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Biblical Video Teachings Library Part 1

Welcome to the Biblical Video Teachings Library of House of Faith Ministries. Here you will find Spirit-filled teachings, prophetic insights, and verse-by-verse studies from Pastor Marcos Marrero, and Minister Lisa Kane. Every video is curated to equip believers, strengthen faith, and proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ. Explore the teachings below and grow deeper in the Word of God.

In The Covering of the Blood, Minister Lisa walks us through God’s unchanging pattern of protection and redemption—from the lamb’s blood brushed on the doorposts in Exodus to the precious blood Jesus shed on the cross for every believer today.

We begin with the first Passover, where God instructed Israel to cover their homes with the blood of an innocent lamb. That blood stopped the destroyer in his tracks. It was a visible, outward covering—declaring, “This house belongs to God.”

John the beloved later reveals the deeper fulfillment: Jesus is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. His blood becomes our covering. His sacrifice—poured out outside the gate—mirrors the blood applied on the outside of Israel’s homes. The message is clear: the blood of Jesus covers, protects, sanctifies, and separates us from the reach of the destroyer.

Scripture identifies this destroyer as the thief who comes to steal, kill, and destroy. His access into our lives often comes through agreement—when we repeat his lies with our words. But when we agree with God’s Word, we close the door to the enemy’s influence and step under divine protection. As Psalm 17 declares, the word of God keeps us from the path of the destroyer.

Through Jesus’ sacrifice—His side pierced, His blood and water poured out—we are forgiven, covered, blessed, and made righteous. The believer who stands under the blood can boldly say, “Not today, Satan.” The destroyer cannot cross the boundary of the blood.

This message concludes with an invitation to receive the covering of Jesus’ blood personally through prayer—opening the door to forgiveness, protection, and new life. And from that moment forward, the believer can confidently declare:

“Jesus, today is Your day over my life. Keep me whole.”

COVERING OF THE BLOOD

Minister Lisa Kane

December 4, 2025

Beloved, God did not pull the woman from Adam’s head or his feet—He drew her from the rib, the place of protection, covering, and strength. From the beginning, God revealed His heart: to be a Helper, and to place His helping nature inside the woman. Scripture shows that God Himself is called “Helper” again and again—defending the fatherless, strengthening the weak, and answering the helpless. When God created woman as “a helper comparable to him,” He was sharing His own attribute with her.

This lesson walks through Genesis, Psalms, Hosea, the Gospels, and the New Testament to uncover the beauty and responsibility of that role. The enemy seeks the “helpless,” but women were not made helpless—we were made helpers, protectors, intercessors, spiritual rib-cages around our husbands. Through prayer, we guard our households, shield our husbands from attack, and stand in the gap like Jesus did when He prayed for Peter that his faith would not fail.

We look at the rib as a symbol of spiritual covering, the unity of becoming one flesh, and the order God established in marriage—wives aligning under God to pray for their husbands, and husbands loving like Christ who gave Himself for the church. This divine order brings transformation to both husband and wife.
Finally, the lesson embraces the single believer: God Himself becomes your Helper. The same God who defends the fatherless, strengthens the weak, and stands against every weapon formed is the One who covers you. As you commit yourself to Him, He shapes you into a vessel of love, prayer, and spiritual strength.

In all things, we learn that to be “the rib” is not a position of weakness—but a position of divine power, prayer, and purpose, patterned after the very heart of God Himself.

THE RIB

Minister Lisa Kane

November 19, 2025

“Renew Your Strength” encourages believers to draw their power and resilience from the Lord, as promised in Isaiah 40:31. Minister Lisa Kane explores how even the strongest grow weary, yet those who wait on the Lord experience divine renewal that lifts them above life’s challenges like eagles soaring on the wind. Through the examples of Paul, Daniel, the Levites, and the psalmists, this message reveals that strength is cultivated through prayer, obedience, and intimacy with God. It warns against trusting in worldly riches or self-sufficiency, urging believers to dwell continually in the “secret place” of God’s presence, where strength is restored and help is sent from above. Ultimately, this teaching reminds us that our ability to walk, run, and soar through life’s trials depends entirely on our willingness to wait, trust, and abide in the Lord.

RENEW YOUR STRENGTH

Minister Lisa Kane

November 12, 2025

Salvation Overcomes draws from Psalm 37 and other key scriptures to show that the distinguishing mark of the righteous is their trust in the Lord’s salvation. While the wicked may appear to prosper, their end is destruction; the salvation of the upright, however, brings peace and divine strength. Minister Lisa Kane teaches that the experience of salvation walk of confession, partnership with Christ, and faith in Christ causes the believer to overcome in any situation including death. Through passages such as Romans 10, 2 Corinthians 6, and Ephesians 1, she reveals that believers are sealed by the Holy Spirit, strengthened in times of trouble, and called to live lives worthy of the gospel. By declaring and living in the reality that “salvation is of the Lord,” we rise above adversity, reflect God’s glory, and demonstrate that through Christ we are more than conquerors—for truly, Salvation Overcomes.

SALVATION OVERCOMES

Minister Lisa Kane

November 5, 2025

In A Believer’s Unbelief, Minister Lisa Kane delivers a powerful teaching on how unbelief silently hinders the lives of believers, keeping them from walking in the fullness of God’s power and promises. Drawing from key scriptures in Hebrews, Romans, Mark, and Matthew, she illustrates that unbelief is more than doubt—it is spiritual hardness that blocks us from experiencing the supernatural life Jesus intended.
The message challenges listeners to recognize the areas in their lives where unbelief persists, even while professing faith. Minister Lisa explores the spiritual implications of unbelief through the failure of the disciples to cast out a demon, the cry of a desperate father for help with his unbelief, and even how Jesus Himself was limited by the unbelief of others.

She emphasizes that confession is the gateway to overcoming unbelief—confession as humility, alignment with truth, and a declaration of faith in Jesus' lordship. Prayer and fasting are highlighted as necessary disciplines to combat unbelief and grow in spiritual authority.

Through biblical insight and practical reflection, A Believer’s Unbelief calls believers to a deeper faith—one that not only acknowledges Jesus as Savior but also embraces the power of His resurrection, healing, and deliverance. The message ends with a personal call: ask God to reveal where unbelief resides, confess Jesus over those areas, and begin to walk in the full measure of faith and power promised to every believer.

A BELIEVER'S UNBELIEF

Minister Lisa Kane

October 22, 2025

This lesson examines the motivational gifts as described by the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 12:28-31. It emphasizes that these gifts must be rooted in love—the “more excellent way” introduced in 1 Corinthians 13—for without love, even knowledge becomes empty noise. Minister Lisa Kane guides believers to discern whether someone or something is led by the Holy Spirit or by the flesh, using 1 Timothy 1:3-7 and Galatians 5:22-25 to contrast being born of love or driven by arrogance or self-interest.

By exploring Scriptures such as 1 Corinthians 2:10-16 and 2 Timothy 3:14-17, this message reveals that walking in the motivational gifts brings godly edification, produces spiritual fruit, and equips believers for every good work. Through the Spirit, these gifts illuminate the deep things of God, leading others beyond intellectual understanding into revelation knowledge. The lesson concludes by showing that when believers walk in the Spirit—manifesting love, joy, peace, patience, and gentleness—their presence becomes a vessel through which others are inspired to live, learn, and walk in the Spirit as well.

OPERATING IN THE MOTIVATIONAL GIFTS OF THE SPIRIT

Minister Lisa Kane

October 15, 2025

In You Are an Heir, Minister Lisa Kane draws from Galatians 4:1-7 to unveil the transformation that occurs when a believer accepts Jesus Christ—not only receiving salvation but also stepping into full spiritual inheritance as a son or daughter of God. Through Scriptures such as Romans 10:9 and James 2:19-24, this teaching highlights that faith must go beyond acknowledgment; it must be expressed through confession and action. Believers are reminded that their words and walk demonstrate the intent of their faith and activate their authority in Christ. As heirs of the Most High, Christians are called to live above the influence of darkness, exercising their God-given power through faith-filled words, works, and steadfast trust in the Father.

YOU ARE AN HEIR

Minister Lisa Kane

October 8, 2025

In What a Christian Fights Against – Part 2, Minister Lisa Kane continues unpacking Ephesians 6:12 by exploring the believer’s struggle against powers, rulers of darkness, and spiritual wickedness in high places. Through passages in Romans, Colossians, and the Gospels, this teaching shows that while earthly and spiritual authorities exist, their power is limited under God and cannot separate us from His love. Jesus Christ has already disarmed principalities and powers, triumphing over them at the cross, and through Him we are made complete and victorious. Darkness is overcome by walking in the light, and spiritual wickedness is defeated by seeking God first, guarding our hearts, and putting on the whole armor of God. This message calls believers to prayer, perseverance, and steadfast faith in Christ, knowing that through Him, we overcome.

WHAT A CHRISTIAN FIGHTS AGAINST - PART 2

Minister Lisa Kane

October 1, 2025

In this teaching, Minister Lisa Kane unpacks Paul’s instruction in Ephesians 6:11–12, showing that our fight as Christians is not against flesh and blood but against spiritual influences that seek to corrupt and destroy. Drawing from Galatians 5, she contrasts the destructive works of the flesh—such as envy, strife, and immorality—with the life-giving fruit of the Spirit, which believers are called to walk in daily.
The lesson highlights how Christ Himself broke the “rules” of sin and death through His victory at the cross, giving us authority as joint heirs with Him. Scriptures such as John 10:10 and 1 Peter 5:8 remind us that the devil seeks to steal, kill, and destroy, but he is limited and subject to God’s judgment. Believers are encouraged to bring their case before the Lord when the enemy steals from them, trusting that God will require sevenfold restoration, as promised in Proverbs 6:30–31.
This first part establishes the foundation of understanding what a Christian truly fights against—spiritual powers, not people—and calls us to walk in the Spirit, live in close relationship with God, and stand in faith for His promises. Part 2 will continue with a deeper exploration of Ephesians 6:12.

WHAT A CHRISTIAN FIGHTS AGAINST - PART 1

Minister Lisa Kane

September 24, 2025

In Therefore Forgive Them Not, Minister Lisa Kane explores the sobering message of Isaiah 2 and its direct application to today’s spiritual and cultural climate. Isaiah describes a world where people bow to idols, false ideologies, and pride, abandoning the truth of God. This mirrors our modern society where deception, pride, and the celebration of evil prevail. The message warns that those who choose darkness over light align themselves with destruction, echoing Paul’s admonition to “walk as children of light” (Ephesians 5:8) and Jesus’ warning against deception in the last days (Matthew 24:4).

Through Scripture, Lisa shows that God’s command to “forgive them not” is not about personal bitterness but about divine judgment on those who willfully reject Him. This lesson urges believers to discern the times, avoid the snares of cultural falsehoods, and remain steadfast in Christ. Ultimately, it challenges Christians to live faithfully in the light of Jesus so that when the Day of the Lord arrives, they are found walking in truth and not among those marked for wrath.

THEREFORE FORGIVE THEM NOT

Minister Lisa Kane

September 18, 2025

This message, based on Proverbs 2:1–12, unpacks the biblical process of discovering the knowledge of God. It begins with receiving and confessing God’s Word, as Romans 10:9 affirms, and continues by treasuring His commands within the heart. Believers are called to incline their ears to wisdom, apply their hearts to understanding, and cry out for knowledge with the same passion as one who seeks hidden treasures.

The teaching emphasizes that when God’s Word is sought and hidden like precious silver, it brings divine covering and separation from the world’s snares (Psalm 91:1). This pursuit leads to understanding the fear of the Lord and finding His knowledge, which becomes a lamp to our path (Psalm 119:105). With wisdom entering the heart, discretion and understanding preserve the believer, delivering them from evil influences and guiding them in righteousness, judgment, and every good path.

Ultimately, the message calls believers to make God’s Word their highest priority—treating it as a treasure—so they may walk under His covering, avoid the traps of the enemy, and live in the awareness and authority of God’s presence.

SEARCHING FOR THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD

Minister Lisa Kane

September 3, 2025

In Christ is Preached, Lisa Kane explores Paul’s message to the Philippians, highlighting how his imprisonment not only spread the gospel to new places like the palace but also emboldened others to preach with greater confidence. Paul acknowledges that some preach Christ with motives of envy and strife, while others do so out of love. Yet, he rejoices regardless, affirming that the central truth remains—Christ is being preached.

The teaching then bridges Paul’s perspective with Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:17-20, reminding listeners that Christ came not to destroy the law but to fulfill it. Ministers are urged to honor God’s commandments in their preaching, as those who teach and live by them will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. At the same time, Paul’s reassurance shows that even those who preach imperfectly are still within God’s plan.

Drawing from both Old and New Testament commandments rooted in love (Deuteronomy 13:3, John 13:34-35), the message concludes that while God can use both fear-driven and love-driven preaching, it is far better to teach, preach, and evangelize with love. Love magnifies Christ, builds up the body of believers, and secures a greater reward in the kingdom of heaven.

CHRIST IS PREACHED

Minister Lisa Kane

August 27, 2025

“Where Belief Leads: Into the Light of Christ” explores the contrast between living in light or darkness as revealed in Scripture. John 3:18–21 teaches that belief in Jesus removes condemnation, while rejecting Him leaves a person already condemned. Romans 8:1 affirms this truth, reminding believers that those in Christ walk free from guilt and shame when they live by the Spirit.

The study highlights Jesus’ encounter with the woman caught in adultery (John 8:3–11) as an example of His mercy and light. Instead of condemning, Jesus exposed the hidden darkness in others and offered the woman forgiveness and a new way forward. In the same way, His Word reveals the truth in our own hearts, both in simple trust and in deeper struggles, always pointing us back to His grace.

Ultimately, Jesus declares Himself the Light of the world (John 8:12), and belief in Him invites us out of darkness into life, hope, and freedom. The study closes with a prayer of surrender, asking Jesus to help us walk daily in His light.

WHERE BELIEF LEADS INTO LIFE

Minister Lisa Kane

August 19, 2025

John 8:28 KJV
Jesus declared that when the Son of Man is lifted up, people will recognize who He is and understand that He speaks only what the Father has taught Him.

Who is the Son of Man?

Jesus is the Son of Man—God’s Son, the eternal Word who became
 flesh.

John 1:1-4 KJV

From the very beginning, the Word was with God and was God. Through Him, all things were created, and i Him is life—the light of humanity.

John 1:14 KJV

The Word became flesh and dwelt among us, revealing the glory of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth. 

Genesis 1:1-3 KJV

From creation’s first moment, God brought the universe into being, His Spirit moving over the waters, and light coming forth by His command. From the start, Jesus was present with God as Creator of all things. In time, He came into the world through a virgin named Mary, taking on human form. He lived without sin and willingly bore our sins on the cross.

John 3:15-18 KJV

Jesus gave His life so that all who believe in Him would not perish but have eternal life, for He came not to condemn the world, but to save it. By lifting Him up through faith, we choose to follow His example.

Declaring what we learn from Him just like He does with His Father. This also means we’re never alone because Jesus, the Father, and the Holy Spirit are always with us.

