Is the Holy Spirit trying to get your attention? I want to give you four signs that the Holy Spirit is trying to speak to you. In fact, He could be trying to communicate something to you right now.
It's not that we necessarily get abandoned by the Holy Spirit, and it's not that the Holy Spirit stops speaking, but rather we become so distracted, so self-absorbed, so immersed in this life that often we ignore the voice of the precious Holy Spirit. So, I want to show you from Scripture different ways that the Holy Spirit will try to get through to you. Maybe He's trying to speak to you in this season, and perhaps you're missing a word from Him.
So listen with faith, listen with an open heart, and comment right now: “I’m listening. ” Write those two simple words, “I’m listening,” and let that be a public prayer of surrender. I don't know about you, but I don't want to miss anything that the Holy Spirit is communicating to me.
I want to be attentive to the voice of the precious Holy Spirit so that even when He whispers, I can hear Him with confidence and clarity. It's not that the Holy Spirit isn't being clear; it's that we're not being conscious. God can get through to anybody He wants at any time; He's sovereign.
But as we look throughout Scripture, we see that generally speaking, the Holy Spirit will try to capture the attention of an individual, particularly the believer, through these various ways I’m about to share. As we become surrendered to the voice of the Holy Spirit, as we begin to yield, as we become more attentive to what He is speaking, we can recognize those warnings, those instructions, those points of guidance. But then there are those seasons where we become so distracted by this life, so preoccupied with what's going on around us, that the Holy Spirit will have to use certain methods to get a hold of you.
Now again, God is sovereign, and I want to emphasize this: He could at any moment cause you to have a vision; He could at any moment cause a dream; He could speak with an audible voice. Yes, He can do all of those things. But I want you to also watch out for these other biblical ways that He will generally speak or try to get your attention.
Now, I'm going to give you the first sign that the Holy Spirit is trying to get through to you, and that is: the Holy Spirit won't change His mind. Consistency. Often, the Holy Spirit will speak something, and then we ignore what the Holy Spirit has spoken in hopes that He'll change His mind.
Micah 2:7 says, "O thou that art named the house of Jacob, is the spirit of the Lord straightened? Are these His doings? Do not my words do good to him that walketh uprightly?
" Here we see this first question being asked; it's a rhetorical one. In other words, it's asking: Does the Holy Spirit change His mind? Can God be persuaded to do it your way?
Can you negotiate with God? Can you bargain with God and get Him to change direction? No, my friend, when the Holy Spirit speaks to you, He speaks a word out of His omniscience.
He speaks a word out of that perfect divine wisdom so that when He speaks, it is instruction that you can count on. Why we would try to get Him to change that, I don't know. Recognize, please, that when the Holy Spirit speaks, He speaks for your good.
Ultimately, this doesn’t mean that He’s going to do things exactly how you want them to be done. It doesn't mean that He won't challenge us or even speak things to us that inconvenience us or change our plans or even bring heartache and sorrow. Sometimes sacrifice brings forth sorrow, but on the other side of that sacrifice, on the other side of that step of faith, on the other side of that step of obedience is the reward of having listened to God's voice.
C. S. Lewis reminds us that there are far, far better things ahead than any we leave behind.
Even if the present moment seems daunting, the Holy Spirit does not change His mind. The Holy Spirit will speak; please hear me now: The Holy Spirit will speak, and then not speak again until you've obeyed what He's already spoken. Now, I'm not saying that He'll stop trying to place you on the right path, because thank God, the Holy Spirit is more patient than we are, more faithful than we are sinful.
So I’m not saying that the Holy Spirit abandons you and says, “Well, forget it! I spoke to them once; they didn’t obey, so now I’m going to move on. ” No, of course, the Holy Spirit will work with you and do what He can.
He won’t just leave you alone. He is going to do what He can to get your attention. What I do mean is that the Holy Spirit isn't going to change His instruction.
Sometimes the Holy Spirit will speak to us with clarity, and then we ignore that and hope that it wasn't Him. We hope, “Maybe that was my emotions,” or “Maybe that was just my thought,” or “Maybe I don’t really need to do that,” or “Maybe God changed His mind and now I can do it the way I want to do it. ” But it never quite works out that way.
When the Holy Spirit speaks an instruction, you can't bargain with Him. You can't negotiate. You can't get Him to change His mind.
