God is doing a new thing, a renaissance, which is often preceded by conflict and transition. This season is not a mystery to be feared but a divine shift to be embraced. It requires spiritual eyes to see beyond the immediate turmoil and recognize the hand of God at work. He is moving to bring about restoration, revival, and reformation. Trust that this new work will spring forth in due time. [05:10]
Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. (Isaiah 43:19, ESV)
Reflection: As you observe the world's conflicts and transitions, what is one area where you sense God might be inviting you to perceive His new work rather than reacting in fear?
A season of renaissance is often preceded by a period of spiritual warfare. This is not a sign of God's absence but a necessary process of clearing out the old to make way for the new. The Lord Himself is the ultimate warrior who fights for His people and His purposes. His victory is certain, and His justice will prevail against all opposition. [18:16]
The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to be silent. (Exodus 14:14, ESV)
Reflection: When you consider the spiritual battles in your life or in the world, what is one way you can practice being silent and trusting the Lord to fight for you this week?
God often brings forth new things through new vessels and new methods that may challenge our traditions. This new wine requires new wineskins; a fresh move of God cannot be contained by old structures or mindsets. He is the God of both peace and war, manifesting His character according to the needs of the generation. [32:10]
And no one puts new wine into old wineskins. If he does, the wine will burst the skins—and the wine is destroyed, and so are the skins. But new wine is for fresh wineskins. (Mark 2:22, ESV)
Reflection: Is there a tradition or a comfortable way of thinking that God might be asking you to release to better receive what He is doing anew?
In times of shift, the most important question is not about events but about identity: who do you say Jesus is? The world offers many false and reduced answers, but true revelation comes from the Father. Understanding His true nature and character is foundational to navigating this season with faith and clarity. [40:42]
He said to them, “But who do you say that I am?” Simon Peter replied, “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God.” (Matthew 16:15-16, ESV)
Reflection: How would you answer Jesus' question, "Who do you say that I am?" in a way that reflects His power and lordship over the current season?
The renaissance of God is accomplished not by human might or power, but by His Spirit. This is a season of rebirthing, restoration, and reward that follows a period of transition. Our role is to align with His Spirit, pray for His kingdom to come, and expect to see things we have never seen before. [35:18]
Then he said to me, “This is the word of the Lord to Zerubbabel: Not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord of hosts. (Zechariah 4:6, ESV)
Reflection: What is one practical step you can take this week to rely more on God's Spirit rather than your own strength to partner with His new work?
Isaiah’s promise of something new frames a bold declaration: a divine renaissance has begun, a season of rebirth and reformation that will reorder nations, institutions, and hearts. Scripture surfaces as the compass—“behold, I will do a new thing”—calling for attention rather than distraction. This new era will not arrive as mere sentiment but through decisive spiritual action: God will uproot entrenched systems, level corrupt structures, and bring restoration after seasons of conflict and transition. History and Scripture both show that renewal often follows hardship; out of upheaval comes rebirth, and God uses disruption to birth a fresh merciful order.
The coming renewal carries a spiritual posture as well as geopolitical consequence. God manifests in forms appropriate to the generation being reached—sometimes as Prince of Peace, sometimes as Lord of Hosts—and He will fight to establish righteousness and justice. Spiritual warfare precedes visible transformation: demonic strongholds must be confronted, false systems exposed, and the old wine skins torn so the new wine can flow. This pattern appears in Matthew 9, where deliverance and astonishment announce something people “have never seen” before; deliverance precedes the revelation of new realities.
Renaissance also requires new vessels. God equips fresh carriers of revelation—those willing to bear new garments and new wine—while those clinging solely to old patterns resist what God brings. The Spirit moves “not by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit,” calling followers to align with God’s timing and methods rather than human expectations. The decisive question resurfaces: who will people say God is? A correct answer opens sight to how God chooses to act in this season. The prayerful posture exhorts believers to contend for the faith, hold prophetic clarity, and participate in the divine reset that ushers a generation into restoration, reform, revival, and reward.
Why does he judge? Why does he war? Because there are times in the earth where he has to establish law and order. There's times in the earth that he must come and he must establish righteousness and justice or he would not be a just God. There are times where he has to come and he has to bring fierce battles against evil and violence and wickedness and judge it and annihilate it.
[00:19:02]
(34 seconds)
#DivineJustice
So the Lord shall go forth as a mighty man. He is the one. There are certain times, especially when he's trying to bring renaissance, that he will stir up jealousy. How is he gonna manifest? Just like what some of you didn't like, I I'm so offended you said Jesus was wearing a t shirt and combat fatigues. Well, I'm sure you probably got mad when he showed up as a burning bush.
[00:21:28]
(28 seconds)
#GodsManifestation
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