WHEN YOU LIFT UP THE SON OF MAN

Minister Lisa Kane

August 12, 2025

In this message, we reflect on what it means to experience His love—the love of God revealed through Christ. Beginning with John 3:16, we recognize that God’s love is not a vague idea but a powerful reality, rooted in His very nature and demonstrated through the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross. This love is not based on our human perceptions but defined by God Himself.

Scripture shows us that love (agape) is more than emotion; it is action, benevolence, and selfless giving. As Paul describes in 1 Corinthians 13, without love, our gifts, knowledge, and even great acts of service amount to nothing. Love suffers long, is kind, rejoices in truth, and endures all things. Experiencing this love transforms how we think, how we treat others, and how we live out our faith.

You are invited to pursue this love intentionally—by seeking God in prayer, allowing Him to renew your mind (Romans 12:1–2), and opening your heart to His Spirit. Experiencing His love leads to a deeper understanding of your value to God, a renewed desire to walk in His ways, and the strength to show His love to others. Above all, it is love that never fails and remains the greatest gift we can live in and share with the world.

EXPERIENCE HIS LOVE

Minister Lisa Kane

August 3, 2025

In this teaching, you are invited to reflect on Romans 14:12, which reminds us that each one of us will give an account of ourselves to God. This is not only about the things we do, but also about the motives behind them. God is interested in why we act, not just what we do.

You’ll see through passages like Titus 1:16, Luke 16, and 1 Peter 4 that every believer has been entrusted with gifts, talents, and the grace of God. These are not meant to be hidden or taken for granted, but to be used in service to others, in prayer, and in acts of love. As you use what God has placed in you, He continues to pour out more, multiplying His work through your life.

This message encourages you to live intentionally—showing hospitality, interceding for others, speaking words that build up, and enduring trials with the peace of Christ. It’s about being faithful in small things, taking steps of action in your faith, and letting God’s Spirit flow through you daily.

Ultimately, when the day comes to stand before the Lord, your desire should be to present a life that honored Him, a life where His gifts were used for His glory. The goal is not perfection, but faithfulness—so that you may hear HisHello and welcome to the House of Faith Ministries. I'm Lisa Kaine. I'm recording this teaching on Friday, July 25th, 20125. Welcome. Let's open up in a word of prayer. Father God, we thank you for your mighty word. For your mighty word is holy and powerful. You are faithful and true. You are worthy. You are glorious. Father God, I pray for the listeners to hear your word, to receive your word. I pray that it makes an impact on their lives that they don't forget it, that it actually simmers and boils within them so that it manifests out and is shared unto others. This is your word and you are the king of glory. Thank you in the name of Jesus. Amen. Amen. Amen. It's a good word today. I'm very excited about it. The anointing has been very powerful this week uh since uh Wednesday. Every time I go into prayer with the Lord, it's been been very very good. So this teaching is called give an account. Let's go to our opening scripture here in Romans 14:12. So then every one of us shall give an account of himself to God. Now if you notice there, there's a bolded word. The word account is in bold and the word motive after it is in parenthesis. The word account is what the translators used when they translated the King James version. The word motive is from the Hebrew or the Strong's Hebrew Greek dictionary. It's another word that the translators could have used. I like to add those extra words in. It kind of gives us a a better understanding of what the original text was and how it's translated to our language today. Amen. So look at this. Give an account. So then every one of us shall give an account of him of himself to God. Every one of us. Now there are two types of judgment that we are aware of. We have the judgment for the sinners at the very end. We have what's called the judgment seat of Christ where uh those of us who are believers are judged upon the works that we do. We have to give an account. And by the way that word account means motive. Why did you do something? God is interested in the motive activities not just the actual doing. If you do something with a bad attitude, that's going to be counted against you. So, here we're going to look at some scriptures. And I've got it's a neat revelation that uh I I got a part of it Wednesday night when I was at church. So, look at this. Uh let's go to Titus 1:16. They profess that they know God, but in works they deny him, being admon abom abominable and disobedient unto every good work reprobate or unapproved rejected. So basically somebody who says they know God but they're rejecting, look at what it says here, they're rejecting him. They're rejecting the works to him. What I'd like to show you here is that you every one of us is given a gift, a talent. We know about the fruits of the spirit. We know about the gifts of the spirit. You can go research those and look them up. Uh, I will say this that as a believer in Christ, we're given a a very special, precious gift. A gift that can we just keep it to ourselves? No. This is a gift that we need to let the whole world know about what we have in Christ. There's a parable that was taught Wednesday night at church. I'm only going to get one scripture out of it. You can go read uh the beginning of Luke chapter 16 here and read the whole parable for yourself. But this kind of gives you an idea. It says, "And he called him and said unto him, how is it that I hear this of thee? Give an account motive of thy stewardship or administration, for thou mayest be no longer steward." So it's a rich man who hired a steward to manage his home, and the steward did not do a good job. God gives us gifts. He gives us the fruit of the spirit, the gifts of the spirit. He gives us things. So the question then comes to us is what do you do with those gifts? What do you do with those things that God has given us that are precious that may you know do you just take it for granted? Now that's not something we want to see. Do you just take your Christianity for granted? Um you are forgiven. Yes. And he will continue to forgive you because that is who Jesus is because that's what Jesus does. He forgives and he will continue to forgive. But there does come a point. He will continue to forgive. But you will be having to give an account to God for the things that were given to you. If you were given the ministry of worship, you need to be in that ministry worshiping. If you're given a ministry of going out on the streets and preaching the good news, then you need to do that. I know that the Lord gave me a gift of teaching. So, I may not be out in front of a pulpit or in front of millions of cameras. No, but I'm still doing it. So, when you're faithful in the small things, you will be faithful in the bigger things. You'll see that scripture here very shortly. This is where we need to be with Christ. Be ready to give give an account of the gifts and the fruits that he has given us. Amen. So, let's go to first Peter and let's look at this. We're going to look at the whole chapter 4 and we're going to go through this one step at a time. And I just really want you to see how Peter addresses this. He says, "For as much then as Christ has suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with the same mind, thoughtfulness, moral understanding." So being thoughtful of what Christ was thoughtful of as he suffered for us. Being of understanding is what Christ was as he understood us. For he that hath suffered in the flesh hath see ceased from sin. We're no longer in sin when we start being likeminded with Christ and what he did. He suffered for us. Yes, he has blessed us and we're blessed beyond measure. There are many of us that there are There are Christians who are believers that have money that are philanthropist that they give and they give and they give and they the Lord just keeps blessing because that's a promise he gave to us in his word. He says try me. That's in Malachi 3. Test me. You won't even be able to have a storage enough to fill the things because you keep giving. He keeps blessing you. So as you have your gift, you keep giving your gift. He keeps pouring more into your gift. So that by the time it comes for you to give an account to the Lord of what you have done, you will find your account is paid in full complete because you were a manager and administrator over the gift that he gave you. Now what is that price? It's nothing in the reality of the fact that you have Jesus as your Lord and Savior and it's a free gift that he gave you. So you freely give it because it mean it costs you nothing. It simply means that you are here ready to give an account to God. But here you don't do it because of the motive being ready to give it to God. You do it because you love the people that are hearing your word, hearing the teaching of the word of God. praying over them, healing them as you pray over them, as you minister to them. Because as you do that, the more the spirit pours out into you. So, you're giving, paying, just throwing it out there. your your payment is your time is your precious time that you gave up from the world because you didn't want to be a part of the world where you gave it to God where you said I want to know more of you Lord and the more you know of him the more you pour it out your cup runth over and it just keeps pouring out of you it keeps ministering to those around that is giving an account this is where we're getting into understanding what Christ did for us and that we do the same. Look at what it says here number two verse two that he no longer shall live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lust longing of men but to the will or determination choice of God. God chooses you. So are you just let's talk about this for just a quick moment because I really want this idea to come across. Are you just saying, "Okay, God, give me, give me, give me, give me, give me." But you're not taking any action. You're not, you know, faith comes by hearing the word of God. So, you have to act on your faith. Remember the woman who touched the hem of his garment? She was unclean. And since she kept being unclean, she couldn't leave the tent because it was against the law to leave unclean because then you would make all the others unclean around you. But she made a choice, a determination. She heard about a man named Jesus. She heard about his healings and she said, "I'm going to go touch him unclean and all because I need my healing. I want my healing." And she went and got it. And she was healed. And the Lord said, Jesus said to her, "Your faith has made you whole." She took action. She didn't just lay there and wait and say, "Lord, magically work through me." How can he work through you if you don't even take the steps or if you don't get up out of bed or you don't even go to the pulpit or you don't even go and ask pastors, "Can you teach?" Or even if you don't even go and say, "Can I pray with you?" If you're not taking the actions, now sometimes we want to say, "Okay, Holy Spirit, I don't know if I should do this." You're going to have to open the door. And then he does, you need to take that action because it is time for you to move in that area because you will eventually give an account of your talents and gifts. And there are a lot of parables that Jesus talks about this. You can go research that. I want you to do your homework. Uh I only have 30 minutes. I'm trying to give you just a 30 minute teaching where it's not going to take your entire day, but that you do learn a good golden nugget. And I'm hoping, you know, out of this entire message, I'm not here to condemn or judge you. You do you with God, but I am here to encourage you to say, get up, use your talents that he gave you. Use them to minister. Amen. Continuing on in chapter four of First Peter, we're in verse 6. For this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are dead, that they might be judged according to the men in the flesh, but live according to the God in to God in the spirit. You see, the gospel was preached to everyone. people who won't receive, people who receive but don't live, and people who receive and choose the determination to live for Christ. But that gospel is the same to every single one of us. Jesus Christ died on the cross for our sins and he has forgiven us. He has redeemed us. Now the question is, how much do you want to share that with others? Did he really really save you? Did it mean something to you? Did it transform the inside of you. This is something to think about because if it did, you ought to be willing to show the world how much it changed you. You know, as much as I spend time in the secret place with the Lord, I'm certain that as I go out, people notice and see things. And I always tell them, it's Jesus, King of glory. Amen. That's who we're giving the glory to is Jesus. Verse seven, but the end of all things is at hand. Be ye therefore sober or sound minded and watch abstain from why unto prayer. Now that's another thing that every one of us can do in the secret place with the Lord is pray. I've taught on this many times. You can go look at my past teachings. But I teach on intercessory prayer. And I know that God answers my prayers. I come before him. One, I I pray for myself because I really don't know how many people are praying for me. And even so, I need to forgive myself and I need to just humble myself before the Lord and start fresh and new. His mercies are new every morning. So then I come to him in likemindedness. I'm trying to be likeminded, trying to do what he does. I come and renew my humbleness and forgiveness every morning because that's how he taught me to do that. And then I go in and I ask for my family. I ask for my church. I ask for and I pray and intercede for healing, for deliverance, for belief. Uh this is the things that I do because that is what's been given to me. And every one of us have that responsibility to pray for our household, to pray for our loved ones, to pray for our church, to pray for our pastors, to pray for our elders, to pray for our neighborhoods, to pray for our community, to pray for our government, to pray for our presidents, whether we like them or not. These are our responsibilities and you will give an account to that. So what you measure after the fire burns the hay and the wood when you're there before God, all that's left is whatever survived the fire. What will survive the fire? I'm going to tell you right now, prayer will. And I've got a long I mean I've been praying for so long and for so many years that if it was a continuous book it would be very long miles upon miles long. I will be given an account. I have to give an account to that. But at least I can say I did this much. Could I have done more? Sure. But I didn't just do a little. I gave what I could the he in the here and the now because I know I'm going to have to give an account. I pray for healing. Does that mean everybody gets healed? No. I don't know why. I don't understand that. God is who he is. You see, God is God because he knows what's in the minds and in the hearts of the individual. And for whatever reason, if he chooses not to heal you, that's on you and him. That's not me. But my part is to pray for you. And if I did my part, I partnered with Jesus and I said, and he said to ask and whatever you ask, it shall be given. I ask for healing over people. So, I'm expecting it. So, whatever the other side of that is that I don't know just reminds me that I'm not God. But it does remind me that I still have to do my duty to be prepared to give an account for what's coming for me when I'm judged. And I've got to do it soberly. You know, that's another thing is um we have to be very cautious uh cautious conscience of all of the things that are going on around us because there are doctrines that are being taught that are false and we you know will God accept you in heaven whether you give a very little bit of account or no account. You everything you did wasn't for God but you called on him at one time. And it says in Romans 10:13, "Anyone who dwells upon the name of the Lord shall be saved." Will you be saved? Yes. This has nothing to do with salvation. This has to do with your reward as you come into it. Now, that doesn't mean you go and do the things that you do just because you're expecting a reward. You can start that way, by the way. There's nothing wrong with that, per se. But what happens is when you start doing things for the Lord and it starts transforming you on the inside because your your spirit changes, your soul changes, your goals change, you become a more godly, righteous person because now you're putting God first. You're putting love first. You're seeing people through his eyes because he's changing you. Now there's an account that he will love to see. And that's another thing is when I think about giving an account to the Lord am I looking at it as judgment? No. I'm looking at look how much I did for you Lord. This is what I could do and I'm so well pleased for what I've done because I yeah I could have done better but I was able to do this. This is when you have to just say look Lord and he will say you did perfect. You did good. come in thy good faithful servant. We need to be prepared spiritually, physically, mentally, in our minds, and in our hearts through the word of God, through being in his presence, through prayer ready for that day because it is coming. Don't think that you won't be judged because you will be. Everybody will be judged. That's that first scripture we read. Verse eight. And above all things, have fervent charity among yourselves, for charity shall cover the multitudes. And you know, when somebody obviously shows you they're not worthy. And it really you can see that they they don't love themselves. This is when you show them how much you love them because then God is showing his love through you to them. Love will wipe out that sin. This you will be given an account just even on that. You may not even know it. In fact, when you're there that day, there can be things that you did you didn't even realize, good and bad. But the best part of it is is when you see those moments that you show love, that you show godliness and you were just like, "Here you go, Lord. You're just going to show what you do." And you don't even it's something you don't even remember. But at that moment, you're going to look back and go, "Wow, Lord, you did that. Look what you did through me. It it I hope this is motivating you and encouraging to you to realize you want more of the scriptures to come out of you, more of his love because he will move through you and you will have a good account to give. Amen. Verse nine, use hospitality one to another without grudging. I have a lot of scriptures, but I'm going to take a moment here to if you notice this generation back 20 years ago, you know, uh my mom and neighbors, they would always have something prepared, danishes, donuts, pastries, and and always have some sort of drink around that uh you know, like a tea or lemonade. And so when visitors came in, you were ready for visitors. Your house was always But then all of a sudden this generation came up where someone knocks on the door. We're hiding behind them. Nobody's home. Well, look what it says. This is scriptural. Use hospitality one to another without grudging. Receive your guest in. If the house isn't clean, don't worry about it. Just say, "Hey, you know what? I'll get to it." And then go clean your house. What if God shows up at your house all of a sudden? Don't you think you ought to be prepared? Just like getting being prepared to give an account, you ought to be prepared to have a visitation from the Lord. That's another one that I wasn't expecting out this teaching free verse 10. As every man hath received the gift, even so minister the same one to another as good stewards, manager of the manifold grace of God. You see, you've been given the gift of grace. God has forgiven you. You are a manager of that grace. You ought to be giving that same gift to everyone around. So if you're walking in hatred towards Trump or hatred towards the way the world is working or acting, you need to forgive. Manage your grace because you'll be given an account for that. Oh hallelujah. Verse 11. If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God. You see now every spoken word ought to be words of God that are good, that are scriptural. This is why I teach. You know, when I realized I I could teach and the Lord was showing this all to me, I was like, you know, I I can't do this. But then as I began to study the scriptures in the Holy Spirit, because, you know, I didn't go to seminary school. I didn't get taught by man. I'm not taught by man. I'm taught by the Holy Spirit. So, I what the Holy Spirit reveals to my mind and my heart. And that is what I'm going to show you through scripture. And I will tell you when I'm wrong. If I'm wrong and I missed it, I will tell you. I remember misquoting uh Joel 21:13. I was quoting as Joel 2:32. I did that for like four uh teachings in a row. Caught myself through the Holy Spirit and I was able to correct. I didn't go back into uh those videos. I just went ahead and corrected myself on that next video and moved forward. But you see, this is where we have this gift that we ought to be managing. We ought to be sharing it with others and we should be teaching whether we're good at it or not. The Holy Spirit is Yeah. Here's the funny thing is you're probably not even hearing exactly what I'm saying. You're hearing what the Holy Spirit is talking to you in your mind. And it's funny because I'll hear comments of what people say I taught and I'll be like, I don't remember teaching on that. But see, that was the Holy Spirit teaching it through this message because your heart was in that place and he was working in your heart at that time. It's how the Holy Spirit works. This is what a good uh a great teacher and uh word of God minister is. I love that. I love that. Verse 11. Starting at verse 11 again, if any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God. If any man minister, let him do it as of the ability which God giveth, which is what I was just talking about. Whether you're a very good speaker or not, I know that some of my early teaching, they're hard to hear, but I still did it. And the more you practice, the better you get at it, the more you do it. So, if you're a person who's been put into ministry, you minister, and you do it to the ability which God has given you. And then says here at the end of verse 11, that God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom be praise and dominion forever and ever. Amen. You see, you're doing it for God. You're not doing it for if somebody gets saved or not. You're you're saying, "Okay, I'm going to teach this word, but it's to give him the glory. The glory belongs to God. This isn't about me and how many people I can reach. I have a very small following if if even it comes and goes." So, you know what? Again, I do this because I know someday I'm going to be a given. I have to give an account for the talent that he has put in me. So, I'm using that talent to the best of my ability. Same with intercessory prayer. I've been given two talents. Hey, you may have been given 10. You ought to be showing them, ministering, manifesting them through the word of God, giving him the glory. You know, I I follow a lady who who does cooking and while she's in there cooking, she's talking about Jesus. She's demonstrating the grace of God just in her spoken words as she talks about her life and then she's teaching how to cook and she's talking about her life. That's a ministry and a very powerful one. She's got a very large following. If you want to know who that is, it's Brenda Gant and she's got cookbooks and stuff. I like her because of her belief in Christ and she's ministering. Oh, this is the time where we just need to stand with Christ and demonstrate him in everything we do because we will be giving an account. Don't be lazy about that. If you're given a house, keep it up. Have some respect. It is hard. It's harder to respect something that was given to you than it is if you worked at it. If you built your own house, believe you and me, you're going to have every nook and cranny always clean because you put sweat and blood into it. Amen. Now, with the gift of Christ, there is you're not putting anything in. It's a gift. He's given it to you for free. So, with that gift, what do you do? Well, I'm going to get self-control, gift of the Holy Spirit, and I'm going to manifest and teach his word through whatever ability I can. Amen. So here it says in verse 12, "Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you as though some strange uh some strange thing happened unto you." But see here, I love this. Beloved, think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you as though some strange thing happened unto you. the time you feel heat or you're under pressure or something didn't go right, you you feel it, then all of a sudden you're calling out to God like it's a strange thing. You have God all the time. He is your gift. You need to be demonstrating him all the time. But rejoice in as much as ye are partakers of Christ's suffering, that when his glory shall be revealed, you may be glad also with exceeding joy. You see, you are walking testimony. Whatever trials you've been through and whatever trials I've been through, they're they're different. Some are similar, but they're different. And if we're all sharing our trials, we're sharing Christ and his grace because his grace still supersedes all of this. And eventually one day we're going to be in the presence of God past judgment, past all of that. We're just going to be basking in his presence. I don't know what else heaven is going to be like, but just for that, I look forward to being in the presence of my Lord and Savior. Amen. Verse 14. If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye, for the spirit of glory and of God rested upon you. On their part, he is evil spoken of, but on your part, he is glorified. You're glorifying him. You're showing the world, look at I've got peace because he is king of glory. Amen. Verse 15. But let none of you suffer as a murderer, as a thief, or as an evildoer or as a busy body in other men's matters. You see, we don't have to be in other men's matters. Notice this says by murderers, too. You know, we murder people through our spoken word. You need to humble yourself before the Lord. Ask him to help you control your mouth to have that selfcont control. Let that peace supersede everything else in you. And that peace comes from him, not you. Yet, if any man suffer as a Christian, let him not be ashamed. You see, when you're a believer in Christ and you suffer, you know what? You're showing the world, I'm a believer. You know what? He's king of glory. I don't care what I'm going through. Eventually, I'm going to be in his presence forever. So, this doesn't bother me. I have peace because of who he is. That is where believers need to be standing strong in today. Because this is where we show the world how much better it is to be a be a believer. Because I don't know how anyone can suffer somebody dying or somebody suffering without having Christ in you. We need that Christ in us. We need his peace. We need that. For the time has come that judgment must begin at the house of God. And it first begin at us. What shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of God? Oh, it begins with the word of the church. So, it has to begin in us. So, we have to take make a choice, a decision and say, I'm going to give a good account. That means I'm going to give all the talents that God has given me. I'm going to utilize him to share the gospel. Whether I'm giving gas at the gas station or putting gas in my car or I'm at the grocery store, somebody asks me or I look at somebody, we make eye contact. Hey, are you a believer in Christ? He can give you peace if you need it. Let's pray together. That is putting Christ first in you. And that is getting the talents. You're going to give a good account afterwards. Verse 18. And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear? Wherefore there wherefore let them that suffer according to the will of God commit the keeping of their souls to him in welloing as unto a faithful creator. You see you are letting him have control and letting him determine. So when you do come into your presence you can say listen Lord with what I had and what I could do here's what I did. It isn't much but it's as much as I can give you. And he's gonna say, "Well done, good and faithful servant." Just because one, you believed, and two, you took it seriously. You took your belief seriously, you took the grace of God seriously. Oh, hallelujah. And in 1 Timothy 4 1-5, now the spirit speaketh this expressly, that in the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of devils, speaking lies and hypocrisy, or having their conscience seared with a hot iron, forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from meats which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which believe and know the truth. For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused if it be received with thanksgiving. for it is sanctified, made holy by the word of God and prayer. I bring these scriptures in. I know I'm going over time a little bit here, but I want you to see something here. When people are telling you, you need to be on a diet, you shouldn't eat that, don't eat these meats, this is bad for you, this causes cancer, they're walking in the flesh. They're not walking in the spirit. As a believer in Christ, your body is made whole. You are already healed. you have and if you're taking holy communion and you you take the grace of God seriously, you take his presence and have that relationship with him, you're you're in your devotionals with him, you're in the secret place with him, and you go and talk to him boldly and confidently and say, "Lord, you know what? I'm doing this for you." And as you do that, because that's what he's teaching you. He's teaching you the boldness and the confidence. As you express that in his presence, God almighty, the creator. When you go out into the world and you're getting gas or gas station or the grocery store, you're it's much smaller thing to talk to somebody else in the flesh, human, than it is to talk to God, the creator.

