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In today’s sermon, Apostle Alfred Williams leads the church into February with a joyful celebration of God’s faithfulness—marking nearly 36 years since the Lord first gave him the vision for the house, and reminding us that this is an apostolic and prophetic ministry built by God’s direction, not human “launching” (Acts 13:1–3). He announces the Scripture of the month as Acts 1, with a clear emphasis on Acts 1:8: receiving power by the Holy Spirit and becoming Christ’s witnesses.
The heart of the message is a call to maturity: God has placed grace on every believer, but it must be developed and expressed in a life “worthy of the calling” (Ephesians 4:1–3). Apostle contrasts a Spirit-ruled life with a disobedient life that leaves people vulnerable (Ephesians 2:1–3), urging humility, gentleness, unity, and the ministry of comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3–4), while stirring faith with testimonies of healing and deliverance that prove God still acts in power. He closes with a holy insistence that the Kingdom is not talk, but power (1 Corinthians 4:20), and that God can be found when we seek Him wholeheartedly (Jeremiah 29:12–14).
By Apostle Alfred WilliamsIn today’s sermon, Apostle Alfred Williams leads the church into February with a joyful celebration of God’s faithfulness—marking nearly 36 years since the Lord first gave him the vision for the house, and reminding us that this is an apostolic and prophetic ministry built by God’s direction, not human “launching” (Acts 13:1–3). He announces the Scripture of the month as Acts 1, with a clear emphasis on Acts 1:8: receiving power by the Holy Spirit and becoming Christ’s witnesses.
The heart of the message is a call to maturity: God has placed grace on every believer, but it must be developed and expressed in a life “worthy of the calling” (Ephesians 4:1–3). Apostle contrasts a Spirit-ruled life with a disobedient life that leaves people vulnerable (Ephesians 2:1–3), urging humility, gentleness, unity, and the ministry of comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3–4), while stirring faith with testimonies of healing and deliverance that prove God still acts in power. He closes with a holy insistence that the Kingdom is not talk, but power (1 Corinthians 4:20), and that God can be found when we seek Him wholeheartedly (Jeremiah 29:12–14).