Article
The Power and Authority of the Kingdom
January 28, 2026

Why Believers Must Stop Waiting and Start Walking

“The Kingdom of God is not a matter of talk but of power.” — 1 Corinthians 4:20

For many Christians, faith has quietly drifted into a posture of delay—waiting on God to act, to heal, to restore, to move. But the New Testament reveals a radically different Kingdom reality: Jesus has already won, and He has already delegated authority and power to His people.

The issue is not whether heaven has moved.
The issue is whether believers will.


Divine Realities, Not Deferred Promises

Scripture repeatedly presents Kingdom truths as present realities, not distant hopes.

“As He is, so are we in this world.” — 1 John 4:17
“He has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us into the kingdom of His beloved Son.” — Colossians 1:13

Righteousness, victory, authority, and freedom are not future rewards. They are already accomplished through Christ. When believers wait for God to do what He has already done, faith is unintentionally replaced with passivity.

Faith does not beg.
Faith receives.

Poster:

Identity Determines Authority

God’s people do not perish because God withholds power—but because they lack understanding.


“My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.” — Hosea 4:6
“If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation.” — 2 Corinthians 5:17

Identity precedes authority. When believers do not know who they are in Christ, they live as spiritual orphans instead of sons and daughters. Many struggles attributed to God’s will are actually rooted in believers failing to walk out what the cross already secured.

Responsibility begins where revelation is ignored.


The Battle Is Spiritual—Aim Accordingly

Paul makes the battlefield unmistakably clear:


“We do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against rulers, authorities, and spiritual forces of evil.” — Ephesians 6:12

When spiritual warfare is misdiagnosed, believers attack people instead of principalities—damaging relationships while leaving spiritual roots untouched. True Kingdom impact happens when the source is confronted, not merely the symptom.

Jesus never fought people.
He confronted darkness.


The Cross Was Total Victory

At Calvary, Jesus did not negotiate with darkness—He defeated it.


“He canceled the record of debt… disarming the rulers and authorities and making a public spectacle of them.” — Colossians 2:14–15

The cross addressed sin, shame, sickness, bondage, and authority. God is not partially victorious. The only remaining question is whether believers will see themselves as participants rather than observers.


Power and Authority: Both Are Required

Jesus distinguished the two, and Scripture affirms both are essential:

  • Authority: legal right
  • Power: operational ability
“Jesus taught as one who had authority.” — Matthew 7:29
“God anointed Jesus with the Holy Spirit and with power.” — Acts 10:38

Authority without power produces religion.
Power without authority produces striving.
The Kingdom advances when both operate together.


Jesus, the Spirit, and Demonstrated Power

Though Jesus was fully the Son of God, His miracle ministry began after the Spirit descended at His baptism.


“The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He has anointed Me.” — Luke 4:18

This was not coincidence—it was revelation. Authority flows from identity, but visible power flows through Spirit-empowered obedience.


Greater Than John the Baptist

Jesus made a shocking statement:


“Among those born of women none is greater than John… yet the one who is least in the kingdom of God is greater than he.” — Luke 7:28

John carried prophetic authority but not indwelling Spirit empowerment. Kingdom believers carry the Spirit Himself.

This is not arrogance—it is inheritance.


The Same Spirit Lives in You

Believers do not receive a weaker Spirit than Jesus did.


“The Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead lives in you.” — Romans 8:11
“God gives the Spirit without measure.” — John 3:34

The Holy Spirit heals, restores, delivers, and transforms—and He is meant to work through every believer, not just a few.


Authority Comes from Identity and Commission

Jesus clarified how authority functions:


“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me. Therefore, go…” — Matthew 28:18–19

Authority flows from identity, but it is exercised through commission. All believers share a general mandate, yet authority functions most effectively within the scope of what God has spoken.

Faith does not operate in imagination.
It operates in obedience.


Word and Power Together

Jesus modeled proclamation and demonstration, and He sent His disciples to do the same.


“He gave them power and authority over all demons and diseases.” — Luke 9:1–2

The Kingdom is not merely explained—it is displayed.


Revelation + Obedience = Power

The early church had authority by assignment, but they waited for power by obedience.


“You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you.” — Acts 1:8

Submission to God’s Word is submission to God’s power. Where obedience flows, authority manifests.

The Call to Action: Walk It Out

This is the dividing line between belief and Kingdom living.

  • Stop waiting for what God has already provided
  • Stop blaming God for what He has authorized you to walk out
  • Stop aiming spiritual weapons at people instead of darkness
“Be doers of the Word, not hearers only.” — James 1:22

Your Next Step

Ask yourself—honestly:

  • Where have I been passive instead of obedient?
  • Where has God already spoken, but I have not acted?
  • Where am I called to exercise authority, not wait for permission?

The victory is finished.
The authority is delegated.
The power is available.

The Kingdom is not coming someday.
The Kingdom is now.