Isn't that amazing? come to the revelation and let the realization that as you're going to give an account eventually one day you want to give a good account. You want to give an account that says listen Lord you gave me this talent and some people will do it at 100%. Some will do it at 60%. Some will do it at 30%. But do something with the talent that he has given you. Amen. Let's close in a word of prayer. Father God, we thank you for your word and we bless your word. Thank you for teaching us how to give a good a good account that we are ready to do that that in every moment of every day to the best of our ability because we're flesh. We're we're human and it is challenging and difficult but because we're not God. But we're going to try to be as much like you as possible and as much use the talents that you have given us. Help us use those talents. Help us take up the responsibility of the grace that you've given us to utilize it to save more souls, especially as we come closer to the end times here. Father God, thank you. Thank you for motivating us, encouraging us to share the grace and the gospel with others to let people know that we can be at peace because it is your peace that can that surpasses understanding and that is within us because you gave it to us. You are king of glory. We love you, praise you, and honor you and worship you. And in the name of Jesus, we pray. Amen. Amen. God bless you. I will see you in the next message. Bye bye. words: “Well done, good and faithful servant.”

GIVE AN ACCOUNT

Minister Lisa Kane

July 25, 2025

Lisa Kane, in her message “The Good Seed,” begins with prayer and frames the teaching around Matthew 13:24–30, where Jesus shares the parable of a man sowing good seed in his field, only for the enemy to sow tares among the wheat. She explains the distinction between historical events like Noah’s flood and symbolic parables meant to convey deeper truths.

Breaking down Jesus’ interpretation of the parable (Matthew 13:37–43), she identifies the Son of Man (Jesus) as the sower of the good seed, which represents the children of the kingdom, while the tares represent the children of the wicked one, sown by the devil. The field is the world, and the harvest at the end of the age will bring separation by God’s angels: the wicked will be gathered and cast into the fire, while the righteous will shine in the kingdom of their Father.

The teaching highlights God’s decision-making process throughout history, particularly His choice to preserve humanity after the flood and ultimately redeem mankind through Jesus Christ. It stresses that each person must decide whether to follow righteousness or remain in sin, with eternal consequences.

Lisa calls on believers to urgently warn and intercede for unbelievers, as deception and confusion from the enemy run rampant. She underscores that choosing Christ makes one a child of the good seed, shining with God’s light and destined for eternal life. The message concludes by urging believers to seek first the kingdom of God, walk in righteousness, and continue sowing the Word to bring others into salvation.

THE GOOD SEED

Minister Lisa Kane

July 10, 2025

This teaching, rooted in Psalm 1:1–2, explores the blessings of delighting in the law of the Lord. Lisa Kane begins with prayer, emphasizing the power of God’s Word to transform lives. She explains that “blessed” means happy, and happiness comes from refusing ungodly counsel, avoiding the path of sinners, and not sitting with the scornful. Instead, believers are to seek counsel from the Bible and godly people, entering the secret place with the Lord for strength and renewal.

Through examples such as Paul and Silas worshipping in prison, she illustrates how joy can be present even in suffering when one abides in God’s Word. The teaching highlights the importance of meditation—keeping Scripture in thought day and night—as a way to cultivate peace, forgiveness, and fruitfulness. Like a tree planted by rivers of water, the believer prospers when rooted in God’s Word, bearing spiritual fruit and reflecting God’s love to others.

Kane contrasts the righteous with the ungodly, who are unstable and carried away by worldly trends. She reminds listeners of God’s ultimate judgment, stressing the need for repentance and intercessory prayer for the lost. Finally, she exhorts believers to prioritize time with God, to let His Word shape desires, and to walk in the joy and prosperity that come from seeking Him first.

The message closes with a prayer of thanksgiving for God’s transforming presence, urging believers to continue delighting in His law so that His love, peace, and power overflow in their lives.

DELIGHTING IN THE LAW OF THE LORD

Minister Lisa Kane

June 29, 2025

This message, “The God Who Formed You,” begins with Jeremiah’s calling, where God tells the prophet, “Before I formed thee in the belly, I knew thee.” From this passage, the teaching highlights how God is not only the Creator of life but the One who molds, sanctifies, and ordains individuals for His purposes before they are even born. The lesson underscores that every believer has a divine calling, and God equips them with His Word and Spirit to fulfill it.

Lisa explains how Jeremiah’s experience demonstrates God’s authority to appoint, prepare, and protect those He calls, even in the face of fear and opposition. She connects this truth to the life of every believer—affirming that God has written our names, our design, and our destinies in His book from the moment of conception. Psalm 139 reinforces that we are “fearfully and wonderfully made” and continuously in God’s thoughts.

The teaching also stresses the power of God’s Word placed in our mouths—just as He touched Jeremiah’s lips—enabling us to speak life, truth, healing, and authority over nations, circumstances, and personal struggles. Testimonies and reflections illustrate God’s personal involvement and protection in everyday life, reminding listeners that He is always near.

Ultimately, the lesson calls believers to recognize their identity in the God who formed them, seek His kingdom first, and boldly proclaim His Word to others. By knowing that God has overcome the world, we can live with peace, confidence, and purpose, trusting in the One who knew us before we were born and continues to walk with us daily.

THE GOD WHO FORMED YOU

Minister Lisa Kane

June 22, 2025

In this lesson, Lisa Kane examines Daniel 9:24 and the prophetic vision delivered by the angel Gabriel, which outlines a 490-year period assigned to Israel and Jerusalem. This period serves as God’s “to-do list” to bring an end to transgression, sin, and iniquity, to establish everlasting righteousness, to fulfill prophecy, and to anoint the Most Holy One—Jesus Christ.

The teaching explains how 483 years were fulfilled from the decree to rebuild Jerusalem to the crucifixion of Christ, leaving one final seven-year period still unfulfilled. This final period, described in Daniel and Revelation, corresponds to the tribulation where the Antichrist will rise, Israel will experience great turmoil, and God will pour out His wrath as both judgment and mercy—giving humanity one last chance to repent.

Lisa also ties in Jesus’ teaching on forgiveness, emphasizing the significance of forgiving “seventy times seven” (490) as a reflection of God’s boundless mercy. Just as God extends repeated opportunities for repentance, believers are called to walk in continual forgiveness. The lesson closes with a call to action for the church to embrace grace now, boldly share the gospel, and help others escape judgment by pointing them to Jesus, whose mercies are new every morning.

THE 490th

Minister Lisa Kane

June 15, 2025

In this lesson, Lisa Kane explores Matthew 10, highlighting the call to boldly confess Jesus before men and the blessings that follow when believers put Him first. The teaching emphasizes that fear of people and circumstances must be replaced by fear of God, who alone holds eternal authority over body and soul. Through examples from personal life, scripture, and ministry, Lisa illustrates how God reveals hidden truths, gives direction through His Spirit, and confirms His presence in moments of obedience.

Believers are reminded that confessing Christ publicly stems from the intimacy of the “secret place” with God, where prayer and devotion cultivate strength for witness. Prioritizing Jesus above family ties, personal desires, or worldly concerns may bring division, but it also secures the believer’s eternal standing before the Father. The message concludes by affirming that Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross proves our immense value to Him, and in response, we are called to love Him above all, walking daily in boldness, faithfulness, and love.

