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‘SEATED IN HEAVENLY PLACES: Manifesting the Joy of Cell Vibration in the Higher Dimensions’ II

1 h 3 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio ‘SEATED IN HEAVENLY PLACES: Manifesting the Joy of Cell Vibration in the Higher Dimensions’ II

Descripción

In this installment of Metron Live, Bishop Jim Swilley continues his series on being seated in heavenly places, drawing from Ephesians 2 and Psalm 16:11. He challenges listeners to rethink joy—not as an emotional high, but as a state of presence. Using stories from his own life, the Israelites’ wilderness journey, a beloved family cat nearing the end of its life, and even a tense basketball game, Bishop Jim argues that fullness of joy is found when we stop living in regret over the past or anxiety about the future and become fully present in the moment. His central revelation is that “in His presence is fullness of joy” also means learning to live in our own presence—to fully inhabit the life we are experiencing right now. KEY TAKEAWAYS 1. YOUR LIFE HAS A PATH, EVEN WHEN IT FEELS CIRCULAR Drawing from Psalm 16:11, Bishop Jim teaches that God shows us “the path of life,” but that path is often cyclical rather than linear. Like Israel wandering for 40 years before facing the same Jericho, many people revisit similar lessons until they learn to see their circumstances differently. Key Thought: Stop obsessing over the “should have, could have, would have” moments. Fullness of joy requires making peace with the path that brought you here. Scripture: Psalm 16:11 ---------------------------------------- 2. PRESENCE IS THE GATEWAY TO JOY The core revelation of the message comes from a simple observation about a family cat that peacefully accepted the end of its life. > “He was present all the way to the end.” — Bishop Jim Swilley recounting a conversation about Avery’s cat. That statement unlocked a deeper understanding of Psalm 16:11. Most people are physically present but mentally somewhere else—replaying the past, worrying about the future, or trying to solve problems that don’t yet exist. Bishop Jim shares a personal story of standing in the Gulf of Mexico on vacation while mentally sorting through future responsibilities, realizing: > “My body’s in the Gulf of Mexico, but I’m not here.” — Bishop Jim Swilley Main Lesson: You cannot experience fullness of joy if you are not fully present. Scripture: Psalm 16:11 — “In Your presence is fullness of joy.” ---------------------------------------- 3. ANXIETY PULLS YOU OUT OF THE PRESENT MOMENT Whether it’s worrying about finances, relationships, aging, health, or the future, anxiety fragments attention and lowers our ability to experience joy. Bishop Jim contrasts this with Jesus’ teaching: Scriptures Referenced: * Matthew 6 — Consider the lilies. * Matthew 6:34 — “Take no thought for tomorrow.” The message is not irresponsibility; it is refusing to sacrifice today’s peace for tomorrow’s uncertainty. ---------------------------------------- 4. STOP REHEARSING THE STORIES THAT KEEP YOU SICK Referencing Proverbs, Bishop Jim teaches that many people unknowingly reinforce negative realities by constantly speaking about them. Scripture: * Proverbs 13:12 — “Hope deferred makes the heart sick.” He argues that there is a healthy place for processing pain, counseling, and healing, but eventually there comes a point where continuing to repeat the story keeps it alive. Key Thought: There comes a time when you stop retelling the wound and start telling a new story. ---------------------------------------- 5. DON’T MAKE YOUR JOY DEPENDENT ON OTHER PEOPLE’S APPROVAL One of the strongest practical applications of the message is the reminder that everyone wants acceptance, but joy cannot be dependent upon it. > “You got to feel good about yourself whether anybody gets it or not.” — Bishop Jim Swilley Jesus serves as the model. He never sought permission from others to live in the truth of who He was. Scriptures Referenced: * John 8:58 — “Before Abraham was, I am.” * John 10:18 — “No man takes my life, I lay it down.” ---------------------------------------- 6. GOD IS NOT AGAINST PLEASURE Bishop Jim closes by examining the final phrase of Psalm 16:11: > “At Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” He contrasts this with religious systems that often treat pleasure, enjoyment, and happiness as suspicious or sinful. Using Jesus turning water into wine at Cana as an example, he argues that God is not opposed to joy, celebration, or abundance. Scripture: * John 2 — The wedding at Cana. His conclusion is that many religious traditions have taught people to expect struggle, guilt, and stress, while Scripture repeatedly points toward joy, peace, and life. MEMORABLE QUOTE > “You can’t have fullness of joy if you’re not present.” — Bishop Jim Swilley MAIN SCRIPTURE PSALM 16:11 “You will show me the path of life; in Your presence is fullness of joy; at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” FINAL THOUGHT The heart of this message is simple but profound: joy is not found in fixing the past or controlling the future. It is found in fully inhabiting the present moment. According to Bishop Jim, the highest vibration, the heavenly place, and the fullness of joy are all experienced when we stop living somewhere else and become fully present to the life unfolding right in front of us.

