Tag Archives: Isaiah 6

Boldness in the Presence of God

A Call to the Fearless

This word was born last night at the Pray West Boylston prayer meeting at Freedom Worship Center, and was sparked in part by a message two Sundays ago by Samuel Maisonet, formerly of Faith Church in Auburn. It is a word for now — for you, beloved of God.

The world trembles at the sound of danger. Men pray for safety; hearts seek shelter. But I write to you, beloved, that you would not pray as the world prays. You are called higher. You are summoned to boldness in the presence of God.

When the early Church faced threats — real threats of death and imprisonment — they did not plead for protection. They did not beg to be hidden. They lifted their voices and cried:

“And now, Lord, take note of their threats, and grant that Your bond-servants may speak Your word with all confidence.” — Acts 4:29 (NASB)

The ground beneath them shook. Heaven answered with fire. They were filled again with the Holy Spirit. They spoke the Word of God with boldness, not fear.

But boldness is not born of flesh. It is born in the presence of God.

Come and see the prophet Isaiah. He was drawn up to the heights of heaven, where the Lord sat enthroned, high and lifted up. Seraphim circled and cried:

“Holy, Holy, Holy is the LORD of armies, The whole earth is full of His glory.” — Isaiah 6:3 (NASB)

Isaiah fell on his face:

“Woe to me, for I am ruined! Because I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the LORD of armies.” — Isaiah 6:5 (NASB)

The fire of God touched him. His guilt was taken away. His sin was atoned for. Then — only then — did he hear the voice of the Lord:

“Whom shall I send, and who will go for Us?” — Isaiah 6:8 (NASB)

Return to the Lord in brokenness

Beloved, Isaiah did not hesitate. His heart, once trembling, now burned. He answered:

“Here am I. Send me!” — Isaiah 6:8 (NASB)

This is the secret: Boldness comes after brokenness. Confidence is born from cleansing. You cannot stand fearless before men until you have bowed low before God.

Boldness in the presence of God is not arrogance — it is holiness on fire. It is the soul washed clean by the blood of Yeshua, the lips purified by His mercy, the heart inflamed by His Spirit. It is the Church, shaken but unshaken. It is the believer, trembling but bold.

And understand this: When God speaks, His command is often 180 degrees opposite to human logic. Where we would pray for protection, He calls us to pray for boldness. Where we would build walls, He calls us to tear them down with His love. His ways are not our ways — they are higher.

“For My thoughts are not your thoughts, Nor are your ways My ways,” declares the LORD. — Isaiah 55:8 (NASB)

“Whoever wants to save his life will lose it; but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it.” — Matthew 16:25 (NASB)

Boldness is not reckless noise; it is love in motion. Last night, the Spirit whispered a deeper truth: it is not only God’s love that draws people — it is God’s love in us. The world will not be won by arguments or anger, but by a bold, visible love that cannot be denied. The true disciple goes out in love and shines. They see Yeshua in us.

As the song “Send Me” by Bethel Music so beautifully sings:

“And before You even ask, oh my answer will be yes.”

This is the posture of boldness: a surrendered yes before the question is even asked.

Will you not come? Will you not enter the presence of the Most High? Will you not fall before Him and be made new?

Do not pray merely for safety. Pray for boldness.
Do not ask merely for comfort. Ask to be sent.
Do not walk in mere knowledge. Walk in love.

The Lord is asking even now:

“Whom shall I send, and who will go for Us?”

Let the cry rise from your cleansed lips:

“Here am I. Send me!”

The world is waiting for the fearless.
The lost are waiting for the loved.
Heaven is waiting for the willing.
The Lord of Glory is waiting for you.

From trembling knees to lion’s roar,
You lift my voice to heights unknown.
In fire and cloud, You speak once more —
The King of Glory claims His own.

Closing Prayer

O Holy Father, El Shaddai,

I come trembling before Your throne. Cleanse my heart with Your holy fire; purify my lips with Your coal. Let every fear be burned away by Your presence. Let every weakness be clothed in Your strength.