WHEN YOU PUT JESUS FIRST

Minister Lisa Kane

June 8, 2025

In this teaching, Lisa Kane of House of Faith Ministries shares insights on “The Foundation to Walking in the Gifts of the Spirit” from Ephesians 4. She begins by stressing that spiritual gifts must rest on a solid foundation of humility, meekness, patience, and love. Walking in these virtues allows believers to exercise their calling—whether teaching, evangelizing, shepherding, prophesying, or simply serving with kindness—in a way that glorifies Christ rather than themselves.

Lisa underscores that the gifts are given not for personal recognition but for building up the church in unity under one Spirit, one Lord, and one faith. She reminds listeners that while doctrines may differ among teachers, love and prayer must guide how we relate to one another, avoiding division and deception. The teaching highlights that every calling is valuable, whether seen or unseen, and that true effectiveness comes from submitting to the Holy Spirit and allowing Him to transform hearts.

Ultimately, the message encourages believers to pursue their calling with obedience, grounded in love, and anchored in Christ, so that the body of Christ may grow in maturity and unity until His return.

THE FOUNDATION TO WALKING IN THE GIFTS OF THE SPIRIT

Minister Lisa Kane

June 1, 2025

This teaching explores the profound meaning of water baptism through Romans 6. Paul’s message makes clear that believers are not merely symbolically washed, but spiritually united with Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection. Going under the water signifies dying to sin, while rising out of it represents new life in Christ.

The lesson emphasizes that this truth provides both knowledge and power: knowledge that sin has no dominion over the believer, and power to choose righteousness over sin. By grasping this reality, Christians can resist temptation, walk in freedom, and bear fruit that reflects their new identity in Christ.

Through scriptural teaching and practical insights, the message highlights baptism as the moment of transformation—death to the old self and resurrection into life with Christ. The believer’s journey from bondage to freedom is a gift of grace, empowering them to live boldly, free from fear, and filled with the hope of eternal life in Jesus.

BAPTIZED INTO JESUS' DEATH - RISEN TO LIFE

Minister Lisa Kane

May 25, 2025

Lisa Kane, speaking for House of Faith Ministries, opens with prayer and introduces the teaching titled “Pre-Mid-Post-Tribulation Rapture: Does It Matter?” (1 Thessalonians 5:9). She stresses that while debates about rapture timing continue, the central truth is that believers are not appointed to God’s wrath and should focus on spreading the message of salvation.

The teaching examines prophetic passages in Revelation, highlighting the severity of the tribulation—such as demonic torment during the trumpet judgments—and contrasts this with God’s consistent pattern of delivering the righteous before judgment, as seen in the days of Noah and Lot. Drawing from Abraham’s intercession in Genesis and Paul’s “mystery” of transformation in 1 Corinthians 15, the lesson argues for a pre-tribulation rapture, underscoring God’s justice and mercy.

Ultimately, the message insists that speculation over timing should not overshadow the greater call: to share the gospel urgently. Salvation is free now, and those who call on the name of Jesus Christ will be saved (Romans 10:9, 13). The teaching closes with a sinner’s prayer, inviting listeners to accept Christ today rather than risk facing the horrors of God’s wrath.

PRE, MID, POST TRIBULATION RAPTURE: DOES IT MATTER?

Minister Lisa Kane

May 17, 2025

This message, drawn from John 2, explores the significance of Jesus turning water into wine at the wedding in Cana of Galilee. Lisa Kane begins by setting the context: the wedding takes place after Jesus’ baptism, His wilderness temptation, and the calling of His disciples. The third-day reference connects both to Jewish Passover timing and to prophetic layers pointing to God’s redemptive plan.

The heart of the teaching focuses on Mary’s discernment. She identifies the lack of wine—a symbol of insufficiency—and brings the problem to Jesus. This models how believers today must notice the needs around them, whether in people’s health, circumstances, or spiritual condition, and immediately bring those concerns before the Lord. Jesus’ exchange with Mary highlights the importance of faith and obedience: while His “hour” had not yet come, the miracle is released when the servants follow His word.

Lisa explains that the water pots symbolize believers filled with the Word of God, ready for the Spirit to transform the “water” into the “wine” of new life, joy, and the power of the Holy Spirit. Just as the servants obeyed and witnessed the miracle, believers partner with Jesus by declaring His Word in faith, releasing God’s power into situations. The teaching emphasizes that miracles manifest not by human works but through faith, obedience, and the authority of Jesus’ name.

The account concludes with two outcomes: the bridegroom’s reputation is saved and the disciples believe in Jesus. This demonstrates Jesus’ nature as Savior—concerned with both practical and eternal matters—and the role of miracles in building faith. The message closes by calling believers to walk in right standing with God, apply His Word over identified needs, and actively partner with the Holy Spirit in these end times to bring salvation, healing, and deliverance to others.

THE CANA OF GALILEE WEDDING

Minister Lisa Kane

May 10, 2025

In this teaching, Lisa Kane leads us into a study from Hebrews chapter 7, focusing on the biblical encounter between Abraham and Melchizedek. She explains how Abraham’s tithe to Melchizedek, the “king of righteousness” and “king of peace,” is a foreshadowing of Christ’s eternal priesthood. Unlike the Levitical priests, who were mortal and subject to death, Melchizedek is presented as a type of Christ—a priest without beginning or end—pointing to Jesus, who lives forever and receives offerings that testify to His life.

Lisa explores how Abraham’s response of giving a tenth demonstrates the principle of blessing: Melchizedek blessed Abraham, and Abraham returned that blessing with his offering. This cycle of blessing mirrors how believers today, as priests and priestesses in Christ, both receive from God and give back through tithes, offerings, intercession, and service.

Drawing on passages from Malachi 3 and the New Testament, the teaching highlights that tithes and offerings are not only financial but also spiritual acts of faith that release God’s blessings and protection, rebuke the devourer, and testify that Jesus is alive. Lisa also encourages believers to see themselves as the true offering received by Christ, as their lives and testimonies bear witness to His resurrection and ongoing work.

The teaching concludes with a strong call for bold faith and public witness in these end times: confessing Christ, living as His priests, blessing others, and trusting God’s promises of provision and eternal life.

THE OFFERING

Minister Lisa Kane

May 3, 2025

This message, titled “Heaven’s Throne,” explores the majesty and purpose of God’s throne in heaven as described in Psalm 103, Isaiah 66, and Revelation 4. The teaching explains that God has intentionally set up His throne as both a seat of power and a spiritual covering, reminding us that His dominion rules over all. By examining John’s vision in Revelation, the message describes the awe-inspiring details of the throne room—lightnings, thunderings, the rainbow, the 24 elders, the four living creatures, and the continual worship offered to God and the Lamb.

The teaching emphasizes that this heavenly atmosphere of praise is not only God’s protection against corruption but also an example for believers to follow. Just as Job was hedged in by God’s protection, Christians are called to remain under God’s covering through faith, prayer, worship, and obedience, rather than relying solely on denominational traditions or man-made commandments. Practical applications are given on how to establish a hedge of protection in daily life, including worship, Scripture, and consistent fellowship with God.

Finally, the message connects the throne room to end-time prophecy, reminding listeners that now is the time to be saved and walk faithfully with Christ. The throne of God assures believers of His ultimate plan to end sin, bring everlasting righteousness, and gather His people under His eternal protection. The teaching closes with a call to live in readiness, place oneself under God’s covering, and boldly share the good news before the final days unfold.

HEAVEN'S THRONE

Minister Lisa Kane

April 18, 2025

Let Your Hands Be Strong is a prophetic teaching based on Zechariah chapter 8, where God calls His people to fasten their strength to His Word and promises. The message unfolds the prophetic vision of Jerusalem’s future restoration during the millennial reign, a time when peace, longevity, and righteousness will flourish under God’s rule. It highlights the difference between today’s age of grace, where salvation is freely offered through Christ, and the coming seven-year period of God’s wrath, known as the Great Tribulation.

The teaching explains that Zechariah’s prophecy points to events that have not yet been fulfilled—such as Jerusalem being called the “city of truth” and children safely playing in its streets—revealing the hope of God’s future blessing after times of judgment. It warns that unbelievers who live through the tribulation will face severe trials, while those who now accept salvation in Christ will be spared. The lesson underscores God’s righteousness as Judge, His promise to Israel’s remnant, and His ultimate victory over Satan.

Ultimately, the teaching challenges believers to let their hands be strong—seizing God’s Word with faith, proclaiming salvation boldly, and standing firm in preparation for Christ’s return. It is both a call to study prophecy with spiritual discernment and an urgent reminder that today is the day of salvation.

LET YOUR HANDS BE STRONG

Minister Lisa Kane

April 11, 2025

In this teaching, “When Hezekiah Turned His Face to the Wall,” Lisa Kane explores the powerful account of King Hezekiah in Isaiah 38, 2 Kings 20, and 2 Chronicles 32. Hezekiah, a righteous king who restored the temple and led Judah back to honoring God, faced a prophetic word of death from Isaiah. Instead of accepting his fate, Hezekiah turned his face to the wall, prayed with sincerity, reminded God of his faithful walk, and wept bitterly. This heartfelt plea moved God to extend his life by fifteen years and grant deliverance from Assyria.

The message emphasizes the importance of an intimate relationship with God, where prayer is not ritualistic but a genuine conversation that moves His heart. Lisa highlights that when we walk uprightly before the Lord and face adversity, we too can boldly approach Him, pour out our hearts, and expect His intervention. Yet, the story also serves as a reminder that pride can hinder gratitude and blessings, and that humility keeps us aligned with God’s will.

Ultimately, this lesson encourages believers to reflect on their own walk with God—asking whether they are living faithfully, seeking His kingdom first, and ready to turn their face to the wall in prayer, trusting Him to move for His glory and for their good.

WHEN HEZEKIAH TURNED HIS FACE TO THE WALL

Minister Lisa Kane

March 22, 2025

This teaching, based on Romans 14, explores what it means to be fully persuaded in your mind. It emphasizes that faith is both a heart and a mind issue, requiring believers to be confident and assured in what they believe, while also showing grace to others whose faith may be stronger or weaker in different areas.

Examples from Scripture and real life—such as differing convictions about food, holy days, or health—illustrate how personal persuasion shapes behavior and outcomes. The message warns against judging others for their level of faith or their practices, reminding listeners that each believer ultimately belongs to the Lord and will give an account to Him.

At its core, the teaching calls Christians to maturity: to hold firmly to their own convictions while respecting the journey of others, to pray rather than condemn, and to allow God to unify and strengthen His people. By being fully persuaded in our minds, we align our thoughts with God’s truth, experience greater peace, and live out our faith with confidence and love.

FULLY PERSUADED IN YOUR MIND

Minister Lisa Kane

March 1, 2025

In My Voice and My Supplications, the focus is on the power of the spoken word in prayer. Drawing from Psalm 116, the teaching highlights the psalmist’s declaration of love for the Lord because He heard his voice and supplications. The lesson emphasizes that speaking out loud in prayer is an act of faith, releasing words that impact the atmosphere and invite God’s intervention.

Illustrations from scripture, such as Proverbs 15:23 and Isaiah 38 with King Hezekiah’s prayer, show how calling upon God with sincerity can bring deliverance, healing, and even a reversal of circumstances. The message also points out that both blessings and curses are carried by words, urging believers to choose life-giving speech.

Practical examples connect biblical truth to daily life—whether in times of crisis, sorrow, or everyday needs—teaching that God bends His ear to listen to His people. The teaching concludes with encouragement to continually confess God’s Word, apply it over every circumstance, and cultivate a lifestyle of prayer that brings joy, protection, and a deeper relationship with the Lord.

MY VOICE AND MY SUPPLICATIONS

Minister Lisa Kane

February 1, 2025

This teaching explores the meaning and significance of John’s proclamation, “Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world” (John 1:29). It explains how Jesus’ role as the sacrificial Lamb was foreshadowed in the Passover account of Exodus, where the blood of the lamb marked the homes of Israel for protection from the destroyer.

The message draws connections between the Old Testament shadow and the New Testament fulfillment, showing how Jesus’ crucifixion, His shed blood, and the Last Supper instituted the new covenant. Just as the Israelites were preserved by the lamb’s blood on their doorposts, believers today are covered by the blood of Christ, which speaks a better word than Abel’s blood and causes destruction, curses, and judgment to pass over.

Through the cross, Jesus fulfilled the law, redeemed humanity, and provided believers with protection, pardon, and victory. Communion is presented as a continual reminder of His sacrifice and covenant, sealing believers under His covering. The message closes with a call to humility, repentance, and faith, urging listeners to stand firm in Christ’s redeeming blood and look forward to His return—not only as the Lamb but also as the coming King.

BEHOLD, THE LAMB OF GOD

Minister Lisa Kane

January 19, 2025

This message explores John 15:1–17, where Jesus describes Himself as the true vine and believers as branches. The teaching highlights how salvation brings immediate cleansing through Christ’s spoken word, but also how ongoing transformation occurs as we abide in Him. Believers are reminded that cleansing is not something we accomplish by ourselves; it is the continual work of Christ purging old habits, renewing the heart, and producing fruit.

Abiding in Christ means maintaining a living relationship with Him—through prayer, worship, and immersion in His word. From this abiding flow the fruits of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. These fruits not only bless the believer but also serve as a testimony to others, drawing them to Christ.

The teaching also emphasizes the necessity of pruning, the process by which God removes what hinders spiritual growth. Though pruning may be painful, it results in greater fruitfulness and joy. Love is central to this abiding relationship: Jesus commands believers to love one another with the same benevolent and affectionate love He has shown.

Ultimately, believers are reminded that they are chosen and ordained by Christ to bear fruit that remains. Through His word, His cleansing, and His abiding presence, Christians are empowered to walk in transformation, resist sin, and live in joy as true friends of Jesus.

DO YOU KNOW YOU'RE CLEANSED IN CHRIST?

Minister Lisa Kane

January 12, 2025

In this teaching, Lisa Kane explores John 11 where Jesus declares, “I am the resurrection and the life.” Using the story of Lazarus, the message emphasizes that God allows certain trials and delays not to harm us, but so His glory may be revealed in greater measure.

The disciples represent believers who follow but often lack awareness, Martha reflects those who question God’s timing yet still acknowledge His authority, and Mary portrays those who, despite deep faith, sometimes grieve without recognizing Christ’s present resurrection power. Through each encounter, Jesus reveals different dimensions of belief—leading to the ultimate miracle of Lazarus being raised from the dead.

The teaching drives home the truth that Jesus is not only the promise of eternal life after death, but the source of life here and now. As believers, we are called to walk in that resurrection power, to trust His timing, and to glorify God in every situation—knowing that nothing, not even death, can overcome the life of Christ in us.