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Portada del episodio ‘SEATED IN HEAVENLY PLACES: Manifesting the Joy of Cell Vibration in the Higher Dimensions’ II

‘SEATED IN HEAVENLY PLACES: Manifesting the Joy of Cell Vibration in the Higher Dimensions’ II

In this installment of Metron Live, Bishop Jim Swilley continues his series on being seated in heavenly places, drawing from Ephesians 2 and Psalm 16:11. He challenges listeners to rethink joy—not as an emotional high, but as a state of presence. Using stories from his own life, the Israelites’ wilderness journey, a beloved family cat nearing the end of its life, and even a tense basketball game, Bishop Jim argues that fullness of joy is found when we stop living in regret over the past or anxiety about the future and become fully present in the moment. His central revelation is that “in His presence is fullness of joy” also means learning to live in our own presence—to fully inhabit the life we are experiencing right now. KEY TAKEAWAYS 1. YOUR LIFE HAS A PATH, EVEN WHEN IT FEELS CIRCULAR Drawing from Psalm 16:11, Bishop Jim teaches that God shows us “the path of life,” but that path is often cyclical rather than linear. Like Israel wandering for 40 years before facing the same Jericho, many people revisit similar lessons until they learn to see their circumstances differently. Key Thought: Stop obsessing over the “should have, could have, would have” moments. Fullness of joy requires making peace with the path that brought you here. Scripture: Psalm 16:11 ---------------------------------------- 2. PRESENCE IS THE GATEWAY TO JOY The core revelation of the message comes from a simple observation about a family cat that peacefully accepted the end of its life. > “He was present all the way to the end.” — Bishop Jim Swilley recounting a conversation about Avery’s cat. That statement unlocked a deeper understanding of Psalm 16:11. Most people are physically present but mentally somewhere else—replaying the past, worrying about the future, or trying to solve problems that don’t yet exist. Bishop Jim shares a personal story of standing in the Gulf of Mexico on vacation while mentally sorting through future responsibilities, realizing: > “My body’s in the Gulf of Mexico, but I’m not here.” — Bishop Jim Swilley Main Lesson: You cannot experience fullness of joy if you are not fully present. Scripture: Psalm 16:11 — “In Your presence is fullness of joy.” ---------------------------------------- 3. ANXIETY PULLS YOU OUT OF THE PRESENT MOMENT Whether it’s worrying about finances, relationships, aging, health, or the future, anxiety fragments attention and lowers our ability to experience joy. Bishop Jim contrasts this with Jesus’ teaching: Scriptures Referenced: * Matthew 6 — Consider the lilies. * Matthew 6:34 — “Take no thought for tomorrow.” The message is not irresponsibility; it is refusing to sacrifice today’s peace for tomorrow’s uncertainty. ---------------------------------------- 4. STOP REHEARSING THE STORIES THAT KEEP YOU SICK Referencing Proverbs, Bishop Jim teaches that many people unknowingly reinforce negative realities by constantly speaking about them. Scripture: * Proverbs 13:12 — “Hope deferred makes the heart sick.” He argues that there is a healthy place for processing pain, counseling, and healing, but eventually there comes a point where continuing to repeat the story keeps it alive. Key Thought: There comes a time when you stop retelling the wound and start telling a new story. ---------------------------------------- 5. DON’T MAKE YOUR JOY DEPENDENT ON OTHER PEOPLE’S APPROVAL One of the strongest practical applications of the message is the reminder that everyone wants acceptance, but joy cannot be dependent upon it. > “You got to feel good about yourself whether anybody gets it or not.” — Bishop Jim Swilley Jesus serves as the model. He never sought permission from others to live in the truth of who He was. Scriptures Referenced: * John 8:58 — “Before Abraham was, I am.” * John 10:18 — “No man takes my life, I lay it down.” ---------------------------------------- 6. GOD IS NOT AGAINST PLEASURE Bishop Jim closes by examining the final phrase of Psalm 16:11: > “At Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” He contrasts this with religious systems that often treat pleasure, enjoyment, and happiness as suspicious or sinful. Using Jesus turning water into wine at Cana as an example, he argues that God is not opposed to joy, celebration, or abundance. Scripture: * John 2 — The wedding at Cana. His conclusion is that many religious traditions have taught people to expect struggle, guilt, and stress, while Scripture repeatedly points toward joy, peace, and life. MEMORABLE QUOTE > “You can’t have fullness of joy if you’re not present.” — Bishop Jim Swilley MAIN SCRIPTURE PSALM 16:11 “You will show me the path of life; in Your presence is fullness of joy; at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” FINAL THOUGHT The heart of this message is simple but profound: joy is not found in fixing the past or controlling the future. It is found in fully inhabiting the present moment. According to Bishop Jim, the highest vibration, the heavenly place, and the fullness of joy are all experienced when we stop living somewhere else and become fully present to the life unfolding right in front of us.

