Cave Adullam

Cave Adullam

Cave Adullam is a community of believers learning to walk in love and embrace the mystery of faith as they pursue the blissful life of Christ in all diligence and godly sincerity to the intent that the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus would be a tangible reality today! To accomplish this, believers of all levels of maturity are assisted in receiving the true ministry of the New Testament through the pursuit of the will and presence of God through worship, teachings of the doctrine of Christ, prophetic ministrations, fellowship, communion and more!

  1. The Work of the Holy Spirit in the Believer | Open Book | Jun 9, 2026 | CR

    9 июн.

    The Work of the Holy Spirit in the Believer | Open Book | Jun 9, 2026 | CR

    Crystal Rivers | Open Book | Jun 9, 2026 The life of Christ is already within you by the Holy Spirit, and that life is not passive. It is power, wisdom, righteousness, redemption, sanctification, and glory working inside you. You are not called to live as a shallow believer who is easily moved by offense, fear, temptation, sickness, deception, or the pressure of men. You are called to be rooted, grounded, established, and built up until Christ is fully formed in you. The goal of your life is not merely to be successful, famous, wealthy, or influential in this world; the true goal is to grow into the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ. The Holy Spirit is in you for specific purposes. He saves you, builds you, changes you, matures you, and works through you. He is not given merely for spiritual excitement or outward display, but to bring you into the image of Christ and make you useful in the agenda of God. Every believer has a ministry, and the offices of apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers exist to equip the saints so the whole body can grow, serve, and come into maturity. You are not meant to remain a child tossed about by every doctrine, every offense, every temptation, or every scheme of darkness. You are meant to grow until you can stand, discern, overcome, and minister life. Understand that growth comes with testing. When the word of God enters your heart, tribulation may arise for that word’s sake. When you decide to walk in healing, sickness may challenge you. When you decide to walk in purity, temptation may confront you. When you decide to obey God, contradiction may arise. These tests do not mean you should turn back. They are opportunities for Christ to be formed in you. If you stumble, rise again. If you fall, get up. If you are wounded in the race, keep moving toward the finish line. What matters is not that you never face difficulty, but that you refuse to abandon the race. You must learn to fellowship with the power of God within you. Feed on the word of God. Pray in the Holy Spirit. Fast when necessary. Ask questions in the presence of God. Train your spirit to hear, receive, and respond. Do not live casually with the Holy Spirit. Reverence His presence. Pay attention when the word is being opened. Build a daily practice of prayer, scripture, obedience, and surrender. Access to God has been given to you through the blood of Jesus, but depth in that access is cultivated through fellowship, discipline, hunger, and practice. You must also learn to use the name of Jesus. The authority of the believer is not reserved for a few special people; it belongs to those who believe. In His name, you can resist darkness, cast out devils, lay hands on the sick, govern your environment, pray over your children, speak life over your body, and confront the works of the enemy. Begin where you are. Use the authority of Christ over your own life, your home, your children, your body, your mind, and your assignment. Do not wait until you feel mature before you begin to practice faith. Practice is part of growth. The power of God operates in different dimensions. There are gifts of the Spirit, including gifts of healings, miracles, wisdom, knowledge, and discernment, but there is also the power within that every believer must learn to live by. The anointing upon empowers you to do, but the anointing within transforms you to become. Do not pursue outward power while neglecting inward formation. If you only desire to do mighty works but refuse to become like Christ, you will be unbalanced. The greater work is for Christ to be raised in you until His life, nature, authority, and glory flow through you naturally. You were made for God. Your mind, body, emotions, gifts, strength, and time belong to Him. Do not allow the distractions of the world, social media, fear, comfort, or laziness to drive God out of your consciousness. Present your body as a living sacrifice. Refuse to be conformed to this world. Be transformed by the renewing of your mind so you can prove the good, acceptable, and perfect will of God. Let your life become a vessel through which God heals, saves, restores, governs, intercedes, and displays His glory. The Lord is able to keep you. Even if your strength feels small, keep His word and do not deny His name. The power of God is in you, upon you, and available to preserve you. You are called to live by that power, to be kept by that power, and to become a vessel through whom that power touches the earth. Therefore, ask the Holy Spirit to build you up. Ask Him to teach your hands to war and your fingers to fight. Ask Him to make you wiser than your enemies. Acknowledge the help God has sent to you. Speak life. Resist death. Reject fear. Stand in faith. Grow in Christ. Run your race. Finish well. Zoom every weekday : http://www.caveadullam.org/zoom

    2 ч. 7 мин.
  2. Power to Take Root and Endure; Standing Firm Until the End | Open Book | Jun 2, 2026 | CR

    2 июн.

