Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
With Michael Walker
With Michael Walker
A message to the New Creation
The new creation is not just a spiritual idea—it is a divine invasion. It is not a better version of the old man, nor a cleaned-up version of the sinner. It is a completely different species, one that originates not from Adam, but from Christ. The believer who walks in this reality is not walking toward transformation—he is walking from it. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come (2 Corinthians 5:17).
And yet, with this transformation comes a divine standard. One that demands a higher alignment, a greater obedience, and a deeper intimacy. It is the calling not merely to follow Christ, but to manifest Him. To not just carry His name, but to reflect His nature. To not simply believe in His works, but to replicate them by the same Spirit that empowered Him.
Jesus did not live according to His own will. He made that explicitly clear. “Truly, truly, I say to you, the Son can do nothing of Himself, unless it is something He sees the Father doing; for whatever the Father does, these things the Son also does in the same way.” (John 5:19 NASB). This was not humility—it was alignment. Christ’s power flowed from His surrender. His miracles were not random; they were reflections of the Father’s heartbeat.
This is the blueprint for every son and daughter of God. The new creation is not just filled with potential—it is called into precision. The gifts of the Spirit are not party tricks—they are instruments of divine orchestration. And those who carry the Spirit, the Word, and the Breath must learn to move only when the Father moves, speak only when the Father speaks, and act only when the Father commands.
Jesus repeated this truth in John 12:49–50: “For I did not speak on My own, but the Father Himself who sent Me has given Me a commandment as to what to say and what to speak… therefore the things I speak, I speak just as the Father has told Me.” This wasn’t theoretical—it was literal. His every word was a release of the divine will. His voice was the voice of heaven on earth.
To be a son of the fullness is to adopt this exact posture. It is to live not by impulse, but by revelation. Not by emotion, but by instruction. The sons of God are those who move in lockstep with the Father—not simply because they are gifted, but because they are submitted. The true mark of maturity in the Spirit is not how many gifts one can demonstrate—it is how deeply one can obey.
Romans 8:14 draws the line clearly: “For all who are being led by the Spirit of God, these are sons and daughters of God.” This leading is not passive. It is not a casual suggestion. It is the active command of the Breath of God guiding the steps, thoughts, and speech of those who have died to self and come alive in Christ.
The new creation is not independent. It is not autonomous. It does not make decisions apart from the Father’s will. It is born of the Spirit and remains in the Spirit. It is fed by the Word and breathes by the Breath. Every movement becomes a manifestation. Every breath becomes a declaration. Every act becomes a vessel of the Kingdom.
To walk as Christ walked is not to strive for performance—it is to submit to presence. Jesus was not performing for approval—He was abiding in union. The miracles were never the goal—they were the evidence. And in the same way, the believer who abides in Christ does not chase power. Power follows them. Authority follows them. Glory follows them. Not because they are seeking it, but because they are aligned with the Source.
John 15:4–5 makes this unmistakable: “Remain in Me, and I in you… the one who remains in Me, and I in him bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing.” The fruit is guaranteed—but only through remaining. Through total, unbroken alignment. Through trust so deep it silences fear, and intimacy so full it produces instinct.
This is what the world longs to see. Not religious speech. Not institutional authority. But sons of the fullness—walking portals of heaven, walking temples of power, walking images of the invisible God. The world doesn’t need more sermons about Jesus. It needs to encounter Him. And that happens when the new creation fully embraces who it is, whose it is, and why it was reborn.
It is no longer enough to say, “I believe in Jesus.” That is entry-level confession. The mature son must say, “I walk as He walked. I speak as He spoke. I move as He moved. Not because I am Him, but because He is in me.”
This is the difference between imitation and incarnation. Imitation copies from the outside. Incarnation flows from the inside. Christ in you is not a metaphor. It is the mystery now revealed (Colossians 1:27). The Father did not just send His Son to redeem you. He sent His Spirit to reproduce Him in you.
The sons of the fullness are those who will not settle for less. They are those who say, “If You dwell in me, I want all of You. If You gave me Your Spirit, I want to walk in it without restraint. If You gave me Your Word, I want to speak it without apology. If You gave me Your Breath, I want to exhale with fire.”
These are not the lukewarm. These are not the indoctrinated. These are the ones set apart—endowed with power, sealed with purpose, forged by revelation. These are the living arks. The carriers of the divine. The vessels of the Most High. These are the sons of the fullness.
And they will not walk like the world.
They will not speak like the world.
They will not bow to the systems of men.
They move only when the Father moves.
They speak only what the Father says.
They live as Christ lived—because Christ lives in them.
They are not waiting for revival.
They are revival.
And the world is about to see the difference.