Ayer1 h 3 min
Portada del episodio ‘SEATED IN HEAVENLY PLACES: Manifesting the Joy of Cell Vibration in the Higher Dimensions’ pt I

‘SEATED IN HEAVENLY PLACES: Manifesting the Joy of Cell Vibration in the Higher Dimensions’ pt I

Bishop Jim’s insightful messages help others find THEIR METRON through M~otivation E~nlightenment T~ranscendence R~enewal O~utreach and N~etworking Learn more: www.bishinthenow.com Follow Jim Swilley on Youtube to see the videos live Sundays at 11:11 am – https://www.youtube.com/bishinthenow In this message, Bishop Jim Swilley launches a new series, Seated in Heavenly Places, exploring the idea that heaven is not merely a future destination but a present spiritual reality. Drawing from Ephesians 2, he challenges traditional concepts of striving for heaven and instead teaches that believers are already seated with Christ in higher dimensions of consciousness and awareness. He connects biblical concepts of joy, abundance, and spiritual maturity with ideas of vibration, authenticity, gratitude, and emotional well-being. The central theme is that fullness of joy is not dependent on circumstances but is a state of being that can be cultivated through gratitude, self-awareness, generosity, and living authentically. Key Takeaways 1. We Are Already Seated in Heavenly Places Bishop centers the teaching on Ephesians 2:4-6, emphasizing that believers are not trying to get to heaven someday but are already participating in heavenly realities now. Scripture: Ephesians 2:4-6 “And raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.” He explains that sitting represents completion and rest rather than striving. Quote: “We’re not trying to get to heaven. We’re from heaven.” — Bishop Jim Swilley 2. Joy Is More Than Happiness The message distinguishes between temporary happiness and what Jesus described as “fullness of joy.” Scriptures: John 15:11 John 16:24 Nehemiah 8:10 Jesus repeatedly spoke of joy becoming “full,” which Bishop presents as a higher state of spiritual living rather than an occasional emotional experience. Quote: “There’s joy, and then there’s fullness of joy.” — Bishop Jim Swilley 3. Protect Your Joy One of the strongest practical applications is the idea that people must become guardians of their own joy. Rather than allowing circumstances, old wounds, or difficult people to dictate emotional states, Bishop encourages listeners to consciously maintain a higher perspective. Quote: “If there’s things in your life that are draining your joy, either have the courage to get rid of it, get it out of your life, or change the way you think about it.” — Bishop Jim Swilley 4. Heaven and Hell Are Present Experiences Rather than viewing heaven and hell exclusively as future destinations, Bishop presents them as realities experienced in daily life. Quote: “Some of y’all ain’t scared of going to hell because you already been to hell.” — Bishop Jim Swilley He describes “streets of gold” as a metaphor for abundance, peace, and living from a consciousness of provision rather than lack. 5. Gratitude Raises Your Awareness A recurring theme is that gratitude shifts perception and opens people to greater joy. Scripture: Psalms 100:4 “Enter his gates with thanksgiving.” Bishop suggests that gratitude should not wait for favorable circumstances but become a daily practice. Quote: “Why can’t you just be happy that you woke up this morning?” — Bishop Jim Swilley 6. Generosity Creates Joy One of the most powerful personal stories in the message involved Bishop blessing a healthcare worker who had helped him. The lesson was that giving often produces more joy in the giver than receiving does. Scripture: Acts 20:35 “It is more blessed to give than to receive.” Quote: “I was so much happier about that than if somebody had given me a hundred dollars.” — Bishop Jim Swilley 7. Authenticity Is Essential Bishop teaches that authentic living is directly connected to joy and emotional health. When people hide behind roles, expectations, or false identities, they disconnect from the fullness of who they are. Quote: “You’re never going to have fullness of joy when you’re frontin’.” — Bishop Jim Swilley 8. Your Narrative Shapes Your Reality A major practical takeaway is the importance of refusing to continually revisit old wounds and painful stories. While healing requires processing the past, growth requires eventually creating a new narrative. Scripture: Philippians 3:13 “Forgetting those things which are behind.” Quote: “You already dealt with this. That’s done. I’m not doing time travel backwards and bringing up old stuff.” — Bishop Jim Swilley Main Scripture Focus: Ephesians 2:4-6 “And raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.” This passage serves as the foundation for the entire series, framing heavenly living as a present reality characterized by joy, abundance, peace, gratitude, and spiritual awareness rather than merely a future hope. Memorable Quote “When you learn to get your joy up there and walk in the fullness of joy, you have to get real protective of it.” — Bishop Jim Swilley