I AM THE RESURRECTION AND THE LIFE

Minister Lisa Kane

January 5, 2025

In this teaching, Lisa Kane examines the meaning of the seven spirits of God as revealed in Revelation 4:5 and 5:6, highlighting how Jesus, the Lamb of God, possessed them and through His victory has made them available to all believers. She connects this reality to the church of Sardis in Revelation 3, showing how Christians can appear alive yet spiritually dead when distracted by the world, living with one foot in the Lord and one in the world.

Believers are exhorted to be watchful, strengthen what remains of their faith, repent, and remember the authority given to them in Christ. Through the example of Joshua and the priests at Jericho, Lisa illustrates how the seven spirits symbolize divine power and intercession, equipping believers to stand firm, blow the trumpet of warning, intercede for others, and bring down spiritual walls through the name of Jesus.

The message emphasizes that even if a believer feels unworthy or distant, the authority of Christ remains within them through the Holy Spirit. By confession, repentance, faith, and speaking the Word, Christians can walk in deliverance, healing, and victory. Ultimately, this teaching calls believers to embrace their role as priests, live watchfully, and operate in the fullness of the seven spirits of God, remembering always that they are more than conquerors through Christ.

SEVEN SPIRITS OF GOD

Minister Lisa Kane

December 29, 2024

This message begins with Micah 5:2, which foretells the birth of a ruler in Bethlehem, tying the prophecy to the fulfillment of Christ’s coming. The teaching highlights that while Israel anticipated a king, Jesus first came as the Savior and Redeemer, fulfilling countless prophecies and providing salvation for all who believe.

From John 6, the lesson focuses on the feeding of the 5,000, where Jesus revealed Himself as the Bread of Life. Through this miracle, the disciples witnessed both His provision and His divine authority, yet the people misunderstood, seeking Him only for physical satisfaction. Jesus corrected their perspective, teaching that true bread comes from the Father and is found in Him alone.

The teaching also connects the miracle of provision to the deeper spiritual truth that eternal life is received by believing in Christ. His body, represented by bread, and His blood, represented by wine, symbolize redemption, healing, and eternal union with God. The message concludes by emphasizing that believers are already “on the other side” spiritually through Christ’s finished work on the cross, and they are called to live in His joy, peace, and victory while proclaiming Him as the true Bread of Life.

BETHLEHEM - EPHRATAH - HOUSE OF BREAD FRUITFULNESS

Minister Lisa Kane

December 22, 2024

In this teaching, Lisa Kane shares a heartfelt message on the power and necessity of dwelling in His presence. Beginning with Psalm 16:11, Lisa explains that life in God’s presence is fresh, alive, and filled with fullness of joy. The psalmist demonstrates how to speak to God, to one’s own soul, and to others, acknowledging that true strength comes not from our own goodness but from God’s mercy, grace, and redemption.

Lisa emphasizes that entering God’s presence is an intentional act—one that requires stopping, speaking His Word, and putting Him first, regardless of circumstances. She teaches that God’s presence is not limited to church, but is available anywhere: at home, in the car, or in quiet moments of prayer and worship. Through verses in Psalm 16, she highlights how God provides protection, counsel, and stability, holding us together even in seasons of adversity.

The message also warns against relying on “other gods”—whether people, doctors, or distractions—reminding believers that faith and trust must be placed solely in the Lord. Lisa explains that healing and renewal flow naturally from being in God’s presence, where sin and its consequences cannot stand. Drawing from both Old and New Testament scriptures, she shows that calling upon the name of the Lord brings salvation, deliverance, and preservation in every situation.

Ultimately, In His Presence encourages believers to seek God first, to call on His name, and to delight in Him above all else. The result is joy, peace, strength, and renewal—benefits that far surpass anything the world can offer.

IN HIS PRESENCE

Minister Lisa Kane

December 15, 2024

In “Altering the Outcome,” Lisa Kane teaches on the transformative power of God’s Word and the believer’s authority to change the course of life’s challenges. Drawing from John 1, Genesis 1, Romans 8, and key passages on Jesus’ miracles and resurrection, the message shows how the spoken Word of God carries creative and life-giving power.

Lisa shares a personal testimony of standing in faith for her mother’s healing from cancer, demonstrating how prayer and declaring the name of Jesus bring peace and hope in the midst of trial. She explains that believers are not bound by the law of sin and death but live under the law of the Spirit of life, empowered by the same Spirit that raised Christ from the dead.

Through examples such as Jesus walking on water, raising Lazarus, and altering natural laws, listeners are encouraged to recognize that faith and spoken declarations in Jesus’ name can shift circumstances—whether in health, finances, or any area of life. The teaching emphasizes that salvation is not only forgiveness of sins but also deliverance, healing, and preservation, all accessed through confession of Jesus as Lord.

Ultimately, the message calls believers to live by the Spirit, speak God’s promises over their lives, and trust Him to alter outcomes according to His power and will.

ALTERING THE OUTCOME

Minister Lisa Kane

December 8, 2024

In this message, Lisa Kane draws from Romans 8:15–17, Galatians 3:25–27, and 1 John 3–5 to explain the powerful truth of spiritual adoption. Believers have not received a spirit of bondage but the Spirit of adoption, testifying that they are God’s children. Through this relationship, Christians are heirs with Christ, sharing in His glory and authority.

The teaching explains how deliverance works as the Holy Spirit—described as a “current of air”—fills believers, replacing spirits of fear, anger, bitterness, and hatred. By recognizing their sonship and walking in partnership with the Spirit, Christians are transformed from within, strengthened to live victoriously, and empowered to cast out demons, heal the sick, and proclaim freedom.

Water baptism, faith, and obedience are presented as key markers of this identity, not as empty rituals but as evidence of the Spirit’s anointing. Lisa highlights that being a child of God means walking in faith, loving one another as a moral and spiritual obligation, and demonstrating God’s power and authority in daily life. She also shares personal testimony of healing and deliverance through the anointing of the Holy Spirit as proof of this truth in action.

Ultimately, this message encourages believers to rise above oppression, embrace their authority in Christ, and live as God’s royal priesthood. By faith, they overcome the world, because greater is He who is in them than he who is in the world.

YOU ARE A CHILD OF GOD

Minister Lisa Kane

November 24, 2024

In this message, Lisa Kane draws from Jonah 1–3 and Deuteronomy 30 to show how God gives reprieves when His people pray and turn from sin. She compares Jonah’s reluctance to obey God’s command to preach in Nineveh with America’s divided political landscape, where lies, abortion, and ungodly agendas threatened the nation. Through prayer and intercession, God’s people sought His mercy, and the election of Donald Trump and JD Vance is presented as a spiritual reprieve—a pause in judgment and an opportunity for restoration.

Lisa highlights Jonah’s struggle, the sailors’ recognition of a spiritual storm, and Nineveh’s repentance as examples of how prayer and obedience shift outcomes. Likewise, America’s choice to reject lies and embrace life has delayed judgment and opened the door for God’s Spirit to move in the nation. This reprieve, however, is temporary; believers are urged not to become complacent but to continue interceding, repenting, and choosing life so that God’s covering remains.

The message closes with a call to recognize God’s sovereignty, remain vigilant in prayer, and live in alignment with His Word, knowing that choosing life and truth brings blessing, while rejecting lies and death invites destruction.

REPRIEVE

Minister Lisa Kane

November 17, 2024

In this message, Lisa Kane unpacks the powerful declaration of Jesus in John 14:6: “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No man cometh unto the Father but by me.” The teaching highlights that Jesus is more than just the access point to God—He is our ongoing progress, the truth that sets us free, and the life that sustains us. Through His obedience to the Father and His completed work on the cross, believers are redeemed, reconciled, and empowered to walk in the same authority He carried.

Lisa explains how trials, persecution, and daily struggles can weigh on the soul, but the prescription Jesus gives—faith, obedience, repentance, and reliance on His name—brings victory and deliverance. Scriptures such as Psalm 35:3 and Romans 10:9 are used to show how confession and declaration of Jesus as Lord establish healing, freedom, and breakthrough. She also reminds believers of the importance of holy communion, dwelling in God’s presence, and obeying Christ’s commandments as the ongoing prescription for health and wholeness.

The message weaves together biblical teaching, personal testimony, and practical application. It encourages believers to call on the name of Jesus in every area—health, finances, relationships, and spiritual growth—knowing that His Spirit dwells within us. Lisa urges listeners to embrace their identity as joint-heirs with Christ, walk in deliverance from sin and sickness, and live abundantly as a testimony to God’s glory.

Ultimately, this teaching stirs faith, awakens revival, and calls for a renewed commitment to Jesus as the only way, the eternal truth, and the source of everlasting life.

I AM THE WAY

Minister Lisa Kane

November 10, 2024

In this message, Spiritually Minded, Lisa Kane opens with Romans 8:6: “For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and peace.” She teaches that carnality—living according to the body’s desires and natural inclinations—produces bondage, condemnation, and ultimately death. In contrast, living by the Spirit brings true freedom, peace, and eternal life.

The teaching explains how faith in Jesus Christ removes condemnation and redeems us from the law of sin and death. Lisa stresses that believers must learn to recognize when they are walking in the flesh and intentionally choose to walk in the Spirit instead. Through fasting, prayer, and the confession of God’s Word, we discipline our bodies and align our minds with spiritual truth.

Practical examples are given: rejecting fear when receiving a negative doctor’s report, declaring the authority of Jesus over sickness, anger, or depression, and relying on the Holy Spirit to replace destructive emotions with love, peace, and joy. Deliverance is described as a process of shifting thought patterns from fleshly responses to spiritual responses, allowing the Holy Spirit to purge strongholds and fill believers with God’s presence.

Ultimately, Lisa teaches that being spiritually minded means allowing God’s Spirit to dwell in us, transform our thinking, and manifest the fruits of the Spirit—love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. Walking in the Spirit pleases God, empowers believers to overcome sin and death, and positions us as heirs and joint-heirs with Christ.

The message closes with encouragement to live daily in spiritual awareness, choosing life and peace through Jesus, and allowing His light to shine within us as we prepare for eternity with Him.

SPIRITUALLY MINDED

Minister Lisa Kane

November 3, 2024

In this teaching, Lisa Kane explores 1 John 2:21–28 to show how Christians can discern lies by holding fast to the truth that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. She explains that denying Christ’s divine identity equates to walking in deception and aligns with an antichrist spirit. The message highlights that lies can manifest in subtle ways—through culture, politics, or even persuasive emotional appeals—and that believers must evaluate actions and fruits, not just words.

Lisa applies this principle to contemporary issues, including the upcoming election, abortion debates, and cultural agendas, urging believers to judge truth by God’s Word rather than public opinion or manipulation. She warns against being seduced by deceptive messages and stresses the role of the Holy Spirit in guiding believers into truth.

The teaching concludes with a call to abide in Christ, walk boldly in truth, and let the Word overflow in everyday life. By dwelling in the Spirit and acting in faith, Christians can remain confident and unashamed when Christ returns, living as witnesses of His righteousness.

HOW TO KNOW IF SOMEONE IS LYING TO YOU

Minister Lisa Kane

October 27, 2024

In this teaching, Lisa Kane explores the revelation of the Sabbath as more than a commandment—it is an intermission designed by God for His people’s rest, renewal, and recognition of His provision. Beginning with Luke 14 and John 5, she shows how Jesus healed on the Sabbath, challenging the Pharisees’ legalistic view and revealing that God’s work of healing and compassion never ceases. These events demonstrate that the Sabbath is not about restriction but about encountering God’s restorative power.

Turning to Exodus 16 and 31, the message highlights how God provided manna in double measure on the sixth day, ensuring Israel could rest on the seventh without lack. This miracle served as a sign across generations that He alone is Lord and sustainer. The Sabbath becomes not just physical rest, but a divine pause where believers witness God’s provision and protection.

Lisa applies this revelation to the New Covenant, showing that the believer’s body is now the temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Corinthians 6). Rest is not limited to one day but can be practiced daily by entering the secret place with God (Psalm 91). The double portion manifests as spiritual, emotional, and physical renewal, giving strength for life’s battles, intercessory prayer, and ministry. Even in trials—such as caring for loved ones during illness—God provides sustaining rest and peace through His presence.

The teaching concludes with practical encouragement: to intentionally set aside intermission time with the Lord, whether an entire day or moments throughout the week. By doing so, believers experience God’s hedge of protection, refreshment of spirit, and the miracle of provision that confirms His lordship.

THE INTERMISSION DOUBLE PORTION

Minister Lisa Kane

October 16, 2024

Lisa Kane opens the message with prayer, acknowledging God’s power and faithfulness. The central scripture is taken from 2 Chronicles 20:15, where God tells King Jehoshaphat, “Be not afraid nor dismayed by reason of this great multitude, for the battle is not yours, but God’s.” This biblical foundation demonstrates how God prepared victories for His people even from generations prior, showing His sovereignty over history and present struggles.

Lisa weaves this teaching into a personal testimony concerning her mother’s ongoing battle with cancer and recent medical complications. Despite devastating news and multiple delays in treatment, she testifies to God’s sustaining hand through visions, dreams, and the unwavering faith of her family. These experiences parallel Jehoshaphat’s reliance on God, revealing how the Lord still intervenes on behalf of His people today.

The message also extends outward to the global stage, reflecting on recent natural disasters such as Hurricane Milton, and how prayer played a role in lessening its impact. Lisa stresses the importance of preventive prayer—praying ahead of time against storms, hardships, and attacks of the enemy. She calls believers to pray fervently for Israel, for their families, and against the schemes of the adversary, reminding them that no weapon formed against God’s people shall prosper.

In closing, she reassures listeners that while battles may rage, the ultimate victory is already secured. The war is won through Christ, and God Himself is our shield, buckler, and King of Glory. The message ends with prayer, lifting up personal and collective needs, while declaring confidence in God’s faithfulness and peace.

THE BATTLE IS NOT YOURS: PERSONAL TESTIMONY

Minister Lisa Kane

October 10, 2024

This message, When Satan Provokes, opens with 1 Chronicles 21:1, where Satan tempted David to take a census of Israel. Though the act itself seemed harmless, David’s decision revealed misplaced trust and led to devastating consequences for the nation. Joab warned against it, but obedience to the king outweighed discernment, resulting in God’s displeasure and the death of 70,000 men.

Through this account, the teaching explains how Satan uses provocation to lure God’s people into disobedience, causing harm beyond the individual to entire communities. David’s response—humbling himself, donning sackcloth, confessing his sin, and offering himself in place of his people—foreshadowed Christ’s sacrifice, where the ultimate penalty of sin was placed upon Him.

The message highlights that while sin carries consequences, repentance and humility before God restore fellowship and position us under His mercy. Believers today, equipped with the authority of Christ and the protection of salvation, can resist provocation and stand firm in the Spirit. Scriptures like Romans 7–8 and Psalm 23 affirm that there is no condemnation for those in Christ, and His rod and staff bring comfort and deliverance.

Ultimately, the teaching calls believers to vigilance against Satan’s schemes, immediate repentance when they fall, and unwavering trust in Jesus’ finished work at the cross, which nullifies condemnation and secures eternal victory.