    Power to Take Root and Endure; Standing Firm Until the End | Open Book | Jun 2, 2026 | CR

    Crystal Rivers | Open Book | May 26, 2026 Give thanks deeply for the goodness of God, especially for the privilege of being planted in a community where truth is pursued, received, tested, and lived out. Do not take lightly the grace of being surrounded by people who are learning to follow the Spirit, grow in the word, and become more like Christ. This is not a call to pride or comparison with others, but to gratitude and responsibility. When God places you in an environment where truth is unveiled, He expects you to respond with hunger, obedience, discipline, and transformation. You must understand righteousness as a journey of formation. First, righteousness is imputed to you as a gift through faith in Christ. You did not earn it; it was given by grace through the finished work of Jesus. You must reckon yourself dead to sin and alive to God. This reckoning is important because you cannot live rightly if you do not first believe and accept what Christ has made available to you. Then righteousness must be imparted to you as you hear, receive, and obey the word of God. This is where transformation happens. The word renews the mind, reshapes the heart, corrects wrong patterns, and forms Christ within you. You do not become mature simply because righteousness was imputed to you; you grow as you submit to the word and allow it to work deeply in you. Finally, righteousness must become your garment. This is the place where righteousness is no longer something you occasionally attempt; it becomes your nature. Your responses, choices, instincts, and desires begin to reflect Christ naturally. You do not have to be forced to obey God because obedience has become your life. This is maturity: when living as a son becomes your true expression. Return continually to the secret place. The most holy place is not meant to be visited occasionally; it is meant to become your dwelling. The presence of God is where you are transformed, corrected, strengthened, and built. Psalm 91 is not just a promise to quote; it is a dwelling to enter. Learn to remain where God can shape you. Learn to stay long enough for your mind to be renewed and your soul to be changed. Learn stillness. Before rushing into the noise of the day, practice gratitude, quietness, meditation, and attentiveness before God. Be still and know. If you refuse stillness, you will struggle to know. Stillness trains your spirit to hear, discern, and respond. Meditate on the word. Speak the word. Let it remain in your mouth until it becomes your reality. Do not only write notes from what you hear; internalize truth until it becomes life. Understand that intimacy with God is personal. No one can cultivate your secret place for you. You must learn to speak with the Lord, listen to Him, receive from Him, and allow Him to write His laws upon your heart. In that place, He builds you. He forms you as a living stone. He shapes you so you can fit into the spiritual house He is building. Do not resist the dealings of God. Coming before Him means coming ready to be purified. He will confront the flesh, expose false identities, challenge the “this is how I am” excuses, and strip away what cannot inherit His nature. The pruning, chiseling, cutting, and correction are not signs of rejection; they are part of your preparation. You are being shaped for a place in His house. Yield to the process. Recognize that every believer has a role in the body. Do not think ministry belongs only to apostles, prophets, pastors, teachers, and evangelists. Their work is to equip the saints, but the saints must do the work of ministry. Helps, administration, government, encouragement, giving, accountability, discipleship, hospitality, kindness, intercession, and support are all spiritual operations when done in obedience to God. Do not despise small acts. A phone call, a word of encouragement, a shared insight, financial help, a prayer, or a simple act of care can supply strength to the body. Exercise your priesthood over your life, your home, your work, your territory, and your circumstances. Do not assume every breakthrough will happen simply because a prophetic word was spoken. Some things require prayer, fasting, obedience, warfare, discipline, and sustained priestly engagement. Take charge spiritually where things appear disorderly. Do not surrender your atmosphere to darkness. Learn to stand in your priesthood and enforce the will of God. Pay attention when God repeats a matter through different vessels. Repetition is often confirmation. When the same emphasis comes again and again, do not treat it casually. God may be pointing to something He wants rooted out, planted, rebuilt, or established in you. Submit to the work of true spiritual foundations. Stay long enough for what is wrong to be uprooted and what is of Christ to be built properly. Zoom every weekday : http://www.caveadullam.org/zoom

