
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


“The Rhetorical Question” is a prophetic, word-driven message built on Ezekiel 37:3—“Son of man, can these bones live?” This isn’t a sermon that asks for opinions. It’s a sermon that restores memory. With the power of rhetorical questions throughout Scripture, this message confronts doubt, dismantles comparison, and recalibrates reverence—reminding you that God never asks because He’s unsure; He asks because we’ve forgotten who He is. If you’re staring at dead places in your life—marriage, family, health, purpose, finances—this word is a faith ignition: God doesn’t need your answer, He’s preparing His Word. One word can shift the diagnosis, revive the relationship, restore the home, and resurrect what you thought was finished. The question is rhetorical, but the outcome will be undeniable. God specializes in things thought impossible.
By Aaron Houston“The Rhetorical Question” is a prophetic, word-driven message built on Ezekiel 37:3—“Son of man, can these bones live?” This isn’t a sermon that asks for opinions. It’s a sermon that restores memory. With the power of rhetorical questions throughout Scripture, this message confronts doubt, dismantles comparison, and recalibrates reverence—reminding you that God never asks because He’s unsure; He asks because we’ve forgotten who He is. If you’re staring at dead places in your life—marriage, family, health, purpose, finances—this word is a faith ignition: God doesn’t need your answer, He’s preparing His Word. One word can shift the diagnosis, revive the relationship, restore the home, and resurrect what you thought was finished. The question is rhetorical, but the outcome will be undeniable. God specializes in things thought impossible.