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

To those who are asleep….Wake up.

The time has come to draw back the veil and speak with precision, because the subject at hand is not shallow, sentimental, or optional—it is everything. The condition of the modern church, the power of Grace, the counterfeit name, and the desperate need for the Breath of God to awaken what has been lulled into a coma, all converge into one prophetic word: come forth. For too long the conversation about Grace has been reduced to clichés and soft words, painted as a balm for transgression, a gentle hand extended when sin rears its head. But this reduction is far from the truth. Grace is not triggered by failure, nor summoned only when man collapses. Grace is proactive, expansive, overwhelming. It covers the house, it bypasses mortality, it overlaps sin itself. As Paul declared, “Where sin increased, grace abounded all the more” (Romans 5:20). It is the reason man is not consumed in his delusion. Yet despite its vastness, Grace is not the Breath, and therein lies the fracture that must be confronted.
The first step is confrontation. This is what the Messiah Himself did whenever He faced illusion or hypocrisy—He named it. It cannot be healed if it is not exposed. The modern pulpit has trained its congregations to breathe through tubes of Grace while never tasting the air of the Spirit. I have listened to preachers like Joseph Prince for over a decade, men who dedicate their entire ministries to speaking about Grace, and while they can handle the English word with clarity, even they skim the surface of its reality. They can preach the covering of Grace, but when the counterfeit name pours from their lips, I cannot help but see waves of Grace billow against them like an ocean tide. Grace will crash against anything that invokes substitution, but it will never fill it. The consequence is unavoidable: empty syllables fall from pulpits, and whole congregations live in the illusion that they are alive when in truth they are sustained only by life support. The Messiah said plainly, “There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven that has been given among men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). To exchange that Name for another is to cut the current while pretending the lights are on.
The example of Moses proves the severity of misrepresentation. Moses struck the rock twice, contrary to Yahweh’s command, and was barred from entering the promised land. “But the Lord said to Moses and Aaron, ‘Since you did not trust in Me to treat Me as holy in the sight of the sons of Israel, for that reason you shall not bring this assembly into the land which I have given them’” (Numbers 20:12). His error was not trivial, but measured against the holiness of Yahweh’s command. If the prophet who spoke with God face to face was denied entry for striking a rock, how much greater is the punishment for those who strike at the true Name of salvation itself? Generations of believers have been taught to call upon a counterfeit, taught to bow before the god of substitution, and yet no consequence is admitted. Here lies the great scandal: Moses lost the land for misrepresentation, but the church today believes it can misrepresent Yahweh’s Son and still inherit the kingdom. This must be confronted with unflinching sharpness, for the counterfeit has bred an entire body that calls itself Christian but lacks the Spirit of God. As the Messiah Himself warned, “Many will say to Me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in Your name?’ … And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; leave Me, you who practice lawlessness’” (Matthew 7:22–23).
From confrontation comes diagnosis. The symptoms are clear for any who have eyes to see. Grace is misunderstood, and its role twisted. Grace covers the house, but it cannot fill it. Grace shields the temple, but it cannot empower it. Grace sustains the frail, but it cannot indwell, cannot inhabit, cannot possess. Grace extinguishes fires, but it cannot ignite the flame that burns eternal. The congregations are lulled into thinking the presence of Grace is the presence of life, but life does not come from Grace. Life comes from Breath. The Messiah promised His disciples, “That is the Spirit of truth, whom the world cannot receive, because it does not see Him or know Him, but you know Him because He remains with you and will be in you” (John 14:17). Grace may remain upon, but only Spirit fills within.
This is why the apostles waited at Jerusalem—not for Grace, but for power. “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you” (Acts 1:8). Grace may preserve, but only the Spirit empowers. And Paul clarifies the channel: “For by grace you have been saved through faith; and this is not of yourselves, it is the gift of God” (Ephesians 2:8). Grace without faith and Breath is suspended animation, not resurrection. What we are seeing in modern congregations is Revelation 3:1 lived out: “I know your deeds, that you have a name that you are alive, and yet you are dead.” Grace exhausts itself to preserve, but does not ignite. Hebrews 10:29 warns of those who “have insulted the Spirit of grace.” It is possible to live perpetually under Grace and yet never know Life.