14 de jun de 20261 h 11 min
Portada del episodio ‘ALIGN WITH THE DIVINE: Discovering the New Heaven and Earth from Within’ (Pt V)

‘ALIGN WITH THE DIVINE: Discovering the New Heaven and Earth from Within’ (Pt V)

Bishop Jim’s insightful messages help others find THEIR METRON through M~otivation E~nlightenment T~ranscendence R~enewal O~utreach and N~etworking * Learn more: www.bishinthenow.com [http://www.bishinthenow.com/] * Follow Jim Swilley on Youtube to see the videos live Sundays at 11:11 am – https://www.youtube.com/bishinthenow [https://www.youtube.com/bishinthenow] In this deeply reflective conclusion to the “Align With the Divine” series, Bishop Jim Swilley explores what true spiritual alignment actually looks like when life becomes painful, confusing, and deeply human. Using Jesus’ interactions with Peter after betrayal and with Mary and Martha after Lazarus’ death, he teaches that alignment is not perfection or emotional denial — it is learning to embrace the full reality of your humanity while remaining grounded in what is authentically true within you. The message centers on foundations: storms reveal what your life is built on, and genuine faith survives not because it avoids questions, but because it has been tested. Through stories about renovating his parents’ home, reflections on aging, grief, friendship, Carol Burnett, and even wrestling with modern deconstruction theology, Bishop Jim emphasizes that alignment means integrating every part of your journey — mistakes, doubts, pain, joy, relationships, and spiritual experiences — into a whole and healed self. MAIN TAKEAWAYS 1. STORMS REVEAL FOUNDATIONS Bishop Jim centers much of the message around Jesus’ teaching about building a house on the rock versus sand. > “The idea is adversity reveals your foundation.” — Bishop Jim Swilley Referencing Matthew 7, he explains that rain, wind, and floods expose whether something is authentically built to last. Alignment is not avoiding storms; it is discovering what remains standing afterward. Scripture References: * Matthew * Luke ---------------------------------------- 2. ALIGNMENT MEANS EMBRACING HUMANITY AND DIVINITY TOGETHER One of the strongest themes throughout the teaching is that spirituality should never require suppressing human emotion. > “I am sick and tired of people taking some Bible verses and telling people not to have human emotions.” — Bishop Jim Swilley He argues that grief, fear, anger, disappointment, and uncertainty are not evidence of weak faith. They are part of being human. Jesus Himself experienced emotional intensity when Lazarus died. This becomes central to his interpretation of Jesus “groaning in the spirit” in John 11. Scripture Reference: * John ---------------------------------------- 3. “GROANING IN THE SPIRIT” WAS EMOTIONAL AGITATION, NOT CALM SPIRITUALITY Bishop Jim digs into the Greek language behind John 11:33 and explains that Jesus’ groaning was more than sadness. > “The Greek root literally translated means to snort with anger or to express indignation, outrage, and deep agitation.” — Bishop