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YOU ARE NOT BEHIND SCHEDULE

Updated: Jun 2


This is a reset season.
This is a reset season.

I have spent the last five months feeling like I was behind schedule. I could not ignore the nagging feeling that I just wasn’t getting things done as quickly as I thought; Anxiety and disappointment began to set in. In America, we are so conditioned to January 1st being our new year, a fresh start, and an opportunity to leave the failures of the previous year behind. Then the Lord spoke to me in early May and said, “Your new year will start on June 1, 2025.”  A sigh of relief and peace came over me. I felt immediately caught up, and I did not inquire any further.

 

This past Sunday, a video came up on YouTube about the Feast of Shavuot, also known as the Feast of Weeks. It is one of the major feasts that occurs 50 days after Passover. It symbolizes in the Old Testament the giving of the Torah. In the New Testament, it signifies the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the book of Acts. More than a historical remembrance, it is a divine invitation to experience renewal, revelation, and alignment with God’s purpose. This is a reset season. The next six months will be a season of recovery and divine visitation, it is your catch-up season.

 

Declare the word and unlock your angels to do the work you don’t have the power to do. Psalms 103:20 says, “Praise the LORD, you his angels, you mighty ones who do his bidding, who obey his word." Shavuot is celebrated with prayers, the reading of the Ten Commandments, and the reading of the book of Ruth. You are not behind schedule; the timing of God is perfect. All your hard work is paying off.

 

This is what you can look forward to during this Pentecost season

Spiritual Renewal and Rededication


Fresh revelation and insight


A ripe harvest, blessing, and supernatural provision


A deeper covenant relationship with God

 

What can you do to embrace this season?

Start your new day at 6:00 p.m. Genesis 1:5 says, "And there was evening, and there was morning."


Renew your mind. Get back on track with what God has already shown you.


Renew your commitment to the Lord and reposition yourself in purpose.


Memorialize this season in your life?


Bring a first fruit offering – your time, energy, creativity, or resources?


Start your new day at 6:00 p.m. The Jewish new day comes from Genesis 1:5: “And there was evening, and there was morning—the first day.” It signifies from darkness to light.

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