land—and use that as the down payment.”

It was like saying:

“I’m going to buy your house… by selling your backyard… and use that to pay for it.”

And miracle after miracle kept happening.

It never stopped.

Because the bread never runs out.


Pour Your Life Out

“He poured out His soul unto death.” — Isaiah 53:12

And here is the point:

Carrying the bread is a holy responsibility.

But it’s simple.

You don’t need to know how.

You just need to respond when the Lord asks:

“Do you see the multitude?”

Then step in.

Take what you have.

Break it.

Give it.

Pour your life out.

Again… and again… and again.

Never stop.

Never stop pouring your life out.


A Blessing Over the House

“Arise, shine; for your light has come!” — Isaiah 60:1

And now I just bless you.

I bless you in Jesus’ name.

May God send you like a flaming arrow into the heart of this nation.

May every life be touched.

May every calling come alive.

May everything God has placed within you be poured out for His glory.


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