    1 ч. 46 мин.
  3. Exercising Priesthood in Daily Life | Open Book | May 26, 2026 | CR

    26 мая

    Exercising Priesthood in Daily Life | Open Book | May 26, 2026 | CR

    Crystal Rivers | Open Book | May 26, 2026 Give thanks deeply for the goodness of God, especially for the privilege of being planted in a community where truth is pursued, received, tested, and lived out. Do not take lightly the grace of being surrounded by people who are learning to follow the Spirit, grow in the word, and become more like Christ. This is not a call to pride or comparison with others, but to gratitude and responsibility. When God places you in an environment where truth is unveiled, He expects you to respond with hunger, obedience, discipline, and transformation. You must understand righteousness as a journey of formation. First, righteousness is imputed to you as a gift through faith in Christ. You did not earn it; it was given by grace through the finished work of Jesus. You must reckon yourself dead to sin and alive to God. This reckoning is important because you cannot live rightly if you do not first believe and accept what Christ has made available to you. Then righteousness must be imparted to you as you hear, receive, and obey the word of God. This is where transformation happens. The word renews the mind, reshapes the heart, corrects wrong patterns, and forms Christ within you. You do not become mature simply because righteousness was imputed to you; you grow as you submit to the word and allow it to work deeply in you. Finally, righteousness must become your garment. This is the place where righteousness is no longer something you occasionally attempt; it becomes your nature. Your responses, choices, instincts, and desires begin to reflect Christ naturally. You do not have to be forced to obey God because obedience has become your life. This is maturity: when living as a son becomes your true expression. Return continually to the secret place. The most holy place is not meant to be visited occasionally; it is meant to become your dwelling. The presence of God is where you are transformed, corrected, strengthened, and built. Psalm 91 is not just a promise to quote; it is a dwelling to enter. Learn to remain where God can shape you. Learn to stay long enough for your mind to be renewed and your soul to be changed. Learn stillness. Before rushing into the noise of the day, practice gratitude, quietness, meditation, and attentiveness before God. Be still and know. If you refuse stillness, you will struggle to know. Stillness trains your spirit to hear, discern, and respond. Meditate on the word. Speak the word. Let it remain in your mouth until it becomes your reality. Do not only write notes from what you hear; internalize truth until it becomes life. Understand that intimacy with God is personal. No one can cultivate your secret place for you. You must learn to speak with the Lord, listen to Him, receive from Him, and allow Him to write His laws upon your heart. In that place, He builds you. He forms you as a living stone. He shapes you so you can fit into the spiritual house He is building. Do not resist the dealings of God. Coming before Him means coming ready to be purified. He will confront the flesh, expose false identities, challenge the “this is how I am” excuses, and strip away what cannot inherit His nature. The pruning, chiseling, cutting, and correction are not signs of rejection; they are part of your preparation. You are being shaped for a place in His house. Yield to the process. Recognize that every believer has a role in the body. Do not think ministry belongs only to apostles, prophets, pastors, teachers, and evangelists. Their work is to equip the saints, but the saints must do the work of ministry. Helps, administration, government, encouragement, giving, accountability, discipleship, hospitality, kindness, intercession, and support are all spiritual operations when done in obedience to God. Do not despise small acts. A phone call, a word of encouragement, a shared insight, financial help, a prayer, or a simple act of care can supply strength to the body. Exercise your priesthood over your life, your home, your work, your territory, and your circumstances. Do not assume every breakthrough will happen simply because a prophetic word was spoken. Some things require prayer, fasting, obedience, warfare, discipline, and sustained priestly engagement. Take charge spiritually where things appear disorderly. Do not surrender your atmosphere to darkness. Learn to stand in your priesthood and enforce the will of God. Pay attention when God repeats a matter through different vessels. Repetition is often confirmation. When the same emphasis comes again and again, do not treat it casually. God may be pointing to something He wants rooted out, planted, rebuilt, or established in you. Submit to the work of true spiritual foundations. Stay long enough for what is wrong to be uprooted and what is of Christ to be built properly. Zoom every weekday : http://www.caveadullam.org/zoom