This is why consistency is one of the signs that the Holy Spirit is trying to get through to you. In other words, that message is consistent. There's that speaking to your spirit that you know is coming from the Holy Spirit.
It's not in the conscious mind; it's not even in the subconscious mind; it's not in the emotions. But deep within your spirit, you know that you know that you know that the Holy Spirit has given you an instruction. You'll find that instruction.
will stay with you consistently, even when you go through various different seasons; even when you allow a lot of time to pass between when God speaks and when you go to listen again. This is why many believers struggle with prayer, because they know that the moment they go back to the prayer room, they're going to hear the same instruction. So, wanting to avoid what they know God is going to tell them, they avoid prayer; they keep it superficial, praying for their loved ones, praying for blessings, praying for breakthroughs, praying for maybe general direction or favor in certain areas of their life.
But they'll never allow themselves to fully go to that place of surrender; they avoid the deeper places of prayer simply because they know that's where the Holy Spirit is dealing with them. So, they avoid scripture, they avoid church, they avoid prayer, or when they do hear a sermon, they try to negotiate in their hearts and minds, "Well, maybe God isn't speaking through that preacher. Perhaps it's just my emotion; perhaps it's just this or that.
Maybe it's just the way I'm perceiving it. " So, they avoid the deeper things of God because they know what God is requiring of them. They know that just on the other side of that depth of prayer is that instruction waiting for them, where they last left it.
Some believers go into the prayer room, receive a revelation about their life from God, receive that instruction, and then, having been offended by that instruction or inconvenienced by that instruction, they leave the prayer room hoping that the next time they come back, that instruction will no longer be there waiting for them. But this time, maybe it'll be different; or maybe God sees what I desire; or maybe God will reason with me; or maybe God will change his mind. My friend, God does not change his mind.
The Spirit of the Lord doesn't change. Can you persuade the Holy Ghost to change his instruction to you? The answer is no.
The Holy Spirit loves you too much to change the instruction that he gave you. C. S.
Lewis captures this perfectly when he says, "We are not necessarily doubting that God will do the best for us; we are wondering how painful the best will turn out to be. " Obeying the Holy Spirit's instruction is often uncomfortable, but it is always for our greater good. So, we have to recognize that this consistency in the speaking of the Holy Spirit, this consistency of that instruction, is a sign that the Holy Spirit is trying to get through to you.
Let me balance this, especially for those who struggle with what I've termed as religious OCD. Maybe you're getting ready for the day and you think, "God wants me to wear a red shirt. " No, God wants me to wear a blue shirt, and now you're torn under the power of legalism, wondering, "If I wear the wrong shirt, is God going to judge me?
" Or maybe you get a random instruction like, "Get out of the car; stop the car; get out and stand at that corner and wave your hands back and forth. " Sometimes people get intrusive thoughts that they mistake for the voice of the Holy Spirit, and then they think that condemnation is the conviction of the Holy Spirit. That's not always the case.
Remember that a consistent, clear message from the Holy Spirit will always align with the Word and will never come with accusation. Let me say that again: that clear, consistent instruction from the Holy Spirit will always align with the Word and will never come with accusation. Why?
Because the devil is the accuser. What's the difference between conviction and condemnation? Well, condemnation says, "You are wrong," while conviction says, "You've made a mistake, but there's a way out.
" Conviction says, "You've made a mistake. " Condemnation pushes you away from God in fear and shame; conviction draws you to God in repentance and surrender. That's the difference between the two.
We have to be careful to balance this thought, but still, we must consider the truth that the Holy Spirit will not change his mind once he has spoken something to you. Of course, there's that prophetic clause, so to speak, that we see in scripture, where if you obey, God will change his mind about punishment, or if you disobey, he will change his mind about the blessing. But that's not what I'm talking about here.
I'm talking about a personal instruction that God gives to you through the Holy Spirit that stays in your spirit, and you know it's him, but you're ignoring it because you don't like what you've been instructed to do. That is the consistency with which the Holy Spirit speaks, and it's a sign that he's trying to get through to you. Type "Help me, Holy Spirit," if this is speaking to you or challenging you.
Now, I want to show you how God will actually use others to try to get through to you. He does use others; he uses loved ones. God will even use complete strangers to try to get through to you.