Fill me, O Lord, with the power of Your Spirit. Let boldness rise where once there was fear. Let Your love overflow from my heart. Let my voice proclaim the name of Yeshua without shrinking back. Grant me the courage to answer when You call, to stand firm when others fall away, to speak when silence tempts me.

Here I am, Lord — send me.
Here I am, Lord — fill me.
Here I am, Lord — use me for Your glory.

In the mighty name of Yeshua, the King of kings,

Amen.

See Also

The Altar and the Fire

Choosing Covenant over Compromise

I beheld a scene of great dread and glory. The heavens quivered and the earth lay cracked and thirsty, yearning for the rain of righteousness. A restless multitude filled the plain below me, their hearts split between the pleasures of the world and the call of the Almighty.

And what of you, reader? Have you felt the drought within your own soul? Have you stood between two altars—one of self, the other of surrender?

Into this tension strode Elijah, clothed in rough hair and blazing with zeal. His voice rolled like many waters: “How long will you waver between two opinions? If the Lord is God, follow Him; but if Baal, follow him” (1 Kings 18:21, AMP).

The Hebrew word pasach pierces the soul. It means to limp, to hop back and forth without commitment. The same word appears in Exodus when Yahweh passed over blood-marked homes, sparing His covenant people. Israel was meant to dance in covenant joy, yet they staggered in double-mindedness. Elijah’s challenge exposed not only their idols—but their hesitation.

Baal’s prophets answered first. Four hundred fifty men leapt around their altar, crying, “O Baal, answer us!” But their worship spiraled into frenzy. They slashed their own flesh; blood gushed, yet no voice replied. Baal demanded pain but gave no fire. Heaven remained silent.

Then Elijah repaired the Lord’s ruined altar with twelve stones—one for every tribe bound to God’s covenant. He drenched the sacrifice, the wood, and the trench with water. Then he prayed, “O Lord, God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, let it be known today that You are God in Israel” (1 Kings 18:36, AMP).

Elijah on Mount Carmel: The fire of the Lord falls from heaven, consuming the sacrifice as the people of Israel witness the power of the one true God.

And fire fell from heaven.
It consumed the offering. The stones. The dust. The water.
The people collapsed to the ground and cried, “The Lord, He is God! The Lord, He is God!” (v. 39).

The limp of indecision was healed by holy flame. The dance of covenant was restored.

The Same Choice Confronts Us

Like ancient Israel, our generation hesitates. We flirt with modern idols—self, power, pleasure, money—while claiming covenant with El Shaddai. The altar of national faithfulness lies broken. The rain has ceased. Still we wonder why the fire no longer falls.

The Lord is asking again:

How long will you hesitate?
How long will you keep a hand on Baal and one on heaven?
How long will you wait for fire, when your altar lies in ruin?

His truth stands unshaken: “Choose this day whom you will serve” (Joshua 24:15, AMP). There is no refuge in neutrality. The dance of Passover offers freedom and life. The limp of idolatry leads only to bondage and death.

Rebuilding the altar of the Lord

Rebuild the Altar

Pasach confronts us again. Will we hop between allegiances, or will we step fully into covenant?

The God who answers by fire still answers.

But only when the altar is whole.

Only when the offering is soaked in surrender.

Only when the heart is laid bare before Him.

Pray with David: “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me” (Psalm 51:10, AMP). Let repentance clear the rubble. Let obedience lay new stones. Let intercession drench the sacrifice. Then the fire will fall again.

A Prayer for Renewal

Father,
We confess our wavering hearts.
We have danced with idols when You called us to walk with You.
Forgive our hesitation. Cleanse our affections.
Restore the broken altar within us.
Pour the rain of righteousness on our parched land.
Let the fire of Your Spirit consume every false worship.
Revive us in Your truth.
May we, like Elijah, proclaim with bold conviction:
The Lord, He is God!

We pray this through Yeshua, our Passover Lamb. Amen.

Do not wait for the fire to fall on someone else’s altar.
Rebuild yours. Today. This moment.
Return to the dance. Rebuild the altar. Let the fire fall.

See Also