    2 ч. 2 мин.
  4. Confidence in Prayer, Faith, and the Finished Work of Christ | Open Book | May 19, 2026 | CR

    24 мая

    Confidence in Prayer, Faith, and the Finished Work of Christ | Open Book | May 19, 2026 | CR

    Crystal Rivers | Open Book | May 19, 2026 A believer is called to live with a renewed understanding of life, death, and spiritual authority grounded in the finished work of Christ. The appointment that humanity once held with death and judgment has been fulfilled in Christ, who bore sin and entered death on behalf of all. Because of this, death no longer holds ultimate dominion over those who are joined to him. Life is no longer to be shaped by fear of mortality, but by the assurance that redemption has already addressed the deepest human constraint. This reality produces a new identity: righteousness. To be made righteous is not merely a moral label but a transformed position that carries privileges, responsibilities, and a new way of living. It redefines expectation, especially in relation to prayer, healing, and divine response. Confidence becomes a key mark of spiritual life—confidence that when requests align with divine will, they are heard, and when they are heard, they are already considered received. Doubt, instability, and fear are therefore not neutral emotions but internal disruptions that weaken spiritual clarity and reception. Fear, in particular, is treated as an intruder that must not be accommodated. It can arise from circumstances, evidence, memory, or anticipation, but it is not meant to remain. It is confronted through intentional engagement with truth, repetition of scriptural reality, and sustained focus on what is certain rather than what is threatening. Victory over fear is not always immediate; it is often cultivated through persistence until peace replaces agitation. In this process, the Word becomes both anchor and weapon, stabilizing the mind and restoring spiritual direction. The Word of God is presented not only as instruction for living but as material for inner construction. It builds spiritual capacity, expands inner receptivity, and reshapes perception. As it is meditated upon and internalized, it produces confidence, clarity, and strength. It also aligns the believer with divine instruction in moments of crisis, enabling right response rather than emotional reaction. In moments of confusion or pressure, divine direction becomes essential, as seen in the pattern of seeking guidance before action rather than relying on impulse. A central expression of spiritual life is communication with God through the Spirit. Prayer in the Spirit is portrayed as more than ritual—it is a channel of mystery, strengthening, and alignment. It enables communication beyond natural understanding and builds inner spiritual capacity. When practiced intentionally, it produces assurance, sensitivity, and a strengthened inner life. Alongside this, calling upon the name of Jesus is emphasized as an act of authority, access, and deliverance. The name represents power that transcends speech; it activates divine operation and brings help, intervention, and rescue. Spiritual transformation is also described as a progressive process. It is not instantaneous but occurs through repeated exposure to divine truth and active participation with the Spirit. As attention is placed on divine reality, inner change occurs—thought patterns shift, desires are reordered, and behavior is reshaped. This transformation affects not only moral conduct but the entire orientation of life, including how challenges, sickness, temptation, and adversity are interpreted and confronted. Creation itself is portrayed as awaiting restoration, longing for the full expression of redeemed humanity. The natural world is seen as impacted by human spiritual condition, and its restoration is tied to the emergence of mature spiritual life. In this framework, redemption extends beyond personal salvation into a broader restoration of order, authority, and harmony. Spiritual authority is therefore expressed through several channels: the Word, the Spirit, prayer, the name of Jesus, and the consciousness of righteousness. These are not separate tools but interconnected dimensions of a single life empowered by divine presence. Healing, deliverance, provision, and moral victory are all framed as outcomes of engaging these realities faithfully. At the center of it all is the understanding that divine mercy remains active and accessible. Even in failure or weakness, turning toward God produces restoration rather than rejection. Mercy is not an exception to divine character but a consistent expression of it. This produces a posture of humility and dependence rather than self-condemnation or despair. Ultimately, the life being described is one of confident spiritual participation—where fear is displaced by faith, confusion by clarity, weakness by empowerment, and passivity by intentional engagement. It is a life shaped by the reality of redemption, sustained by communion with the Spirit, and expressed through authority in prayer, word, and identity. a Zoom every weekday : http://www.caveadullam.org/zoom

    5 ч. 34 мин.
  5. Confidence in Prayer, Faith, and the Finished Work of Christ | Open Book | May 19, 2026 | CR