Sometimes this is—number two—confirmation. We're going to read a relatively large portion of scripture here: Acts 10, and I'll read verses 1 and onward. Stay with me in the scripture.
In Caesarea, there lived a Roman army officer named Cornelius, who was a captain of the Italian regiment. He was a devout, God-fearing man, as was everyone in his household. He gave generously to the poor and prayed regularly to God.
One afternoon, about three, he had a vision in which he saw an angel of God coming toward him. "Cornelius," the angel said. Cornelius stared at him in terror.
"What is it, sir? " he asked. The angel replied, "Your prayers and gifts to the poor have been received by God as an offering.
Now send men to Joppa and summon a man named Simon Peter. He is staying with Simon, a tanner who lives near the seashore. " As soon as the angel was gone, Cornelius called two of his household servants and a devout soldier, one of his personal attendants.
He told them what had happened, and. . .
Sent them off to japa. Now, watch this. The next day, as Cornelius's messengers were nearing the town, Peter went up on the flat roof to pray.
It was about noon, and he was hungry, but while a meal was being prepared, he fell into a trance. He saw the sky open, and something like a large sheet was let down by four corners. In the sheet were all sorts of animals, reptiles, and birds.
Then a voice said to him, “Get up, Peter, kill and eat. ” “No, Lord! ” Peter declared.
“I have never eaten anything that our Jewish laws have declared impure and unclean. ” But the voice spoke again: “Do not call something unclean if God has made it clean. ” The same vision was repeated three times.
Then the sheet was suddenly pulled up to heaven. Now, there's a bigger narrative here; this is, of course, the gospel now coming to the Gentiles. But let's take a look at this specific narrative for the point that we're looking for.
Peter was very perplexed. What could the vision mean? Just then, the men sent by Cornelius found Simon's house, standing outside the gate.
So now, the men that Cornelius had sent, the angel spoke to Cornelius, and Cornelius said, “These men, God spoke to Peter,” and now there's this coming together, standing outside the gate. They asked for a man named Simon Peter, who was staying there. Meanwhile, as Peter was puzzling over the vision, the Holy Spirit said to him, “Three men have come looking for you.
Get up, go downstairs, and go with them without hesitation. Don’t worry, for I have sent them. ” I thought this was so interesting because we see here one of the great advantages of hearing the voice of the Holy Spirit, namely that the Holy Spirit coordinates among His faithful believers so that He's able to speak to Peter here, saying, “Go with the men,” and He was able to speak to Cornelius, saying, “Send them.
” This shows us that confirmation will come by way of the voice of the Holy Spirit, and God will confirm things to you through others. This is why, listen please, we have to be humble enough to receive correction from others. The scripture says, “Submitting yourselves one to another.
” Now, this doesn't mean that you take criticism and correction from anyone and everyone who comes to you with that criticism and correction. For example, if I did that, I would never have any identity or any ministry because I would be constantly changing everything to adjust for the thousands of opinions that come my way. So, for the most part, I ignore 99.
9% of opinions, but I do make sure that I surround myself with people who are God-fearing, grounded in the Word, and who are not "yes men," as you would call them. They're able to speak to me with boldness and say, “This is something that you need to get right. This is something that's off.
This is something that you taught that maybe needs to be tweaked. ” So, we thank God for that kind of accountability. But then there are some believers who won't receive from anyone.
They say things like, “Well, all I need is Jesus. I don't need anybody to help me,” or “I don't care what anybody else thinks of me,” even though the scripture tells us that a good name is better than great riches. So, we know that God will put people in your life.
Iron sharpens iron. You know what happens when iron sharpens iron? Sparks begin to fly.
Why? Because there is this chipping away of self. God will put people in your life who can get in your face.
In fact, some of the most valuable relationships you will have are with people with whom you’ll have conflict. That's how you know you have a solid relationship with someone: when there can be conflict, and then you can still come back around and make peace. God will put those kinds of people in your life, and if you're too prideful to take heed to anything that anyone around you is saying, you're going to wind up isolated, you're going to wind up disconnected, and you're going to miss the instructions that the Holy Spirit sends through people who love you.
C. S. Lewis wrote, “Pride is spiritual cancer.
It eats up the very possibility of love or contentment or even common sense. ” Pride can prevent us from receiving the messages that the Holy Spirit sends through others, leaving us cut off from God's guidance. The Lord doesn't mind confirming things for you.
