As Bishop Alexander expounds on the life of Jacob, he explains that to get to your next sometimes you must go back to places and people you left behind. The return allows you to confront your pride and face your fears. God causes us to go back to receive redemption from our actions and relieve us of burdens he doesn’t want us to carry into our future. Our mistakes never stop God’s promises.
In the second installment on his 7-part series addressing the insurrection at the capitol in Washington, D.C. on January 6, 2021, Bishop Claude Alexander provides the antidote for the spirit of lawlessness and rebellion utilizing Jesus’ trial before Pilate. He says the kingdom of God is not of the world as nationalism may lead us to believe. It is spiritual and manifests itself in lives that submit and surrender to God.
Words Along The Way Pt 1: Floods, Clouds and Rainbows
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Bishop Alexander compares the story of Noah and the great flood to our experience with the pandemic. God had enough with the violence on the earth. He explains, even the grace of God has a limit. God used the flood to recreate the earth and the people on it. If you have survived this pandemic, you have been kept to do something better; different in this new age.
On the heels of the insurrection at the capitol in Washington, D.C. on January 6, 2021, Bishop Claude Alexander explores contributing factors that led up to the uprising. He points to the spirit of lawlessness and rebellion that was first instituted by Adam and Eve. He says that both Adam and Eve and those in D.C. felt that boundaries were meant to restrain them; however, in reality boundaries are in place to protect us so that we may flourish.
The post An Autopsy of An Insurrection Part 1 first appeared on Claude Alexander Ministries.
Every person who leads in anything over a period of time will encounter some type of failure. The question isn’t will you fail, but how you face the failure!
The post Facing Failure first appeared on Claude Alexander Ministries.
The first imprint and impact of leadership that is experienced often is not in the classroom, boardroom or office. The first imprint is typically in the home through a mother.