    19 мая

    Confidence in Prayer, Faith, and the Finished Work of Christ | Open Book | May 19, 2026 | CR

    Crystal Rivers | Open Book | May 19, 2026 A believer is called to live with a renewed understanding of life, death, and spiritual authority grounded in the finished work of Christ. The appointment that humanity once held with death and judgment has been fulfilled in Christ, who bore sin and entered death on behalf of all. Because of this, death no longer holds ultimate dominion over those who are joined to him. Life is no longer to be shaped by fear of mortality, but by the assurance that redemption has already addressed the deepest human constraint. This reality produces a new identity: righteousness. To be made righteous is not merely a moral label but a transformed position that carries privileges, responsibilities, and a new way of living. It redefines expectation, especially in relation to prayer, healing, and divine response. Confidence becomes a key mark of spiritual life—confidence that when requests align with divine will, they are heard, and when they are heard, they are already considered received. Doubt, instability, and fear are therefore not neutral emotions but internal disruptions that weaken spiritual clarity and reception. Fear, in particular, is treated as an intruder that must not be accommodated. It can arise from circumstances, evidence, memory, or anticipation, but it is not meant to remain. It is confronted through intentional engagement with truth, repetition of scriptural reality, and sustained focus on what is certain rather than what is threatening. Victory over fear is not always immediate; it is often cultivated through persistence until peace replaces agitation. In this process, the Word becomes both anchor and weapon, stabilizing the mind and restoring spiritual direction. The Word of God is presented not only as instruction for living but as material for inner construction. It builds spiritual capacity, expands inner receptivity, and reshapes perception. As it is meditated upon and internalized, it produces confidence, clarity, and strength. It also aligns the believer with divine instruction in moments of crisis, enabling right response rather than emotional reaction. In moments of confusion or pressure, divine direction becomes essential, as seen in the pattern of seeking guidance before action rather than relying on impulse. A central expression of spiritual life is communication with God through the Spirit. Prayer in the Spirit is portrayed as more than ritual—it is a channel of mystery, strengthening, and alignment. It enables communication beyond natural understanding and builds inner spiritual capacity. When practiced intentionally, it produces assurance, sensitivity, and a strengthened inner life. Alongside this, calling upon the name of Jesus is emphasized as an act of authority, access, and deliverance. The name represents power that transcends speech; it activates divine operation and brings help, intervention, and rescue. Spiritual transformation is also described as a progressive process. It is not instantaneous but occurs through repeated exposure to divine truth and active participation with the Spirit. As attention is placed on divine reality, inner change occurs—thought patterns shift, desires are reordered, and behavior is reshaped. This transformation affects not only moral conduct but the entire orientation of life, including how challenges, sickness, temptation, and adversity are interpreted and confronted. Creation itself is portrayed as awaiting restoration, longing for the full expression of redeemed humanity. The natural world is seen as impacted by human spiritual condition, and its restoration is tied to the emergence of mature spiritual life. In this framework, redemption extends beyond personal salvation into a broader restoration of order, authority, and harmony. Spiritual authority is therefore expressed through several channels: the Word, the Spirit, prayer, the name of Jesus, and the consciousness of righteousness. These are not separate tools but interconnected dimensions of a single life empowered by divine presence. Healing, deliverance, provision, and moral victory are all framed as outcomes of engaging these realities faithfully. At the center of it all is the understanding that divine mercy remains active and accessible. Even in failure or weakness, turning toward God produces restoration rather than rejection. Mercy is not an exception to divine character but a consistent expression of it. This produces a posture of humility and dependence rather than self-condemnation or despair. Ultimately, the life being described is one of confident spiritual participation—where fear is displaced by faith, confusion by clarity, weakness by empowerment, and passivity by intentional engagement. It is a life shaped by the reality of redemption, sustained by communion with the Spirit, and expressed through authority in prayer, word, and identity. a Zoom every weekday : http://www.caveadullam.org/zoom

    2 ч. 8 мин.
  6. Overcoming Through the Name and Blood of Jesus | Open Book | May 12, 2026 | CR

