Jump High and don’t be afraid you’ll fall, prophecy by Robin D Bullock on 8/18/24. See partial transcript and video link below:

https://www.youtube.com/live/hb4U3hKQVnw
Sunday Morning Service 8/18/2024
Church International @ChurchInternational @RobinDBullock
Streamed live 8/18/24

1:54:45 – Now, Jump. Jump high, says the Lord. Don’t be afraid you’ll fall. For I’ll catch you. I’ll catch you every time. I tell you to go and do this. And go and do that. And you say, that looks impossible to me. The Lord says, it’s a little thing to Me. It’s not very impossible at all. You just have to see it through My eyes. So jump up into a higher place. And begin to look in My eyes. And you’ll go from a step, to a step, to the next step. You’ll be walking where your head used to be.


NotebookLM AI Summary:

The source material, “Excerpts from ‘The Silent Voice of Reason,'” documents an audio broadcast featuring announcements, extended worship, and a sermon focused on courage, faith, prosperity, and the role of spiritual leadership in a challenging time.

Community Updates and Worship
The broadcast begins with a discussion mentioning members of the church, including Aubrey Bonds Mason, who was referred to as Katie. They express enthusiasm for creating children’s content, specifically biblical cartoons, as a positive alternative to typical television viewing.

A major upcoming event is announced: the continuing “rooftop 2024 movement” scheduled for a Friday night and Saturday night (specifically August 30th and 31st), with services starting at 7 p.m. and a live stream kickoff at 6:45 p.m.. Previous rooftop weekends were described as highly powerful and life-changing, characterized by the youth showing up with a hunger for the Holy Ghost. The speaker notes that the presence of the Holy Ghost during these events was so strong that attendees experienced the Spirit in their own ways, sometimes shaking under the power or pacing, fulfilling the scripture about those who hunger and thirst after righteousness being filled.

As the service transitions into the main event, listeners are noted to be tuning in from around the world, including Houston, Texas, Mozambique Massachusetts, Alberta, Canada, and the Black Hills of South Dakota. This global participation is likened to praise going up like glory from different areas, representing the body of Christ coming together in “one accord”. The speaker encourages attendees to rejoice, welcoming the Holy Ghost’s presence, as praise is described as a powerful weapon that will still the enemy and avenger.

Themes of Risk, Prosperity, and Calling Your Shot
A significant portion of the teaching revolves around the metaphor of “calling your shot,” inspired by baseball legend Babe Ruth. The audience is encouraged to “swing for the fence” and be “risk takers,” believing that God loves those who step out in faith.

This concept is tied directly to prosperity and biblical action. To call your shot for prosperity, you must speak it out, but also back it up with action derived from the Word of God. The action related to prosperity is giving, based on scriptures that promise, “Give, and it shall be given unto you” and Malachi 3:10, emphasizing that sowing time or offerings is an investment. The speaker uses the biblical account of Isaac, who “sowed in a famine and reaped a hungry car (hundredfold) in the same year,” as an example of calling one’s shot through giving when circumstances dictate against it. It is stated that angels ensure the “bat hits that ball” for those who dare to call their shot and speak it out.

The Unwavering Power of Jesus’ Name and the Shepherd’s Duty
The speaker champions the name of Jesus as the singular entity capable of bringing about change and fear in the spiritual realm. While “God” is considered a broad term, mentioning Jesus will “silence an airport” or “scares hell, scares sickness, scares disease, scares poverty”. The love of Jesus is highlighted through the analogy of the shepherd leaving the ninety-nine sheep to go after the one, assuring listeners that Jesus will find them regardless of how far they have fallen. This point is supported by personal testimonies, including raising a boy from the dead on a bus and delivering an occultic leader by saying, “in the name of Jesus, come out of it”.

The speaker issues a powerful and lengthy warning to spiritual “shepherds” (pastors), admonishing them for their silence and lack of David-like courage in defending the flock. Shepherds are accused of allowing “hungry lions and bears” (representing liberal ideology and cultural agendas such as gender confusion, same-sex marriage, and transgender teachers) to attack their flock through means like social media. Not speaking out against these issues publicly is equated to enabling the predators. The true shepherd must restore the soul (mind, will, and emotions) of the flock and eliminate confusion.

Political and Concluding Warnings
A prophetic warning is delivered specifically to “pastors of stiff-necked churches,” claiming that God brought back the nation (by implication, referencing Donald Trump) in answer to prayer, but many shepherds are now abandoning God and Him (Trump) by remaining silent out of fear of losing their platforms. This silence is framed as slapping the next generation with the back of the hand. The audience is warned that if they do not listen to the prophets and vote righteously, they risk witnessing the death of the next generation, echoing the tragedy of King Zedakiah losing his sons.

The sermon concludes with an affirmation of Psalm 23, emphasizing that the Lord ensures His followers “shall not want”. The actions of a good shepherd are illustrated: digging trenches to provide “still waters” for the sheep (preventing drowning) and anointing their heads with oil (to prevent sunstroke), establishing a table for them even in the presence of enemies by oiling the snake holes. The Psalm guarantees that “surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life”. The service ends with an altar call for deliverance and a final declaration of “Shalom,” meaning peace, or “nothing missing, nothing broken”.

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