Jim Swilley Rather than presenting Jesus as emotionally detached, he presents Him as fully immersed in the pain and tension of the moment. This becomes a metaphor for alignment: * feeling fear while still believing, * grieving while still hoping, * questioning while still remaining spiritually rooted. ---------------------------------------- 4. RELATIONSHIPS ARE PART OF SPIRITUAL ALIGNMENT Much of the sermon reflects on the importance of authentic relationships — particularly Jesus’ relationship with Peter and Lazarus. > “What really matters is the relationship that you have and that you maintain.” — Bishop Jim Swilley He highlights: * Jesus asking Peter “Do you love me?” * Martha confronting Jesus after Lazarus’ death * The value of longtime friendships that survive storms Scripture References: * John * John ---------------------------------------- 5. ALIGNMENT INCLUDES YOUR ENTIRE STORY — EVEN THE BROKEN PARTS One of the defining statements of the message: > “Make peace with every bit of your life, including your mistakes and your foibles and the things that you messed up that you can’t fix.” — Bishop Jim Swilley He teaches that spiritual maturity is not pretending the painful parts never happened. Instead: * regrets, * failures, * rejection, * unanswered questions, * trauma, * and transformation all become threads in the tapestry of your identity. ---------------------------------------- 6. FAITH THAT SURVIVES QUESTIONS IS STRONGER THAN BLIND CERTAINTY A major portion of the teaching wrestles openly with theological deconstruction and modern skepticism. Bishop Jim acknowledges: * problems with organized religion, * hypocrisy within evangelical culture, * intellectual critiques of scripture, * and the rise of ex-pastors becoming atheists. Yet he arrives at a deeply personal conclusion: > “The winds and the rains and the storm already tried it… and baby it’s still standing.” — Bishop Jim Swilley His argument is not rooted in dogma, but experience. Faith survives because something deeply authentic remains after every question has been asked. ---------------------------------------- KEY SCRIPTURES REFERENCED * Matthew — The wise man builds on the rock * John — Lazarus, Mary, Martha, and Jesus groaning in the spirit * John — Jesus asking Peter “Do you love me?” * Isaiah — “The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me…” ---------------------------------------- FINAL THOUGHT The ultimate message of this teaching is that alignment is not becoming less human — it is becoming fully integrated. The storms of life do not destroy what is real; they expose it. Faith, identity, relationships, grief, questions, and hope all coexist in the same sacred space. > “You are aligned with your foundation, with what’s been shaken and tried in the fire… You are exactly where you’re supposed to be.” — Bishop Jim Swilley

1 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio ‘ALIGN WITH THE DIVINE: Discovering the New Heaven and Earth from Within’ (Pt IV)

‘ALIGN WITH THE DIVINE: Discovering the New Heaven and Earth from Within’ (Pt IV)

