Abba Yahusha, Heavenly Father,
We come before You not in fear, but in faith.
We rise with voices of the ancestors—Amadlozi, Unkulunkulu, the wisdom of the Mohegan people, and the strength of my Polish roots.
We lift up Your truth, Your light, and Your justice.
Breathe on us the winds of clarity and courage.
HaleluYah.
Scripture Foundation (Halaleyah Scriptures):
Halaleyah( Tellihim)- Psalms -82:3-4
"Defend the poor and fatherless: do justice to the afflicted and needy. Deliver the poor and needy: rid them out of the hand of the wicked."
This is not just a verse—it is a mandate. When systems fail and agencies become temples of confusion, we are called to advocate, educate, and reform.
In Manhattan, we walk among temples of culture—The Schomburg Center, The Tenement Museum, The Museum of the American Indian—where truth is preserved, voices are raised, and forgotten stories breathe again. These museums remind us: truth must be curated, not buried.
In government offices, too many are greeted with indifference, misdirection, or outright lies—power moves meant to silence the spirit. Nevertheless the Spirit of Yahusha is not easily silenced. It burns at the center of our being—through the chakras—from root to crown:
Root (Muladhara): We ground ourselves in justice. We rise with the cry of the Mohegan and the resilience of East Harlem.
Sacral (Svadhisthana): We create new systems built not on power, nonetheless on compassion.
Solar Plexus (Manipura): We act with courage—facing institutions not as beggars, but as divine advocates.
Heart (Anahata): We love the people we serve, even those hardened by bureaucracy.
Throat (Vishuddha): We speak truth, loud and clear, in the face of deception.
Third Eye (Ajna): We discern the intentions of policies, separating equity from ego.
Crown (Sahasrara): We connect to the divine, understanding that justice is a spiritual act.
From the Ancients and the Wise:
Plato said, "The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men."
Desmond Tutu declared, “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.”
Dr. Maya Angelou whispered into our spirit, “Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better.”
Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) taught: “The best among you are those who bring greatest benefits to others.”
Buddha said: “However many holy words you read, what good will they do if you do not act upon them?”
Catholic social teaching echoes: "Every person has a right to participate in society, seeking the common good and well-being of all."
Intercession and Advocacy:
We are not just ministers, we are policy reformers.
We are not just teachers, we are liberators of the misinformed.
We are not just citizens, we are sacred vessels of truth.
Community education is holy work. Teaching someone to read a document, fill out a form, or appeal a wrongful denial is as holy as preaching the gospel.
Policy reform is sacred service. Changing broken systems so they reflect the Kingdom of Yah—where the poor are protected, and the truth is honored.
Let us walk with the Polish saints, the Zulu warriors, the Muslim reformers, the Catholic nuns, and the Buddhist monks—those who prayed, fasted, and fought for justice in ways that bent history toward healing.
Our ancestors do not sleep—they whisper strategies into our ears.
They tell us: don’t stop.
They say: keep showing up.
They command: serve the people—not the system.
Call to Action:
WBJMinistries, rise up.
Hold workshops in libraries, parks, and housing lobbies.
Partner with museums to reclaim and retell our people’s stories.
Train advocates with chakra-aligned spiritual discipline.
Call out injustice—not with rage, but with righteousness.
Let our sermons reform systems as much as they renew souls.
Halaleyah (Tellihim )- Psalms 118:5-6
"I called upon Yahusha in distress: Yahusha answered me and set me in a large place. Yahusha is on my side; I will not fear: what can man do unto me?
Heavenly Father, Abba Yahusha,
Set our voices on fire with truth.
Let every lie crumble before the sound of Your justice.
May we walk in the wisdom of all who came before us—Amadlozi, the Mohegan, saints, and sages.
Make us not only hearers of Your Word, but doers of reform.
HaleluYah.
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