Beloved,
Hear the cry of the Spirit to the Church. The Lord is near. The hour is late. And still, we remain divided—voices without harmony, bodies without breath, altars without fire. We debate. We defend. But where is the fear of the Lord? Where is the awe that bends knees and breaks jars?
We are not whole. The Church limps between movements and moments, calling unity what God has not sanctified. But El Shaddai has not abandoned His Bride. He calls her. He cleanses her. He prepares her.
“If My people who are called by My Name humble themselves and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.” — 2 Chronicles 7:14 (NASB)
Everything begins with prayer.
1. God Will Not Unite What He Has Not Purified
The Lord does not bless confusion. He will not anoint flesh. He does not unite denominations; He gathers disciples. Judgment begins in the house of God—not in anger, but in holy love.
Before unity, there must be fire. Before reconciliation, repentance. We cry out for healing, but the jar must break. Our titles, our platforms, our pride—they must fall before the presence returns.
“For it is time for judgment to begin with the household of God.” — 1 Peter 4:17 (NASB)
Unity through prayer begins with surrender.

2. The Final Move Will Be Birthed in Intercession
The final revival will not start with lights and stages. It will begin in hidden rooms where nameless saints cry, “Come, Lord Jesus.” No man will own it. No system will control it. The oil will be found with those who waited in the secret place.
We have tried strategy. Now we must try surrender. We have planned. Now we must pray.
“Before she was in labor, she gave birth; before her pain came, she delivered a male child.” — Isaiah 66:7 (NASB)
Unity through prayer is not organizational—it is spiritual.

3. The Spirit Will Burn Away the Lines of Division
He will not repair man’s scaffolding. He will consume it. The Church that remains will not be Baptist, Catholic, or Pentecostal—it will be holy. It will carry fire. It will tremble at His Word.
Do not ask, “What church are you from?” Ask, “Do you carry His presence?” The true Bride will not compare sermons. She will weep at His feet. She will not argue over gifts. She will pray until heaven opens.
Unity through prayer ends all boasting.

4. The Fire Will Fall on a United Bride
Not a blended theology. Not an ecumenical table. A people in one place, with one cry. A remnant who stayed behind when the crowds went home. They wait not for consensus—but for power from on high.
“And when the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in one place.” — Acts 2:1 (NASB)
When the altar is rebuilt and the hearts are torn, the fire will come. Not to endorse a doctrine—but to mark a people.
Unity through prayer creates the altar where fire falls.

5. The Cry of the Bride is Rising
She does not say, “Make us famous.” She whispers, “Make us ready.” Her voice shakes the heavens—not with eloquence but with urgency. She does not seek platforms. She seeks oil.
The world will not believe until the Church bleeds again—on her knees, at the altar, in love. Not unity by human agreement, but by divine alignment.
This is how the Church becomes one again: by prayer. By purity. By presence.
Unity through prayer is the way back to the Bridegroom.
⸻
Your fire alone can cleanse and heal,
Your voice the wound and balm reveal.
Unite us not by creed or throne—
But make us Yours, and Yours alone.
⸻
Final Exhortation
Beloved, the time is now. Let the traditions fall. Let the opinions fade. Let the fire of the Spirit come.
Do not build. Kneel.
The unity we need will not be signed—it must be sown in tears.
The Bride will be made one again when the altar is rebuilt and the prayers ascend like incense. He is coming for a pure Bride, not a polished one. Let every heart return.
The Lord, He is God. The Lord, He is God.