WHEN SATAN PROVOKES

Minister Lisa Kane

October 6, 2024

In this teaching, Lisa Kane explores the profound truth that Gentiles, through the gospel, have become fellow heirs with Christ (Ephesians 3:6). She explains how Jesus, the Word made flesh, fulfilled God’s plan by temporarily setting Israel aside so that the good news could reach the Gentiles. Through Paul’s revelation, believers now understand the mystery hidden for ages: that we are joint heirs with Christ, empowered by grace to share in His promises and authority.

Lisa highlights that this inheritance calls us not only to salvation but also to walk in the same power Jesus demonstrated, empowered by the Holy Spirit to do even greater works. She emphasizes the importance of humility, obedience, and being rooted in love, for love is the foundation of all spiritual fruit and gifts. Drawing from John 14:12 and Paul’s testimony, she illustrates how believers are called to live boldly, ministering in unity as the body of Christ, showing God’s love in action.

The message closes with a call to abide in Christ through prayer, Scripture, and obedience, allowing His love to transform hearts and His Spirit to manifest through gifts and fruit. As fellow heirs, believers are encouraged to embrace their divine calling, walking in confidence, boldness, and love to bring salvation and transformation to the world.

FELLOW HEIRS

Minister Lisa Kane

September 20, 2024

In Do You Know His Love, Lisa Kane opens with Luke 23:46, reflecting on Jesus commending His spirit into the Father’s hands as the ultimate act of trust and love. The teaching examines redemption through passages in Psalms, Galatians, Titus, 1 Peter, and Romans, showing that Christ’s sacrifice was foretold, fulfilled, and remains the central act of God’s covenant love.

The message highlights redemption as a ransom paid to release humanity from the dominion of sin, death, and the curse of the law. Through the imagery of Jubilee, Lisa explains how Jesus restored believers to their rightful inheritance as children and heirs of God. The teaching emphasizes that salvation is a gift—not earned by works—but received through confession and faith in Christ.

Listeners are urged to let God’s love penetrate deeply, transforming their emotions, thoughts, and actions, producing zeal for good works and a testimony of His power. Lisa stresses the importance of speaking faith, confessing Christ openly, and remembering the cross as the supreme demonstration of divine love. The message closes with an invitation to salvation through the sinner’s prayer, calling all to embrace Christ’s redeeming love and to live watchfully in expectation of His return.

DO YOU KNOW HIS LOVE

Minister Lisa Kane

September 12, 2024

In “There is Only One God and You Will Know”, Lisa Kane teaches from Isaiah 44 and supporting scriptures to highlight God’s declaration of His uniqueness and supremacy. Through a personal dream of idols collapsing, Lisa illustrates how false gods—whether physical idols or modern ideologies—are powerless and destined to fall. She stresses that transformation begins when we truly know who God is, as all Scripture is designed to reveal Him and confirm His sovereignty.

The message warns against false prophets and counterfeit teachings, reminding believers to test everything against the Bible. By understanding God’s Word, Christians can discern truth from deception and avoid the traps of modern false ideologies. Lisa points to prophecies in Isaiah, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, and Revelation, showing how God continually declares that all people will ultimately know He is Lord. She also connects these prophecies to Christ as Redeemer and King, explaining how Jesus fulfills God’s promise to save, deliver, and reveal Himself to all flesh.

Throughout, the teaching emphasizes the believer’s responsibility to study Scripture, walk in faith, and guard against deception. Lisa concludes with a call to transformation, urging believers to confess Christ, grow in relationship with Him, and stand firmly on the truth that there is only one God. The message closes in prayer, thanking God for His Word, His protection from false teaching, and His revelation of Himself as the only true and living God.

THERE IS ONLY ONE GOD AND YOU WILL KNOW

Minister Lisa Kane

September 4, 2024

In this teaching, Lisa Kaine opens with Revelation 20:15, emphasizing the eternal consequences for those whose names are not written in the Book of Life. She explains the concept of judgment after death, distinguishing between the believer’s judgment at the Bema Seat of Christ and the unbeliever’s judgment at the Great White Throne.

Drawing from Hebrews 9:27–28, she addresses the apparent contradiction of individuals like Enoch and Elijah who never died, connecting them to prophetic roles in Revelation as potential witnesses. The teaching explores how rapture, though instantaneous, can also be understood as a form of death, aligning with Paul’s declaration that all are appointed to die once.

For believers, judgment is not about salvation but about works—the quality of their lives tested by fire (1 Corinthians 3). Precious works will endure as jewels and rewards, while empty deeds will be burned away. Believers are urged to live as God’s temple, maintaining a true relationship with Him rather than settling for superficial devotion.

In contrast, unbelievers will face the Great White Throne judgment (Revelation 20:11–15). Their names not found in the Book of Life will result in condemnation and eternal separation from God in the lake of fire. Even those who considered Jesus merely a prophet or lived by “good works” apart from faith will be judged according to what was engraved in the books.

The message closes with a call to salvation through Jesus Christ, affirming His atoning work on the cross and offering the sinner’s prayer as a step toward eternal life. The overarching theme is God’s mercy and grace, urging listeners to secure their eternal future by faith in Christ and by living in obedience and service to Him.

JUDGEMENT: BELIEVER VS UNBELIEVER

Minister Lisa Kane

August 28, 2024

This teaching from Zephaniah 2 stresses the urgent call to seek the Lord before the day of His anger arrives. By examining key terms in the King James translation, it reveals the deeper meaning of seeking God through prayer, worship, humility, and righteous living. Lisa Kane explains that the “day of the Lord” refers to a future period of tribulation and judgment, when those who reject Christ will face God’s wrath, while those who seek Him now will be hidden and protected.

The message illustrates how pride, arrogance, and idolatry lead to destruction, as seen in the downfall of nations and lineages throughout Scripture, while righteousness and meekness bring restoration and blessing. Listeners are urged to repent, embrace Christ, and live in humility so they may escape coming judgment. The teaching concludes with a prayer of salvation, underscoring God’s faithfulness to preserve His people and extend His grace to all who turn to Him.

WHEN YOU SEEK THE LORD: ZEPHANIAH 2

Minister Lisa Kane

August 21, 2024

In this message, Lisa Kane opens with 1 Corinthians 12, emphasizing that believers, though diverse, form one united body in Christ. She explains that every member—whether strong or weak, prominent or unseen—has a vital place in God’s design. Using scriptural insights, Lisa unpacks the meaning of spiritual gifts, showing how ministries extend beyond the traditional “five-fold” into a broader range of roles such as apostles, prophets, teachers, helpers, administrators, and more.

The teaching highlights the responsibility of stronger believers to honor and uplift those who are weaker, guarding against judgment and division, and instead co-laboring in unity. Lisa stresses that ministry is not burdensome but flows out of joy and relationship with God, whether through small acts of kindness or larger leadership roles. She illustrates this with testimonies of believers who followed their heart’s joy—such as caring for children or serving the elderly—and found God opening doors for ministry.

The message closes by reaffirming that all gifts and callings come from the Holy Spirit, who equips and directs each believer. Lisa encourages her listeners to seek God personally, spend time in His Word, and allow Him to reveal their unique ministry path, reminding them that being part of Christ’s body is both a privilege and a calling to love, serve, and build one another up.

ONE BODY

Minister Lisa Kane

August 14, 2024

In this teaching, Lisa Kane continues her series on women in the Bible, focusing on Rizpah, a concubine of King Saul and the mother of two of his sons. The message begins with 2 Samuel 21:1, where a three-year famine during King David’s reign is revealed to be a result of Saul’s violation of Israel’s covenant with the Gibeonites. Saul’s act of bloodshed against a protected people brought a generational curse upon the land.

Lisa explains the history of the Gibeonites, tracing their covenant with Israel back to Joshua 9, where they used trickery to secure protection but nonetheless became bound under Israel’s oath before God. Because Saul broke this covenant, the famine was a direct judgment from God. David, seeking atonement, delivers seven descendants of Saul—including Rizpah’s two sons—to the Gibeonites, who hang them to satisfy justice.

The message highlights Rizpah’s grief and perseverance as she guarded the bodies of her sons from birds and beasts until the rains returned. Her vigil displayed both mourning and a desperate connection to the consequences of sin and covenant-breaking. David, moved by her devotion, later gathers the bones of Saul, Jonathan, and the executed sons, burying them with honor. Only then does the curse lift, and God restores rain to the land.

Lisa draws out the principle that curses can affect entire generations, but forgiveness, repentance, and mercy can restore blessing. She warns against the spiritual dangers of covenant-breaking, murder, and bitterness—contrasting Rizpah’s suffering with David’s merciful actions. The teaching concludes with an exhortation for believers today to intercede for their families, churches, and lands, forgiving sins, nullifying curses, and claiming God’s inheritance of rain and restoration.

RIZPAH: BLOOD CURSE

Minister Lisa Kane

July 18, 2024

The speaker shares a powerful testimony of divine encounters beginning with a dream on September 2nd, in which repeated numbers and visions pointed to a prophetic countdown of Jubilee and restoration. This led to a series of life shifts, including a move on December 31st, and culminated with a fresh word from the Lord on September 25th declaring, “The new has begun.”

He connects these experiences to a larger prophetic framework, including Chuck Pierce’s timeline, identifying this season as the doorway into what may be the Third Great Awakening. Drawing from Isaiah 26–27, the teaching warns of the Leviathan spirit—a serpent-like force that blinds believers, manipulates human DNA, and hinders true worship and revival. Scriptural parallels with Job and the tabernacle illustrate how Leviathan entwines itself within humanity, blocking spiritual illumination and breeding pride.

The message emphasizes that God is raising up His people, armed with His mighty sword, to expose and defeat Leviathan. This will unlock unprecedented deliverance, healing, and restoration in preparation for the end-time harvest. The call is urgent: believers must reject fear, pride, and unbelief, embrace their new creation identity in Christ, and step boldly into the season of awakening and revival that God has initiated.

SPIRIT OF LEVIATHAN

Pastor Marcos Marrero

July 8, 2024

In this teaching, Lisa Kane continues her series on Women in the Bible by focusing on Lydia, a successful businesswoman and devout worshiper of God introduced in Acts 16. The message begins with prayer, inviting God’s presence and guidance, then connects Lydia’s story with Jesus’ declaration in Luke 19:40 that even stones would cry out if His followers were silent—emphasizing that God uses whomever He wills, including women, to carry His word forward.

The teaching outlines Lydia’s conversion under Paul’s ministry, her baptism with her household, and her role in hosting and supporting the apostles, providing a home large enough for gatherings that likely became the foundation of the church in Thyatira. Lisa highlights Lydia’s independence, her financial success in the trade of purple cloth, and her courage in housing Paul and Silas after their release from prison.

The message then ties Lydia’s leadership to Revelation 2, where the church in Thyatira is addressed, underscoring both commendations for faith and love, and warnings against false teaching (symbolized by Jezebel). Lisa stresses the importance of discerning truth from false doctrine, walking in forgiveness, and relying on the power of the cross for healing and freedom from sickness.

Finally, the teaching broadens the discussion to the transformation brought through Christ’s resurrection. By citing John 20 and Romans 8, Lisa emphasizes that believers—male and female—are no longer “lower than angels” but joint heirs with Christ, empowered to minister in His name. While affirming the biblical pattern of pastoral leadership through husbands and wives together, she reminds women not to discount themselves, since God uses anyone willing to serve Him. The message concludes with encouragement to hold fast to true doctrine, walk in forgiveness, and live in the authority of Christ’s redemption, bringing glory to God.

LYDIA - WOMEN IN LEADERSHIP

Minister Lisa Kane

June 27, 2024

In this continuation of the Women of the Bible series, Lisa Kane teaches her second message on Esther, titled Freedom Beyond the Law. Beginning with Esther 3:13, the lesson examines Haman’s decree to destroy the Jews and Esther’s courageous intercession before the king. Though the king could not revoke the decree, he authorized a counter-proclamation empowering the Jews to defend themselves. This parallel illustrates how God’s law, while holy, cannot be undone; instead, Christ fulfilled the law and established a new covenant that sets believers free.

Lisa then moves to the Ten Commandments in Exodus 20, explaining how the law identifies sin and reveals human inability to remain righteous in their own strength. She highlights the generational consequences of sin, the danger of idolatry, and the tendency to place routines, possessions, or desires above God. The message emphasizes that the law brings bondage, but Christ’s sacrifice—His blood upon the mercy seat—redeems believers and breaks curses, granting freedom from condemnation.

Drawing on Colossians 2, 1 Corinthians 6 and 15, and Galatians 3, Lisa underscores that believers are new creations, no longer bound by ordinances or human doctrines. Instead, they are called to walk in the Spirit, stand on God’s promises, and exercise faith for healing, provision, and victory. Through testimonies and scriptural application, she shows how living in Christ’s freedom transforms mindsets, renews strength, and empowers a life of joy and spiritual authority.

The message concludes with an exhortation to embrace liberty in Christ, seek first God’s kingdom, and reject the weight of man’s traditions and the law’s condemnation. By choosing to walk in the Spirit, believers can live in the fullness of God’s promises and testify of His power.

ESTHER FREEDOM BEYOND THE LAW

Minister Lisa Kane

June 20, 2024

The message opens with authoritative prayer over the city—declaring Jesus’ Lordship and the end of demonic rule—and sets the theme: faith that truly works in power. From 2 Thessalonians 1:11, believers are called to be found worthy through faith that moves mountains—not by hype, but by knowing God and refusing inner doubt. Daniel 2:22 shows why mountains don’t move: divided hearts hide “deep and secret things” where doubt lives. God, who is light, reveals these dark places when invited.

Jeremiah 33:3 issues the invitation: “Call to Me”—God alone can retrieve what we cannot, including early wounds, rejections, and generational injuries that still sabotage trust. Entering covenant (pictured in Abraham’s sacrifices) means letting the Word cut between spirit and soul (Heb 4:12), guarding the promise from “birds of prey,” and staying through the “dreadful darkness” until God’s fire passes through and gifts faith.

Ezekiel 44:4 portrays the result: once the inner gate is opened and cleansed, the glory of the Lord fills the temple—we are that temple. Job’s journey models deliverance by stripping and restoration; his daughters’ names picture the process: the Dove (Spirit) comes, the bark is stripped, then inner strength and beauty are bestowed (Job 42). This requires the cross: laying down Adam’s old coverings so we’re clothed with Christ’s glory, which intimidates darkness and empowers ministry.

Practical applications include: ask God to reveal unsearchable things; forgive ancestral/offending voices; submit to the Spirit’s surgical work; persevere through fire; and live from the intimacy Jesus offers (Rev 3:20). The warning from John 6:66—turning back when the word feels “too hard”—is answered by a call to courageous surrender. The message closes by blessing the congregation and prophesying a fountain of living water rising in the house, flowing to the city with end-time deliverance and awakening.

LACKING

Pastor Marcos Marrero

June 17, 2024

In this third teaching on Eve within the Women in the Bible series, Lisa Kane explores the theme of Restoring Dysfunctional Relationships. She begins with a review of God’s perfect design for relationships in creation, showing how Adam and Eve’s formation reflects divine order, covering, and mutual submission under Christ. This pattern extends to all areas of life—marriage, family, friendships, and even workplace connections.

