Opening Prayer:
Abba Yahusha, Heavenly Father,
We come before You with open hearts, seeking wisdom, strength, and truth. Let this message awaken our spirits, align our souls, and draw us into deeper surrender. May Your Ruach guide every word spoken and heard. HaleluYah.
Main Scripture Reading:
Halaleyah Scriptures - LUKASAH ( Luke)- 14:28
> "For which of you, wanting to build a tower, does not sit down first and count the cost, whether he has what he needs to complete it?"
Introduction:
In the heart of Manhattan, where towers stretch to the heavens and the hum of ambition pulses like a drum, the question echoes loudly: Have we truly counted the cost of following Yahusha?
Like an architect preparing to build—like the sculptors who shaped the sacred art in the Metropolitan Museum of Art or the resilience displayed in the Museum of the American Indian—we too must plan our walk with Yahusha not with emotion alone, nevertheless with commitment, intention, and surrender.
Point One: Discipleship Requires Vision Beyond Self
Yahusha did not call us to an easy path. He called us to transformation. As the Mohegan elders say, “The path is not in the sky. The path is in the heart.” True discipleship flows from the heart chakra—Anahata, the center of compassion and love, where divine intention meets human action.
The Buddhist teaching reminds us, “To understand everything is to forgive everything.” Are we willing to forgive, love, and follow Yahusha with our whole heart—even when it breaks?
Point Two: Surrendering All—A Radical Act of Faith
To follow Yahusha is to surrender—your comfort, your plans, your ego. Polish mystic and poet Adam Mickiewicz once wrote, “True faith begins where human strength ends.” We must be willing to let go of what we cling to.
Think of the root chakra—Muladhara, our foundation. Are we grounded in this world, or are we rooted in the Kingdom? We must build on the Rock, not shifting sand.
Amadlozi, the ancestral spirits of Africa, teach us the power of legacy and obedience. Just as we honor our ancestors through action, we honor Yahusha by following, even when it costs us our very lives.
Point Three: Counting the Cost Means Living Differently
The philosopher Søren Kierkegaard said, “To be a Christian in Christendom is the greatest difficulty of all.” It’s easy to look like a disciple. It’s hard to live as one. Discipleship is not just belief—it’s movement, obedience, and sacrifice.
Think of the sacral chakra—Svadhisthana, the seat of passion and identity. Have we crucified our desires to walk in divine purpose? In a culture that promotes self, Yahusha calls us to deny self.
In the halls of the Museum of Modern Art, bold creators dared to be different. Yahusha calls us to spiritual boldness, to live a faith that challenges the norms, just like Catholic mystics, Muslim poets, and Protestant reformers once did.
Point Four: Yahusha’s Scars—Our Map to Ministry
We preach at WBJMinistries not from perfection but from pain. Yahusha showed us wounded hands with healing power. The throat chakra—Vishuddha speaks truth with clarity. Will your voice testify through trials?
Your scars, your lineage, your story—whether from the hills of Poland, the tribes of the Northeast, the rituals of Islam, or the wisdom of Catholic catechism—all can be redeemed for His glory.
Call to Reflection: Are We Really Willing?
Take a walk through Central Park. Sit quietly inside The Cloisters museum. Think deeply. Are you willing to leave comfort for calling? To turn wounds into witness?
Unkulunkulu, the Great Source, is not far from Yahusha’s message. All true paths require surrender. But only one leads to eternal life.
Conclusion: Faith That Moves
We close with a powerful question: Are we walking, or just talking?
Discipleship is not a title. It’s a trail. A trail stained with sweat, tears, and sometimes blood.
LUKASAH (Luke)-14:33 says:
> “So likewise, whoever of you who does not forsake all that he has, is unable to be My talmid.”
Closing Prayer:
Abba Yahusha,
Help us surrender all—not part, not most, but all. Let every chakra, every thought, every breath align with Your purpose. Let WBJMinistries be a lighthouse to the lost, a voice of clarity in chaos, and a witness to the world that You are worth everything. HaleluYah.
Call to Action:
Support this message and join the mission. Visit https://wbjministry100.wixsite.com/wbjministries. Share, give, pray, and walk with us.
Remember: Your pain has purpose. Your scars have power. Your surrender will spark revival.
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