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The first thing I sense is peace… all pervading, silent and still… pure peace; rest, an absence of evil, an abundance of God… nothing but an otherworldly quietness.
I sit in the silence, unable to comprehend what I am experiencing. I submit myself to God, I resist the devil, and I look around me. Nothing. No beasts. No demons. No taunting. No intimidation. No fear. Just perfect stillness before the dawn.
I pace the walls, looking intently into the spirit world, and still there’s nothing. Just peace. I am speechless – I have no words. I know this is God in all His awesome majesty. I bow down, and present a sacrifice of worship to my King, and finally my vision appears… I see my Jesus, arms outstretched, walking toward me. He goes down on His haunches as He nears, and says simply, “See, nothing is too difficult for me.”
I know that the chains have been broken over the clinic, and the tide of evil has been suspended. I know that my prayers have been answered, and my Father in all his glory has lifted the veil of darkness and is shining His light onto every soul within this place. This is the time to pray for the staff, for the visitors, for the women who hold new life, and the men that contributed to that life. This is the window of opportunity that I have prayed for. My spirit sings Hallelujah! Glory to God! And I sing Hallelujah over the clinic again and again and again…
I am humbled and awed by the majesty of my God. Praise Him! Praise Him! Praise Him!
Footnote: I have been pondering for the last few hours as to why my spirit felt so strongly led this morning to sing hallelujah over the clinic. I looked up a reference in e-Sword, and found this write-up (with reference to the Hallelujah shouted in Revelation 19:1):
I heard a loud voice of a great multitude – Whose blood the great whore had shed. Saying, Hallelujah – This Hebrew word signifies, Praise ye Jah, or Him that is. God named himself to Moses, EHEIEH, that is, I will be, Exo_3:14; and at the same time, “Jehovah,” that is, “He that is, and was, and is to come:” during the trumpet of the seventh angel, he is styled, “He that is and was,” Rev_16:5; and not “He that is to come;” because his long – expected coming is under this trumpet actually present. At length he is styled, “Jah,” “He that is;” the past together with the future being swallowed up in the present, the former things being no more mentioned, for the greatness of those that now are. This title is of all others the most peculiar to the everlasting God.
Praise God! My prayer yesterday was ‘come Jesus come’. And today, my spirit gloried in the fact that He had indeed come. My God, how great thou art!