The message then shifts to the account of Cain and Abel as an example of dysfunction. Cain’s rejection of God’s requirement for a blood sacrifice led to offense, anger, and ultimately murder. Lisa highlights how God warned Cain that sin was at the door, but also gave him the authority to rule over it. The teaching shows that dysfunction often begins within the individual when hurt and anger go unchecked, but restoration is possible through Christ.

Key steps are outlined:

Confession of Jesus as Lord brings deliverance, healing, and salvation.

Holy Communion reminds believers of Christ’s sacrifice, applying the broken body for healing and the blood for cleansing.

Forgiveness and letting go of anger stop sin in its tracks.

Self-control (temperance), a fruit of the Spirit, empowers believers to walk in love, peace, and restoration.

Lisa emphasizes that relationships—whether with family, spouses, coworkers, or oneself—can be healed by bringing them back under Christ’s covering. Through prayer, confession, and reliance on the Spirit, dysfunctional patterns are broken, sin is defeated, and God’s perfect design for relationships is restored.

EVE - RESTORING DYSFUNCTIONAL RELATIONSHIPS

Minister Lisa Kane

May 23, 2024

In this continuation of the Women of the Bible series, Lisa Kane focuses on Eve, exploring her creation and its significance in the construct of human relationships. Using Genesis 1:27 and 2:21–24 as the starting point, the teaching emphasizes how God formed man and woman with complementary roles that reflect His image. The message highlights that the foundation of relationships is built when Adam leaves his parents and cleaves to Eve, establishing the pattern of unity, faith, and dependence upon God.

Lisa explains that relationships are designed to mirror the order God set: man submitting to Christ, and woman partnering with and supporting man under God’s covering. Drawing from Ephesians 5, the lesson clarifies submission, self-control, and love within marriage, addressing misconceptions and stressing mutual prayer, humility, and unity in Christ as the true strength of relationships.

Practical insights are given on handling conflicts, practicing forgiveness, exercising self-control through the fruit of the Spirit, and maintaining prayer as the cornerstone of relational health. Husbands are instructed to love their wives sacrificially, while wives are called to respect and support their husbands, both drawing strength from Christ as the ultimate foundation.

The message closes with encouragement to allow the Holy Spirit to transform personal attitudes and actions, ensuring relationships thrive according to God’s design. A follow-up teaching is promised on how to address and restore broken relationships.

EVE - RELATIONSHIP PART 1

Minister Lisa Kane

May 16, 2024

In this message, Lisa Kane introduces the Women in the Bible series, starting with Eve as the mother of all living. Drawing from Genesis, she explains that Adam was created from the dust of the ground while Eve was formed from Adam’s rib, showing God’s design of unity, protection, and partnership between man and woman. This creation account also reflects the fullness of God’s image, represented in both male and female.

Lisa then connects Eve’s story to the deeper spiritual truth of being born again. Using the imagery of physical birth—water and blood—she parallels it with Jesus’ words to Nicodemus about being born of water and the Spirit. Through Christ’s crucifixion, where His heel was bruised and His side pierced, the Church was birthed by blood and water, fulfilling God’s promise from Genesis.

The teaching highlights how Eve’s creation, physical birth, and the union of man and woman serve as foreshadows of spiritual rebirth through Jesus Christ. It shows that believers, born again by water (the Word) and the Spirit, are called to live as one body in Christ, reflecting God’s image and carrying His kingdom into the world. The message closes by reminding men to cover and protect their wives, women to guard the inner parts of their husbands, and both to walk together as one flesh, empowered by the Spirit of God.

EVE BORN AGAIN

Minister Lisa Kane

May 9, 2024

In this message, Lisa Kane highlights the believer’s responsibility when receiving the Word of God. Using 1 Corinthians 13:9 as a foundation, she explains that since we only “know in part,” we must be careful to measure every teaching and prophecy by the truth of Scripture. Listeners are urged to accept what aligns with the Bible and to reject anything false or misleading.

Lisa shows from passages like Joshua 24:15 and Deuteronomy 30:19 that God has always given His people the power of choice—life or death, blessing or cursing. Likewise, when prayers or teachings contradict God’s Word, believers have the authority to reject them. Discernment, rooted in knowledge of the Word (Hebrews 4:12; 5:14), is key to avoiding deception.

The message stresses that discernment must be exercised in the spirit of love, as described in 1 Corinthians 13, and never in condemnation. Since Jesus came not to condemn but to save (John 3:17), believers are called to walk in forgiveness and mercy, avoiding the role of the accuser which belongs to Satan (Revelation 12:10). Instead, they are to handle error with humility, prayer, and grace, leaving judgment in God’s hands.

Finally, Lisa reminds listeners to continually seek God’s Spirit in the “secret place,” rely on His Word, and let their actions of love and forgiveness confirm their faith. True discernment flows from knowing Scripture, walking in love, and yielding to the Holy Spirit. The message closes with a call for believers to take responsibility for guarding their hearts and minds, choosing to serve the Lord faithfully, and allowing the Spirit of God to lead them in truth.

YOUR RESPONSIBILITY AS A LISTENER OF THE WORD OF GOD

Minister Lisa Kane

April 26, 2024

In “Suffer Reproach,” Lisa Kane draws from 1 Timothy 4:10 to explain the reality of laboring and enduring reproach for the sake of trusting in the living God. The message explores how reproach—whether small irritations like daily frustrations or larger accusations and judgments—serves as both a test and an opportunity for growth.

Through scripture in Matthew 7, Matthew 6, and Romans 10, Lisa emphasizes the importance of self-judgment before judging others, practicing forgiveness, and recognizing that the true accuser is Satan. She teaches that when we face correction or accusations, our natural human response may be anger, but the supernatural response is prayer, forgiveness, and calling upon the name of Jesus.

Illustrating with practical examples, she shows how even minor frustrations can be transformed into moments of spiritual growth when surrendered to Christ. The message calls believers to live with integrity, seek God in the secret place through prayer, and embody forgiveness as Christ did. By doing so, Christians not only protect themselves from the snares of reproach but also become trustworthy examples of faith and purity, shining as true witnesses of the gospel.

SUFFER REPROACH

Minister Lisa Kane

April 18, 2024

Lisa Kane delivers the teaching “My Father, Your Father” from John 20:17, highlighting Jesus’ first post-resurrection encounter with Mary Magdalene. In this pivotal moment, Jesus declares that He ascends to “My Father and your Father, My God and your God,” signifying the believer’s adoption into God’s family through His victory over death. Lisa explains the power of this revelation: Jesus, fully man and fully God, became the first resurrected body and opened the way for humanity to experience God as Father personally.

The message explores how Jesus’ three days in the heart of the earth fulfilled prophecy, how He led the faithful of old from paradise into heaven, and how His resurrection shook history itself. Drawing from Paul’s words in Ephesians 4, Lisa teaches on the gifts Christ gave the church—apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers—designed to edify and unify the body of Christ. She emphasizes that true ministry must be rooted in forgiveness, love, and the power of the Holy Spirit.

Finally, Lisa challenges listeners to recognize their calling, walk in unity, and extend forgiveness rather than judgment, for Christ Himself came not to condemn but to save. The message closes with an exhortation to pray for the church, leaders, and the world, living in the reality that Jesus’ Father is now our Father, and His God is now our God.

MY FATHER, YOUR FATHER

Minister Lisa Kane

April 11, 2024

In this message, Lisa Kane explores the theme of “I Am” by grounding it in both Old and New Testament revelations. Opening with Luke 22:31–32, she highlights how Jesus prayed for Peter during a time of trial, underscoring that Christ prays for all believers so that their faith will not fail. The lesson then examines Job’s testing in Job 1, showing that even Satan must ask permission from God to afflict, proving that God remains fully in control of every circumstance.

Through scriptures such as Exodus 3:14, John 14:6, John 11:25, John 15:1, and Matthew 28:20, the teaching demonstrates how God revealed Himself as the eternal “I Am,” and how Jesus fulfilled and embodied that identity as the Way, the Truth, the Life, the Resurrection, the True Vine, and the ever-present One. Believers are reminded that to yield themselves to God is to submit to His righteousness and live as transformed “works in progress” under His protection and grace.

The message also challenges listeners to reflect on their daily choices—whether they yield their lives to sin or to righteousness—and to recognize that serving Christ is not a burden but a light and easy yoke. By humbling themselves before the great “I Am,” believers can walk in renewed strength, protection, and intimacy with God, reflecting His presence to a watching world.

Ultimately, this teaching calls believers to trust in God’s sovereignty, rely on Christ’s intercession, and embrace the ongoing process of transformation that comes from belonging to the eternal “I Am.”

I AM

Minister Lisa Kane

March 21, 2024

Drawing from Jacob’s encounter at Bethel (Genesis 28:16–19), the teaching unveils a biblical framework for “city gates” as spiritual portals between the natural realm and the heavens. Jacob discovers a gate, marks it with oil, and names it—modeling how believers identify, consecrate, and steward places of God’s presence. The message explains the interplay of realms (earth, the “second heaven” of opposition, and the “third heaven” of God’s rule) and shows how prayer, worship, and obedience “find the gate,” much like historic revivals that tapped a spiritual well.

Acts 17:26–28 is used to show that God pre-appoints times and boundaries so people will seek and “grope” for Him—implying that gates exist right where we live. Isaiah 28:6 frames the gate as the place of (1) wise judgment for life-shaping decisions and (2) warfare where strength “turns back the battle.” Isaiah 29:21 warns that offenses and empty words are Satan’s snares to move gatekeepers off post. The conflict at Bethel (Amos 7) illustrates prophetic authority at the gate: when darkness claims territory, God’s word confronts and reclaims it.

Practical application flows through testimonies of household covering, anointing thresholds, and deliverance: name the gate (peace, healing, etc.), anoint it (symbolizing the Spirit and Christ’s blood), guard it with Scripture, and prophesy God’s purposes over families and regions. Believers are urged to stand in Christ’s authority (Luke 10:19), break generational patterns, and persist in seeking until the “switch” of revelation flips. The call to action: find your gate, consecrate it, hold your ground, and let living water flow for the salvation, healing, and freedom of many.

CITY GATES - SPIRITUAL MATTERS

Pastor Marcos Marrero

March 18, 2024

Lisa Kane delivers a powerful teaching from Psalm 24 titled “The King of Glory.” The message begins by affirming that the earth and everything in it belongs to the Lord, including the authority over the devil, who is subject to God’s control. Believers are called to ascend the hill of the Lord with clean hands and pure hearts, which is made possible through Christ’s sacrifice and the believer’s freedom from sin as explained in Romans 6.

The teaching highlights the role of prayer in the secret place, where believers act as “city gates” through which the King of Glory enters to do battle. When believers intercede for their families, cities, nations, and leaders, God Himself, strong and mighty in battle, brings victory and restoration. Psalm 24’s repetition of “Lift up your heads, O ye gates” underscores the power and urgency of inviting God to reign.

Throughout the message, Lisa stresses that all victories belong to the Lord, and believers must give Him the glory. The message ties the theme to the resurrection of Jesus Christ, celebrating His victory over sin and death, and pointing to God’s ultimate plan revealed in Daniel 9:24 to bring an end to sin, reconcile iniquity, and establish everlasting righteousness. The teaching closes by urging believers to continue in prayer, trust God’s timing, and rejoice in His dominion and kingdom that endure through all generations.

KING OF GLORY

Minister Lisa Kane

March 18, 2024

The message opens in prayer, inviting the Holy Spirit’s blessing promised to those who read Revelation. The teaching then walks through a compressed timeline:

Church Age & Rapture: The faithful (Philadelphia) are caught up; the lukewarm (Laodicea) face purification on earth.

Two Witnesses (1,260 days): Identified as Elijah and Enoch; they prophesy, are killed, raised, and ascend—after which a representative vacuum on earth sets the stage for the Antichrist.

Antichrist’s Unopposed Rule (1,290 days): Global control and coercion to receive the mark of the beast. An angel warns (Rev 14:9–11): taking the mark brings eternal judgment.

Harvests & Martyrs: Christ reaps those who refused the mark; they appear on the sea of glass mixed with fire (Rev 15:2–3), singing the songs of Moses and the Lamb—Jews and Christians purified and rewarded before entering the temple presence.

Seven Bowl Judgments (Rev 16): Targeted, righteous judgments mirror spiritual realities—incurable sores (uncleanness), waters to blood (corrupted life), scorching sun (judgment of sun-worship), darkness over the beast’s throne, culminating in a cataclysmic quake in which mountains vanish and Babylon is fully judged.

Heavenly Scene (Rev 19:1–10): While earth is judged, heaven resounds with “Hallelujahs” and the Marriage of the Lamb; the Bride is clothed in righteous acts.

Return of Christ (Rev 19:11–16): Jesus descends on a white horse; by the sword of His mouth He destroys gathered armies (the winepress of God’s wrath). The beast and false prophet are cast alive into the lake of fire.

Millennial Kingdom (Rev 20:1–6): Satan is bound 1,000 years; survivors and preserved Israel repopulate the earth under Messiah’s rule of peace and longevity.

Final Rebellion & White Throne (Rev 20:7–15): Satan’s brief release culminates in swift defeat. All the unrighteous dead face judgment; those not in the Book of Life are cast into the lake of fire.

Call to Readiness: Believers are urged to keep short accounts with God (apply the blood at the “door”), stand as Christ’s ambassadors, reject dead religion, and shine with hope. As the world trends toward centralized control, the Church must proclaim: “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.”

Key Themes: the seriousness of the mark, the mercy of God even in judgment, rewards by fire for believers, the certainty of Christ’s victory, and living now with courage, purity, and evangelistic urgency as we await His appearing.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK OF REVELATION PART 9

Pastor Marcos Marrero

June 28, 2009

Opening & posture: A prayer of consecration and readiness to receive God’s Word, seeking protection from hindrances and an outpouring of blessing, peace, joy, power, healing, deliverance, and restoration.

End-time framework (three converging “dispensations”):

Nations/New World Order moving toward one world government and economy;

Israel restored as a nation (yet “without the Spirit” in Ezekiel’s dry bones sense);

The Church restored to apostolic foundations; a faithful Philadelphia remnant contrasted with a Laodicean church left behind.

Seals & historical momentum: The spirit of antichrist, wars, and a demonic door of deception associated with 20th-century upheavals set the stage for present global consolidation and control.

Rapture & mid-point shift (Rev 11): The faithful Church is caught up; the two witnesses minister for 1,260 days, are killed, then raised and called up. Their departure signals the “abomination that causes desolation”—the removal of anointed restraint on earth and a transfer of God’s dealing back to Israel.

Economic control & the mark (Rev 13:15–18): The beast enforces worship through total commerce control—no buying or selling without the mark, name, or number (666). This marks the period when Satan rules globally through a man, unopposed by remaining spiritual restraint.

Number symbolism & tabernacle typology:

153 as “sons of Elohim/children of light” (linked to John 21:11) → a picture of the completed people of God: Church (7 lampstands), Israel (12×12=144 showbread), plus the two witnesses = 153.