It is a pathetic sight, but not as insult—it is pathetic in its essence, because it is without pathos, without vitality, without movement. And yet, it is also beautiful, because Grace still stoops low. Grace refuses to abandon them, even in delusion. Grace is exhausting itself to preserve them from utter collapse, because Yahweh’s mercy reaches farther than human patience. So the condition of the body is both tragic and stunning—tragic because they mistake Grace for life, stunning because Yahweh allows Grace to overlap them until the moment they might awaken. The reality is that they are in a coma, wandering in dreams of illusion, mistaking visions of their own making for the kingdom of God. But this coma is not harmless. It is the pathway to damnation. Grace can sustain, but it cannot save. To live forever in a coma is not life; it is death disguised as survival.
The clearest sign of their coma is their hostility to truth. When the true Name is spoken—Yehoshua, the Name that bears Yahweh’s covenant, the Name that carries salvation—these congregations rise not in faith but in rage. They call it false. They brand it demonic. They accuse the one who carries truth of being a devil. And in that moment, the veil is ripped open: this is the same spirit that accused the Messiah of casting out demons by Beelzebul (Matthew 12:24), the same blindness that crucified the Lord of glory. Humans, when confronted with Truth, often choose delusion. They prefer dullness because it is safe. They cling to illusion because reality shatters their control. And so the Name is rejected, the Spirit resisted, the Breath expelled, and the machine of Grace continues to keep them alive in a delusion that is neither life nor death.
This explains why even demonstration would not be enough. If the Spirit Himself raised the dead before their eyes, they would not fall on their faces in awe but lift their fingers in accusation, calling it witchcraft, calling it sorcery, calling it of the devil. This is not speculation—it is the reflex of the counterfeit. It has always branded reality as falsehood and illusion as truth. When the Messiah healed the blind, they said He did so by demons. When He raised the dead, they plotted to kill Him and Lazarus. When He cleansed lepers, they fled in fear. This is why the deep dive cannot end at diagnosis. To complain about this condition endlessly would accomplish nothing. The Messiah did not stop at confrontation or diagnosis. He spoke the cure.
And this is the cure: wake up. This is the demonstration the Spirit is drawing forth. It is not to entertain with miracles or overwhelm with power, but to embody the Godhead and speak the command that creation itself obeys. The Messiah’s pattern is simple and unshakable: confront the problem, diagnose the symptoms, then speak the cure. And the cure was always in His Word. “When He had said these things, He cried out with a loud voice, ‘Lazarus, come out!’” (John 11:43). “Taking the child by the hand, He said to her, ‘Talitha, kum!’ (which translated means, ‘Little girl, I say to you, get up!’)” (Mark 5:41). “And when He had said this, He breathed on them and said to them, ‘Receive the Holy Spirit’” (John 20:22). Every time He spoke, reality shifted, and life entered where death had reigned. The same pattern must govern this word now. The church must be told: you are not alive, you are on life support. You are not filled, you are covered. You are not breathing, you are ventilated. Rise up. Breathe. Come forth. This is not poetry. It is not metaphor. It is the summons of the Spirit of God, spoken into the coma ward of counterfeit Christianity.
Yet even here, in the summons, the great tension remains. Why would Yahweh want to save them? Why does He extend His hand to those who resist, accuse, deny, and call His truth demonic? This is the question that burns in the heart of anyone who sees the condition clearly. And the answer is beyond human comprehension. “The Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not willing for any to perish, but for all to come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9). His love is not like ours. His patience is not like ours. “But God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). He desires all to awaken, even those who cling to their illusions. His Grace covers them not as permission, but as preservation until the Breath comes. As Isaiah declared, “Therefore the Lord longs to be gracious to you, and therefore He waits on high to have compassion on you” (Isaiah 30:18). This love is the mystery that cannot be solved, only witnessed with awe. It is not about our compassion but His. It is not about our endurance but His.
So the deep dive ends as it must: not in lament, not in despair, but in command. The time for complaint is over. The time for endless diagnosis is over. The voice of the Godhead must be demonstrated, not described. The pattern of the Messiah is clear and complete. Confront the counterfeit. Diagnose the symptoms. Speak the cure. The Spirit has one word for this body: wake up. Grace has kept you alive, but Grace cannot save you. Come forth.