What about the scripture where Jesus says, “A wicked, adulterous generation demands a sign”? Well, there, specifically, Jesus is talking to religious leaders who are not asking for a sign out of sincerity; they were demanding a sign out of cynicism. So, it's a mistake to take that one instance in scripture and give it universal application by saying that we should never ask God for a sign.
In fact, all throughout scripture, we see that God was able and willing to give signs and, in some instances, multiple signs to demonstrate what He was speaking. So, the Holy Spirit will give you signs. The Holy Spirit will send you prophets.
The Holy Spirit will send you friends. The Holy Spirit will speak to you through your spouse, through your friends, through your brothers, and through your parents. Now, this doesn't mean that every time they speak, it's of God, because sometimes the enemy can speak through the same people.
But if you're discerning and you listen for the voice of the Holy Spirit, you'll see it when He begins to confirm these things through others. God will send messengers to speak to you. In fact, in this way, I believe we can also categorize dreams as signs that God sends, trying to get a message through to you.
So, through the Word, He speaks. Maybe we don't receive through the Word because we're stubborn, and we lie to ourselves and say, “That doesn't apply to me. ” Then maybe the Holy Spirit speaks directly to our heart, but because we've made up our mind already, we ignore that instruction, we suppress it, and we hope it goes away.
We hope that he changes his mind so he speaks consistently; and when that doesn't work, he starts sending confirmation through others. This is where, please hear me now, you have to humble yourself because if you don't, what comes next is a little more harsh. First, he will speak with consistency; then he will speak through confirmation from others.
That's relationship, yes? This is after you've ignored the word. This is after you've ignored that whisper, and you're still kind of debating.
Now, granted this is a fine line—there's a fine line between waiting for confirmation and being disobedient. I want to make sure this is clear because I don't want anyone to leave this stream with self-condemnation. There's a difference between the believer who says, "I'm not so sure yet if this is God, so I need to wait on confirmation," versus the one who says, "I believe this is God, but I'm afraid, or I don't want to be inconvenienced, or I don't want to be embarrassed, or I don't want to give up," and therefore they suppress that instruction and ignore it.
There's a big difference between those two, but there's a thin line between them. Sometimes we lie to ourselves. Oh, Holy Spirit, I pray you convict us if this is us.
Sometimes we lie to ourselves and say we're waiting on confirmation when we know it's the Holy Spirit, but we're just standing behind a spiritually sounding excuse. We know God has spoken; we know what the Holy Spirit says. To give ourselves a way of escape, to give ourselves relief in our conscience, to give ourselves a little less pressure in that area of disobedience, we lie to ourselves and choose to believe ourselves when we say, "I'm waiting on confirmation.
" That may be true, but you have to test your heart and allow God to test your heart and reveal these things. It's possible that you're actually ignoring the voice of the Holy Spirit while telling yourself you're waiting on Him. I know this because these are problems with the flesh, and these are issues all believers deal with.
If that's you, I want you to let me know in the comments section: say, "You know what? I think that's me. I think the Holy Spirit's speaking to me right now.
" Again, there is that thin line, so I don't want you to feel condemned if you truly are sincerely waiting for confirmation from the Holy Spirit. But at the same time, I don't want you to have false comfort by lying to yourself and saying you're actually waiting on confirmation when you already know what He's spoken. Number three: now he begins to weigh heavily upon you.
Okay, so here we see the believer. God speaks to them through the word; they don't receive the message. Sometimes we can be really stubborn.
Then the Holy Spirit begins to speak directly to the heart. We don't receive the word because sometimes we can be really stubborn. So what he'll do then is speak with consistency.
That's the first sign. Many times, believers at that point will say, "Okay, this is You, God. I'm going to go for it.
" If you ignore that consistent voice of the Holy Spirit, now he begins to send prophets. Now he begins to send people. Now those around you begin to recognize and say, "Hey, there's something off here.
There's something not quite right in your life. " I'm not talking about strangers or internet critics or members of your church who just like to talk trash on everybody; that's not what I'm talking about. I'm talking about people who love you and who have the authority and the right in the place to correct you in these ways.
God will send those people to you, and they'll begin to speak to you. Here is where you have to be careful because, like with Pharaoh, if we ignore that, the heart becomes harder. We ignore that instruction, and then we go through this cycle of ignoring the instruction, and the heart becomes harder.