Tabernacle layout illustrates the rapture, cleansing, reward, and entry into God’s presence; the two witnesses as olive trees alongside the lampstand.

Second-half timeline (Daniel & Revelation):

Post-midpoint period described with 1,290 days to judgment; overall antichrist ascendancy framed with 666 (interpreted here as a span of conquest) and a terminal 1,332 days culminating in Christ’s intervention.

A seven-Sabbath (6×7=42 days) cadence of final bowl judgments completes God’s wrath.

Three angelic proclamations (Rev 14):

Everlasting gospel preached worldwide;

Babylon (false religion) falls, demonic deception caged;

Warning: worshiping the beast/receiving the mark brings irrevocable judgment.

Martyr harvest & vindication (Rev 14–15): Those who refuse the mark are martyred, then gathered by the Son of Man and seen on the sea of glass singing the Song of Moses and the Song of the Lamb—law and grace united—awaiting temple access until the seven bowls finish.

Final bowls (Rev 16) in weekly cadence: Targeted judgments (beginning with grievous sores on the marked) unfold over 42 days, demonstrating the incurable nature of allegiance to the beast.

Second Coming & defeat of evil (Rev 19): Jesus descends on a white horse; the beast and false prophet are seized alive and cast into the lake of fire; the gathered armies are destroyed by the word of His mouth.

Millennial horizon: Resurrected saints reign with Christ, serving as His administrators among long-lived, earth-bound survivors in a restored creation order.

Appeal & assurance: Believers rest in Christ’s finished work—kept from the hour of testing—while those not yet in Christ are urged to call on His name today for salvation and peace.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK OF REVELATION PART 8

Pastor Marcos Marrero

June 21, 2009

After an opening prayer of spiritual warfare and consecration, the message lays a foundation: Scripture never returns void, salvation rests solely on Jesus’ sinless blood, and religion without Christ’s deity and atonement cannot save. Using the ark and mercy seat as a picture, the sermon emphasizes forgiveness through Christ’s blood rather than human effort.

A prophetic overview follows: the Church age (~2,000 years) ends with a visible heavenly unveiling and the rapture of believers who love Christ’s appearing. The first half of the seven-year period (1,260 days) features the release of tormenting demonic powers and the ministry of two witnesses (identified here as Enoch and Elijah) who prophesy until the beast from the abyss kills them; after 3½ days they rise and ascend, accompanied by a great earthquake that kills 7,000. The seventh trumpet then announces that the kingdoms of this world belong to Christ. Believers appear before Christ’s judgment seat—not for condemnation, but for rewards based on faithfulness to their God-given purpose (gold/precious stones vs. wood/hay/stubble).

Revelation 12’s “war in heaven” is expounded: Michael expels Satan to earth, triggering fierce persecution of Israel (“the woman”). God supernaturally preserves a remnant in the wilderness for “a time, times, and half a time” (linked to the Day of Atonement pattern of two goats—one taken, one left—and to passages about fleeing through split mountains and sheltering in caves). Typological connections (e.g., “wings of an eagle,” honey and oil from the rock) illustrate God’s provision while the world faces the mark of the beast and martyrdom of those who refuse it.

The message closes with a grace-filled appeal: now is the age of mercy. Believers are urged to anchor their identity in Christ’s love, overcome by His blood and their testimony, and walk through the “right door” of destiny for God’s pleasure and glory.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK OF REVELATION PART 7

Pastor Marcos Marrero

June 14, 2009

The message opens in praise and prayer, anchoring hope in Lamentations 3:22–23—God’s mercies are new every morning. We thank God for adoption, sealing by the Spirit, and the commission to take the gospel to all nations. The speaker frames Revelation as the capstone where the preceding 65 books find fulfillment, arguing its coherence across 1,500 years of inspiration and encouraging confidence in Scripture despite modern skepticism.

A sweeping overview of dispensations follows:

Innocence (Adam and Eve) → Conscience (post-Fall self-awareness and the battle between God’s word and the serpent’s lies) → widespread corruption leading to the Flood at year 1,656 from Adam.

Human Government begins at ~1,657 (Noahic covenant), continues to today, and will be judged when the “kingdoms of this world” become Christ’s.

Promise (Abraham ~year 2000) establishes an eternal, twofold covenant (physical and spiritual seed).

Law (Moses ~year 2500) given at Sinai; still awaiting judgment.

Grace/Church Age (Christ at ~year 4000; Pentecost) fulfills Passover, Unleavened Bread, Firstfruits, and inaugurates global gospel mission.

The sermon contrasts the fallen human mind—at enmity with God—with the mind of Christ given to believers, illustrated by a dream showing supernatural peace in the face of death. Babel and Nimrod exemplify rebellion; today’s global systems (language/technology) foreshadow end-time centralization.

Daniel 9’s “70 weeks” is unpacked: 490 years are decreed for Israel and Jerusalem. After 483 years “Messiah is cut off,” creating a pause in which grace goes to the nations. The final 7 years resume when Antichrist confirms a covenant:

First half (1,260 days): Two Witnesses minister with miraculous authority; trumpet judgments include a five-month demonic torment and a massive mortality event; this period culminates in their martyrdom and the abomination of desolation.

A brief midpoint pause is noted (their bodies lie unburied ~3.5 days), aligning time markers.

Second half (1,290 days + 45 days): Great Tribulation against Israel escalates; days are “shortened for the elect.” Post-Tribulation, a 45-day window completes judgments of the nations. Satan is bound for the Millennium, ending open transgression and inaugurating righteousness.

The message ties prophetic timing to Sabbaths and Jubilees (Israel’s failure to give the land rest; the Church at the 120th Jubilee), to the fall festivals (trumpets/Rosh Hashanah as the day of gathering), and to the covenant with David (explaining a period of “desolation” with no earthly representative after the Two Witnesses, during which an angel proclaims the everlasting gospel from the sky; Rev 14). Revelation 10’s seven thunders are sealed, underscoring that God withholds some details so people won’t postpone repentance.

Throughout, believers are urged to reject the accuser’s voice and believe God’s verdict of righteousness in Christ, to rest in His mercy each morning, and to be doers of the Word. The sermon closes with prayer, inviting hearers to belong to Jesus now—sealed for the day of redemption and spared from the coming wrath.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK OF REVELATION PART 6

Pastor Marcos Marrero

June 7, 2009

The message opens with prayer and spiritual warfare, declaring the gathering a “no-fly zone” for the enemy. The teacher then reviews a dispensational reading of Revelation: the church age (seven churches/seals) gives way to the Rapture, after which the Holy Spirit’s church-age anointing lifts. The Laodicean-type church is portrayed as remaining to face testing. The first six seals are recapped—especially wars, deception, famine, and cosmic disturbance—framed as forces that shaped church history and culminate in a visible unveiling of Christ at the sixth seal. Matthew 24 is woven in to show parallel signs and the call for believers to “look up.”

Turning to Revelation 8–9, “about half an hour” of silence in heaven is interpreted as the first 1,260 days (three and a half years) of Tribulation. Seven angels receive seven trumpets, signaling swift, concentrated judgments that mingle heaven’s fire with “the prayers of the saints” (divine recompense). The first four trumpets strike one-third of earth, sea, rivers, and heavenly lights—read as spiritual forces now driving history toward three escalating “woes.”

Woe 1 (fifth trumpet): a fallen “star” (Satan) opens the abyss; demonic “locusts” torment people for five months but cannot harm those sealed by God (Israel’s remnant). This visible collision of the spiritual and physical realms is presented as severe mercy—exposing the reality of demons so that many will repent.

Woe 2 (sixth trumpet): four destroying angels bound at the Euphrates are released to kill a third of humanity, accompanied by a 200-million strong, terrifying cavalry. Despite judgments, many still refuse to repent of demon-worship, violence, sorcery, sexual immorality, and theft (Rev 9:20–21). The two witnesses (identified here as Enoch and Elijah) establish Temple worship and law, confront the rising Antichrist/false prophet, and are killed after 1,260 days; the world celebrates until God raises them, along with those martyred in faithful repentance.

Throughout, the speaker emphasizes: God judges the Church first (escape via faithfulness to Jesus and His Word), then purifies Israel and the nations; judgments are purposeful—to reveal Christ, unmask Satan, and compel a choice. The message closes urging readiness, repentance, and reliance on the Holy Spirit to discern spiritual truth and endure faithfully.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK OF REVELATION PART 5

Pastor Marcos Marrero

May 31, 2009

Opening prayer & posture: A call to lay aside tradition and flesh, receive “rivers of living water,” and be strengthened for spiritual battle.

Twofold structure of Revelation: Chapters 1–3 present the physical, linear church age (seven churches); chapters 4–6 unveil the spiritual dynamics behind that history (throne, Lamb, seals).

Four horsemen as four forces: Antichrist deception, war, economic upheaval, and death operate to bring Israel (law) and the Church (grace) back into the same prophetic moment, culminating in Revelation 6.

Fifth & sixth seals: The fifth seal highlights sacrificial witnesses (“under the altar”); the sixth seal pulls back the sky—heaven and earth meet, signaling imminent divine wrath and triggering end-time transitions.

Transfer of anointing & the 144,000 (Rev 7:1–8): Before wrath falls, an angel “from the east” halts judgment; the Church is removed (Philadelphia kept from the hour of trial) and Israel is sealed (12,000 from each tribe) to carry the covenant witness.

Great multitude (Rev 7:9–17): An innumerable company from every nation, tribe, people, and language appears before the throne—identified as those coming out of many tribulations who washed their robes in the Lamb’s blood (the raptured Church across the ages).

Clocks and convergences:

Physical clock: Six thousand years (six “days”) leading to the millennial Sabbath; 144 generations picture completion.

Spiritual clock: 120 Jubilees (Noah motif) also converge near the end; both clocks meet at the sixth seal.

Tribulation vs. wrath: Tribulation = persecution by men throughout the church age; wrath = God’s seven-year judgment. Confusing these leads to timing errors about the rapture.

“No one knows the day or hour” (Mt 24): Read in context of the midpoint events (abomination of desolation). As in Noah’s day, God revealed the year and even a seven-day window; Zechariah 14 suggests a unique day when normal time is suspended to allow Israel’s flight on a Sabbath/winter.

Midpoint details & flight: After the two witnesses’ 1,260 days, their death/resurrection coincides with Israel’s flight to refuge (Azal/“scapegoat” imagery from the Day of Atonement). God preserves a remnant for 1,290 days while others seal their testimony in martyrdom.

Pastoral charge: Do not neglect Revelation or end-time preaching. Watch the signs (globalism, Israel, wars, upheavals), stay sober and ready, and lead others to Christ with boldness when the world is shaken—rejoicing at His appearing.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK OF REVELATION PART 4

Pastor Marcos Marrero

May 24, 2009

After an opening prayer for clarity and revelation, the message reviews last week’s premise: Revelation tells the same end-time events from two synchronized angles—what happens on earth and what happens in the unseen realm. This is set within God’s dispensational timeline: innocence, conscience, human government, promise (Abraham), law (Moses), grace (through Jesus), and the coming kingdom (the millennial rest).

Rev. 1–3 cover the church age. Two end-time church types are highlighted: “Philadelphia” (keeps the Word; affirms Jesus’ deity; promised protection) and “Laodicea” (self-sufficient, Christ outside the door; will face refining fire). Many misread Rev. 4 linearly as the rapture; instead, the teaching argues Rev. 4–5 shift to the heavenly point of view of the same era, solving timing tensions (e.g., anointing authority passing to Israel in Rev. 7 with the 144,000).

In Rev. 4 John is caught up to heaven: the throne radiates “lightnings and thunderings”—symbolic of divine life-giving energy (the Word). The seven Spirits are before the throne. This scene is presented as a view of the eternal Word prior to incarnation. John then sees four living creatures—lion, calf/ox, man, and flying eagle—interpreted as a “dispensational clock”: human governments (lion), law (ox), grace (man), and the kingdom’s lift into immortality (eagle).

Rev. 5 searches for a worthy Man to take the sealed scroll; none among Adam’s descendants qualifies—until the Lion of Judah appears as the slain Lamb. This Lamb, bearing perfect spiritual and physical authority (seven eyes and seven horns), receives the scroll—harmonizing with Jesus’ declaration, “All authority…has been given to Me.” Heaven responds: elders, living creatures, angels, and all creation worship the Lamb with sevenfold and fourfold doxologies, affirming His cosmic lordship.

The message weaves Psalm 22–24 to show the cross, its provisions, and the victorious ascent: Christ descends, plunders hell, empties paradise, and ascends with a human, resurrected body; the everlasting gates receive the “King of Glory.” Implications for today: unique convergence signals we’re nearing God’s judgments and the kingdom transition—global alignment of nations (e.g., UN), Israel restored as a nation (1948), and a fresh apostolic/charismatic restoration in the church—calling believers to bold, humble, Word-anchored faith.

The session closes by previewing next week’s focus on the seven seals (Rev. 6)—how they map onto the church-age mysteries—and by praying for opened ears, understanding hearts, and readiness to walk as kings and priests with Christ.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK OF REVELATION PART 2

Pastor Marcos Marrero

May 10, 2009

Opening in worship and prayer, the message declares trust in God and asserts that we stand on the threshold of “great wonders.” Revelation 1:1–3 frames the study: there is a promised blessing for those who read, hear, and keep its words. The teacher argues Revelation isn’t inherently difficult; it becomes clear when we (1) let go of rigid, inherited interpretations, (2) read the whole Bible’s storyline, and (3) recognize that Revelation alternates between two synchronized perspectives—what happens on earth (physical) and what happens in heaven (spiritual). Like Job’s story, unseen heavenly decisions produce visible earthly outcomes; building a timeline helps align the two.

Revelation 1 introduces Jesus—the glorified Son of Man—whose radiant presence underscores His deity and lordship over history. The book’s theme is His coming: first in the clouds to gather and judge, then in glory to reign for a thousand years. The message situates Revelation within God’s dispensational dealings (innocence, conscience, human government, promise, law, grace), noting that final judgments will address three arenas: the nations, Israel, and the church. Historical touchpoints (e.g., Israel’s restoration and the church’s renewal) signal we are in the final generation.

Chapters 2–3 provide the church-age timeline through seven churches, with special focus on the last two as models for today. Philadelphia is commended for holding fast to Jesus’ name and Word despite weakness; such faithfulness is promised protection “from the hour of trial” coming on the whole world. Laodicea, by contrast, is lukewarm, self-sufficient, and spiritually blind; Jesus lovingly rebukes, calls for repentance, and stands knocking, urging renewed fellowship. Trials refine faith like gold; believers are exhorted to persevere, reject compromise, and keep their hope fixed on Christ.

The message closes in prayer, asking God to ready His people, deepen their love and holiness, and make them bold witnesses so many will embrace the truth and be prepared for the Lord’s day.

UNDERSTANDING THE BOOK OF REVELATION PART 1

Pastor Marcos Marrero

May 3, 2009

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