I’ve had kind of a busy morning already. I’ve been over to my knee doctor — he had to give me a gel shot for my right knee as I have a torn meniscus. I’ve also already been on a call with JiNan, my good friend, and her whole team as we’ve been working toward being able to serve incredible inventors, innovators, and creators in every possible way.
As she and I were on the phone for about an hour and a half today, it was really great to talk about creative courage, crowned purpose, and the importance of the power of agreement. That’s kind of where I want to take this meditation this morning.
She had some great questions because I’ve been introducing the Hebrew into these meditations, and many of you may have questions around the Hebrew as well. I can send out a cheat sheet for that too — a little quick glossary of terms so to speak.
But today is Day 70 in 2026, and because it is Day 70 we begin with the cycles.
Today would be what we call a Father day. What that means is that it is a day where we meditate on the Father aspect of the Trinity. So we think about the invisible Yahweh. We think about the Everlasting Father from Isaiah 9:6. We think about the aspect of origination and seed sowing.
We think about all of that from that perspective as we meditate on the Father.
We do this under the covering of our yearly prophetic word, which is:
Rest → Trust → Receive → Conceive → Deliver
When I say those five words, in the back of my mind I also have those five attributes of Jesus from Isaiah 9:6:
Wonderful Counselor
Mighty God
Everlasting Father
Prince of Peace
When I think about this, I like to remind myself that we are seated in heavenly places. Understanding how much information and activity is whirling all around us, what we want to get to is a still place where we can hear His voice and execute on simple, doable steps.
So today is a Father day.
In the cycle of five, today is the question:
“What does a miracle look like?”
You look down the road and visualize the miracle — calling the end from the beginning — and then you work back from there in the realm of faith.
You want to be describing what you want and what the ideal is more often than describing what doesn’t work. In the realm of faith, you don’t want to be a complainer. You don’t want to constantly point out what’s wrong. Of course you need to see reality, but your faith does not work by constantly describing what is wrong.
Faith works by calling things that be not as though they were.
In the cycle of seven, we are finishing the cycle of seven today, so it is a financial day.
Think about what that means to you today.
Is it a day to invest?
Is it a day to save?
Is it a day to organize?
Is it a day to sow a seed?
Just think about it from a financial standpoint.
Then in the nine fruits of the Spirit, today is the seventh fruit in the cycle, which is faithfulness.
Whenever I get to a faithfulness day, I always remind myself that He is faithful — and then I try to imitate Him by being faithful:
Faithful to my family
Faithful to my ministry
Faithful in my prayer life
Faithful in my giving life
Faithful in my forgiving life
Faithful in my decision-making life
Faithful in my fasting life
Finally, in the twelve simple thoughts, today is the tenth thought:
“Make your supply available now.”
So today is about being available to people, encouraging people, and really making sure I am bringing my A-game, so to speak.
That’s what I wanted to share with you today.
Also, today is a Qof day in the Hebrew letters. Qof is about holiness, the glory of God, and often carries the idea of sacrifice.
We are working our way backwards now through the Hebrew cycle because in Yahweh’s creation things rotate and spin, but they also oscillate.
Sometimes things move in and out — like breathing, like the beating of your heart, like the tides of the sea. There is an oscillation that takes place in creation.
So we include that in our thinking.
Today being a Qof day should remind us of holiness, the glory of God, and perhaps even a small sacrifice we could make today on behalf of someone else.
Of course Jesus is the sacrifice — but maybe there is an act of obedience or generosity we can perform today for someone else.

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