So God sends more representatives to speak to us, and we harden our heart toward them. Don't harden your heart, because once you do that, you start this cycle that's very difficult to break. Then the Holy Spirit has to begin to weigh heavily on you.
There's number three: conviction. By the way, these don't necessarily flow in chronological order. This is not necessarily an exact sequence of events I'm giving you; it could happen in any order.
But these are different ways the Holy Spirit will try to get your attention. Conviction now begins to weigh on you. You have trouble sleeping at night; you have trouble praying because of conviction; you have trouble worshiping because of conviction; you have trouble reading the word because of conviction.
You can't even enjoy fellowship with other believers because that conviction is weighing heavily upon you. John 16:8 says, "And when he comes, he will convict the world of its sin, and of God's righteousness, and of the coming judgment. " What is conviction?
Conviction is a deeply held belief. In this sense, you could say there may be legalities attached to the word conviction, but ultimately it's the Holy Spirit calling our attention to certain things. I think that at least in general, specific practical application is that the Holy Spirit will bring to your attention sin, but not just that.
He doesn't just show you what you ought not to do. He convicts the world of its sin. He shows you what you ought to do and of God's righteousness.
Many times, when we think of a conviction of the Holy Spirit, we just think about sin. We just think about the Holy Spirit saying, "Hey, this is wrong. " And He does do that; don't hear what I'm not saying.
Definitely, the Holy Spirit will convict you of sin, but He will also convict you of God's righteousness. What does that mean? He holds a standard in front of you and says, "This is what God has called you to," so He calls you to higher places to meet a standard—not necessarily perfection, but at least of.
. . surrender vicariously to what Christ has accomplished and of the coming judgment.
So, in other words, he makes you keenly aware of the fact that we're all going to stand in judgment. He makes you keenly aware of the fact that you're going to be accountable for your actions. He makes you keenly aware of the fact that you're going to stand before God.
So, he brings forth conviction; he convicts the world of sin, convicts of God's righteousness, and convicts of the coming judgment. Once you begin to ignore the conviction of the Holy Spirit, I talked about that thin line between waiting on God for confirmation and disobeying. There's a thin line but a major difference between the two.
Once you ignore that conviction, and you know it's the Holy Spirit, and you delay anyway, now delay has become disobedience. Write that in the comment section: delay is disobedience. Now, I'm not talking again about those who say, "Well, I'm waiting for confirmation from God," and they're sincere and they actually are waiting for confirmation.
Note: you shouldn't wait for confirmation if something is perfectly clear in Scripture. But I'm talking about those specific instructions for our lives, things you should do or should not do. James 4:17 says this: "Therefore to him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin.
" For the sake of his love for you, he'll begin to weigh heavily upon you. Watch this now: Psalm 32:15, "Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight! Yes, what joy for those whose record the Lord has cleared of guilt, whose lives are lived in complete honesty!
" Watch this now: "When I refused to confess my sin, my body wasted away, and I groaned all day long. Day and night your hand of discipline was heavy upon me; my strength evaporated like water in the summer heat. " Verse five is key.
Watch the turnaround: "Now finally I confessed all my sins to you and stopped trying to hide my guilt. " That is so key. I said to myself, "I will confess my rebellion to the Lord," and you forgave me; all my guilt is gone.
So that heavy grief, that weight on the conscience, that's the conviction of the Holy Spirit. And that, by the way, is a very difficult place to be because I know no individual more miserable than the disobedient believer, the one who gets stuck in that place where they know God has spoken something, yet they stubbornly refuse to turn. So he’ll begin to convict you now consistently.
He'll speak consistently, then bring confirmation to others. Then he'll begin to turn up the heat on the fires of conviction. Finally, number four: If you don't respond to that consistent voice, if you don't respond when he sends confirmation, if you don't respond when he turns up the heat on the fires of conviction, God will turn to his last resort, and that is chaos.
Now, I don't mean disorder because God is not a God of disorder; He is a God of order. So, when I talk about chaos, I'm not talking about chaos from God's perspective; I'm saying it can seem chaotic from our perspective. Why?
Because this is where God begins to disrupt the things that are not of Him. You ignore the conviction long enough—please hear this, believer—if you ignore that conviction long enough, God will resort to chaos, not because he's cruel, not because he's mean, but because the Scripture is clear: he chastises those whom he loves. We look in Acts 27:9, "We had lost a lot of time; the weather was becoming dangerous for sea travel because it was so late in the fall.