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When Feelings Aren’t Facts: Why God’s Goodness, God’s Word, and God’s Spirit Belong Together A lot of spiritual confusion starts in the same place: we build our lives on the wrong foundation. We let feelings, opinions, preferences, or even powerful experiences define what’s true—then wonder why we feel unstable, stuck, or unsure of who we are. In this message, the pastor lays out a clear progression: you don’t really know who you are until you know who God is , because “we’re created in his likeness and his image.” From there, he walks through a core belief that shapes the culture and mission of the church: our precepts are rooted in Scripture —not in performance, not in hype, and not in whatever feels right in the moment. 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The pastor references the idea that God is able to do “exceedingly abundantly above” what we ask or imagine—and highlights that it works “according to the power of God that works within… us.” The practical takeaway: your view of God shapes your expectations, your confidence, and your behavior. If you believe God is good, you’ll stop negotiating for approval and start living from belovedness. 2) Repentance Isn’t Just Feeling Bad—It’s Changing How You Think One of the most helpful clarifications in the message is about repentance. The pastor emphasizes that repentance is not merely emotional regret. It’s transformation—“to change the way you think.” He ties it to the renewing of the mind: “God doesn’t want you to check your mind at the door… I just don’t want you to leave it the way that it is.” In other words, spiritual growth includes your intellect, your thinking patterns, and your assumptions. God’s goodness, he says, is what transforms the way we think—and as thinking changes, behavior changes too. Key takeaway: repentance is a mindset shift that leads to a lifestyle shift. It’s not ignoring reality; it’s learning to interpret reality through God’s truth. 3) Scripture Is the Final Authority (Not Feelings, Preferences, or Opinions) The third core belief is stated plainly: “We are a church whose precepts are rooted in Scripture.” And the pastor doesn’t soften what that means: “If the Bible says you must do it… you must do it.” “If the Bible says don’t do it… you don’t do it.” If Scripture gives direction without full clarity, it may be permissible—as long as it’s not against the Word—and you “work out your salvation with fear and trembling.” The big idea is that God’s Word is revealed truth , and without it, we drift. Feelings and opinions can lead us “in all sorts of ways” to conclusions that may not even be for us—but “God’s word is for you.” He also drops a line that’s both convicting and freeing: “My feelings are not my facts.” He admits he doesn’t always feel secure or righteous—but what God says is still true. “Truth is truth whether you see it or feel it or not.” If you’ve ever felt spiritually whiplashed—confident one day, crushed the next—this is why. A life led by feelings will always be fragile. A life led by truth becomes steady. 4) Word-Heavy Without Spirit Gets Dry. Spirit-Heavy Without Word Gets Weird. One of the strongest sections of the message is the pastor’s critique of extremes. He describes one camp that’s “very word-heavy” but has “aborted any dependency upon the Spirit,” resulting in people who “know a lot about God, but… don’t know how to encounter God.” Then he describes the opposite: circles that are big on “the move of the Spirit,” where “all this stuff” happens—but when asked what God is doing and how they know, there’s confusion because it’s “not rooted in Scripture.” The result: encounters without sound doctrine that can send people “way off in left field.” His solution isn’t a “balance” (as if Word and Spirit compete). He calls it a marriage : “The move of the Spirit will never contradict the word of Scripture.” That line is a safety rail. If you want to know whether what you’re experiencing is trustworthy, he argues, Scripture sets the “parameters,” “guidance,” and “signpost.” 5) The Word Is Meant to Shape How You Live, Not Just What You Know This is where the message gets intensely practical. The pastor quotes James 1:22: “Be doers of the word… not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.” He explains it with the mirror metaphor: the Word shows you who you are, but if you walk away and don’t do it, it’s like forgetting what you look like—“in other words, you don’t know who you are.” He takes it further: “Knowledge without obedience will always lead to a hardened heart.” That’s how people become religious, routine-driven, and resistant to God—like the Pharisees who could speak well but had hearts “far from me.” He frames lordship with another sharp line: “Lordship is not just a confession. It’s actually submission.” 6) A Seed, a Jalapeño Plant, and the Power of the Word One of the most memorable anecdotes is about his mother—who “was not a gardener,” and whose plants came to their house “to die… a sad, gruesome, lonely, crunchy death.” But she could grow two things: jalapeño peppers and banana peppers. The point isn’t gardening advice—it’s spiritual formation. A seed doesn’t need you to manufacture fruit. The fruit is already in the seed—if it’s planted in the right environment. “That’s the Word of God,” he says. “You don’t need to add to the Word… you don’t need to subtract… the Word of God is perfectly powerful to produce the fruit of its kind.” Our role is to create the right environment: a surrendered heart and obedient life. 7) Scripture Shapes Culture—and Culture Shapes Everything To close, the pastor argues that God’s Word isn’t just personal inspiration; it shapes a whole way of life. He references Deuteronomy 6:6–9: keep God’s words on your heart, talk about them at home and on the way, write them on doorposts. That’s not about having a “snark reply to every coworker’s opinion.” It’s about God’s truth being present in “every crevice” of life , shaping attitudes, beliefs, behaviors, and ultimately the culture of a home and community. 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