    12 мая

    Overcoming Through the Name and Blood of Jesus | Open Book | May 12, 2026 | CR

    Crystal Rivers | Open Book | May 12, 2026 You were not born again merely to survive spiritual battles; you were born in Christ to overcome. From the beginning, God plants seeds in the hearts of His own, and even when they wander, He continues to fight for their salvation. A person may backslide, become bitter, resist believers, or run from the faith because of wounds, disappointments, deception, or bad examples, but God does not easily release those who truly belong to Him. He continues to pursue, restore, correct, and draw them back to Himself. Understand that God is good, and there is no sickness, evil, corruption, or darkness in Him. Every good and perfect gift comes from Him, while destruction, affliction, deception, and bondage come from the enemy. Because of this, you must learn to discern the nature of God accurately. Do not attribute evil to God, and do not mistake spiritual attacks for the Father’s character. God’s desire is life, healing, salvation, freedom, and fullness. Your walk with God must grow beyond basic faith into mature love, knowledge, and discernment. Love is not meant to be blind, careless, or easily manipulated. True love must abound more and more in knowledge and judgment, so that you can approve what is excellent — not merely what looks nice, religious, emotional, or impressive, but what truly carries Christ. You must become rooted and grounded in love, yet trained enough to discern good from evil. Without discernment, love can become reckless and expose you to people, systems, or influences that are not of God. One major mark of maturity is becoming unoffendable. Offense is one of the easiest ways to derail a believer. People will disappoint you, misunderstand you, betray you, or act in ways that hurt you, but you must allow the Holy Spirit to train your heart until you are not easily moved by offense. The deeper your death to flesh, the less power offense has over you. The goal is to stand before Christ without offense, bitterness, or resentment ruling your heart. You must also understand the name of Jesus. It is not enough to use the name of Jesus; you must live by the name of Jesus. Many people may pray, command, prophesy, cast out devils, or do religious works in His name while refusing to live under His authority. That is dangerous. The name of Jesus carries power, authority, resurrection life, and divine backing, but the believer must labor to believe in that name, trust that name, pray in that name, and live in obedience to that name. The name of Jesus is not a religious formula; it is the authority of the risen Christ. You are called to cast out demons and overcome the works of darkness, but you must learn that spiritual warfare has laws, protocols, and strategies. Not every situation is handled the same way. Some demons can be directly cast out. Some battles require repentance, knowledge, endurance, intercession, revelation, or spiritual strategy. Some issues are sustained by sin, ignorance, covenants, fear, deception, or hidden roots that must be exposed by the Holy Spirit. If you apply the same method to every battle, you may become frustrated, because different prayers and different battles require different wisdom. In the same way, your victory depends on hearing God’s strategy for the specific situation before you. Sometimes the instruction may be simple. Sometimes it may require study, fasting, prayer, waiting, or removing something from your environment. The key is to ask, listen, and obey. You must become a student of the Word. Victory is often tied to knowledge. There are things you cannot overcome simply by shouting; you must grow in understanding. The Word of God strengthens your mind so you can receive and apply divine strategy. When God wants to deliver you, He may first lead you into teaching, study, meditation, and repeated exposure to truth until your mind can agree with what heaven is saying. Feed on the Word, listen to sound teaching, learn your authority in Christ, and build spiritual understanding before the day of battle intensifies. The blood of Jesus means that your victory is not based on your perfection, performance, fasting, or personal strength. You must also understand the purpose of praying in the Spirit. Tongues are not just a spiritual activity; they are a divine tool for alignment, strengthening, revelation, and strategy. When you pray in the Spirit, the Holy Spirit can begin to give information, expose hidden roots, reveal what to confront, and show you how to pray. Sometimes you will need to write down what He reveals and return to it in prayer. As you stay in the Spirit, the real issue behind many other visible issues can be uncovered. Creation itself has been affected by corruption, but the children of God carry the liberty of Christ. You are part of God’s answer to bondage, disorder, and corruption. Zoom every weekday : http://www.caveadullam.org/zoom

    1 ч. 27 мин.

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Cave Adullam is a community of believers learning to walk in love and embrace the mystery of faith as they pursue the blissful life of Christ in all diligence and godly sincerity to the intent that the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus would be a tangible reality today! To accomplish this, believers of all levels of maturity are assisted in receiving the true ministry of the New Testament through the pursuit of the will and presence of God through worship, teachings of the doctrine of Christ, prophetic ministrations, fellowship, communion and more!