" And Paul spoke to the ship's officers about it. Verse 10: "Men," he said, "I believe there is trouble ahead if we go on—shipwreck, loss of cargo, and danger to our lives as well. " Verse 11: "But the officer in charge of the prisoners listened more to the ship's captain and the owner than to Paul.
" They did not heed the voice of the Holy Spirit spoken through the Apostle Paul. He saw prophetically what was going to happen, and of course, many of you know what happens next. They do end up being shipwrecked.
The same thing happened to Jonah. God said go one way; he went the other, and God sent a whirlwind from Heaven to destroy the ship. In other words, God, in the case of Jonah, destroyed his means of disobedience.
Hear me now, please: that is his mercy on your life. People wonder, "Why do the wicked get away with so much? " It's because God is not destroying their means of disobedience.
Why does it seem like when believers begin to disobey, suddenly there's chaos? Why? Why is that not always the case for the wicked?
Why does it seem like the wicked prosper? It's because God's hand is not on them in that way; it's his mercy that destroys your means of disobedience. C.
S. Lewis spoke on this as well, stating, "God allows us to experience the low points of life in order to teach us lessons that we could learn in no other way. " Sometimes chaos, the destruction of our own means of rebellion, is the most merciful act God can perform.
Think also of the Scripture: "Hand them over to Satan" (1 Corinthians 5:5) "to deliver such a one unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus. " Now, here the Scripture is not talking about a born-again believer becoming demonized; this is talking about the attacks of the enemy that begin to humble them. God will allow circumstances and chaos around them that are specifically incited by demonic power.
God does allow chaos to shake us out of complacency. Let me tell you something; that might be where you are right now. I am not saying that every time you face chaos it's a sign that you disobeyed God.
Not even close; that's not true. Why? Because the rain falls on the just and the unjust alike.
The sun shines on the just and the. . .
Unjust alike, everybody who's alive on planet Earth today will experience both good and evil in this lifetime. They'll experience both blessings; of course, we're always blessed, but I think you understand what I'm saying. I'm talking about, in terms of our lived experience, there will be trials, tragedies, and challenges in the life of every single human being because we live in fallen conditions.
That's life. But then there are those specific conditions that come about as a result of the hand of God trying to get your attention. Maybe He's trying to get your attention today.
Maybe you attempted to click off this video right now or turn off the audio because of the conviction of the Holy Spirit setting in. And I'm here to tell you, as a messenger of the Word of God, that you must heed the voice of the Holy Spirit. Surrender before God sends forth the whirlwind.
Surrender before God has to shake things up. Surrender before God has to chastise; that is a last resort. And I'm telling you, this is the Holy Spirit speaking to you through God's Word—not through me, but through God's Word—to show you that God will do what is necessary to get your attention.
So consider me, conf conf, consider this message confirmation. Maybe God's pairing it with conviction. I don't know; as I said, it's not necessarily a sequence, but He's trying to speak to you now.
Do not stifle the voice of the Holy Spirit; do not ignore that lead of the Holy Spirit. He is talking to you right now. What is He asking you to do?
What is He asking you to give up? Is there a relationship, a connection, an attitude, or a mindset that He's asking you to surrender? Is there a step of faith He's been requiring of you, and you've been withholding from Him simply because of fear and selfishness?
Now the Holy Spirit is saying, "Move when God says move. Act when He speaks. " Respond to the voice of the Holy Spirit today.
Lift your hands and say, "Lord, I surrender. Lord, I'm done running. I'm tired of running.
I'm tired of doing it my way. I'm tired of being stubborn. " Holy Spirit, You're so gracious.
You're so merciful. You're so humble in nature to continue to speak to someone like me who ignores that conviction. And I am pleading with you, child of God, listen to the voice of the Holy Spirit today.
He is calling out to you in love and mercy, saying, "Surrender. Stop fighting the voice of the Holy Spirit. " You're not going to be able to bargain your way out of this.
Heed the voice of the precious Holy Spirit; He's talking to you right now. Thank you so much for watching. If this video touched your heart, please give it a thumbs up, share it with someone who needs to hear this message, and comment "Amen" down below.
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