Bishop Jim’s insightful messages help others find THEIR METRON through M~otivation E~nlightenment T~ranscendence R~enewal O~utreach and N~etworking * Learn more: www.bishinthenow.com [http://www.bishinthenow.com/] * Follow Jim Swilley on Youtube to see the videos live Sundays at 11:11 am – https://www.youtube.com/bishinthenow [https://www.youtube.com/bishinthenow] In this Pentecost Sunday message on Metron Live, Bishop Jim Swilley reframes Pentecost as a celebration of inclusion, liberation, diversity, and spiritual alignment rather than religious legalism. He argues that the Holy Spirit dismantles barriers of gender, nationality, race, and exclusion, pointing to Acts 2 as proof that God’s spirit is poured out “on all flesh.” Swilley contrasts the expansive, freeing nature of the Holy Spirit with fear-based religion, nationalism, and judgmental Christianity, emphasizing that true spirituality should make people more compassionate, more authentic, and more open-hearted. The core of the teaching centers on “alignment with the divine” through understanding the seasons of life: winter, spring, summer, and fall. Swilley teaches that many people mistake seasonal transitions for spiritual failure, when in reality they are simply moving through different phases of growth, rest, manifestation, or release. He encourages listeners to stop comparing themselves to others, discern their current season, and live authentically without shame or regret. The message closes with a call into spiritual alignment, freedom, and peace, reminding listeners that abundant life comes from being fully present and fully themselves. MAIN TAKEAWAYS PENTECOST IS ABOUT INCLUSION, NOT EXCLUSION Swilley explains that Pentecost was never meant to become a system of legalism or external holiness rules. Instead, it represents the breaking down of barriers between people, cultures, genders, and nations. > “The true message of Pentecost is inclusion, diversity, Universalism… deliverance from xenophobia.” — Bishop Jim Swilley THE HOLY SPIRIT CANNOT BE CONTROLLED The message repeatedly emphasizes that the Holy Spirit is beyond human categories, institutions, and prejudice. > “The Holy Spirit is beyond your genitalia. It’s beyond your sexual orientation. The Holy Spirit is beyond your racial prejudices.” — Bishop Jim Swilley ALIGNMENT MATTERS MORE THAN STRIVING Swilley teaches that many people are exhausted because they are forcing manifestation instead of aligning with their current season. > “If you’re trying too hard, you might need to just focus more on the alignment.” — Bishop Jim Swilley LIFE HAPPENS IN SEASONS The sermon outlines four spiritual life cycles: * Winter — reflection, healing, rest * Spring — new ideas and preparation * Summer — growth, action, manifestation * Fall — harvest and letting go He stresses that no season is permanent and none are failures. STOP COMPARING YOUR JOURNEY One of the strongest themes is learning to discern your own timing instead of measuring your progress against someone else’s life. > “Your prayer wasn’t answered? It’s not the season yet.” — Bishop Jim Swilley SPIRITUAL MATURITY BRINGS PEACE Swilley describes spiritual maturity as reaching a place where you stop obsessing over control, appearances, judgment, and external validation. > “Abundant life really is just living the life that you want and being happy with it.” — Bishop Jim Swilley SCRIPTURES REFERENCED * Acts 2 — The Day of Pentecost * Joel 2:28 — “I will pour out my spirit on all flesh” * Matthew 13:38 — “The field is the world” * John 16:7 — “It is necessary that I go away” * Isaiah 33:6 — “Wisdom and knowledge will be the stability of your times” * Psalm 1 — Fruit brought forth “in his season” * Ecclesiastes 3 — Seasons and times * Galatians 3:28 — “Neither male nor female” * 2 Corinthians 3:17 — “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty” * Philippians 2:12 — “Work out your own salvation” * Psalm 30:5 — “Weeping may endure for a night” * Psalm 112:7 — “Not afraid of evil tidings” * Ecclesiastes 4:9-12 — “Two are better than one”

30 de may de 20261 h 23 min
Portada del episodio ‘ALIGN WITH THE DIVINE: Discovering the New Heaven and Earth from Within’ (Pt III)

‘ALIGN WITH THE DIVINE: Discovering the New Heaven and Earth from Within’ (Pt III)

Bishop Jim’s insightful messages help others find THEIR METRON through M~otivation E~nlightenment T~ranscendence R~enewal O~utreach and N~etworking * Learn more: www.bishinthenow.com [http://www.bishinthenow.com/] * Follow Jim Swilley on Youtube to see the videos live Sundays at 11:11 am – https://www.youtube.com/bishinthenow [https://www.youtube.com/bishinthenow] In this powerful and deeply personal episode of Metron, Bishop Jim Swilley explores what it truly means to “align with the divine” by reframing adversity, suffering, and spiritual growth. Broadcasting from the new Metron Live studio, Bishop Swilley blends spirituality, personal storytelling, scripture, meditation, and even quantum physics to challenge traditional ideas about God, demons, spiritual warfare, and victimhood. His central thesis is that hardship is not punishment from an external enemy, but often a signal that we are out of alignment with our higher consciousness and deeper truth. Rather than seeing life’s struggles as attacks from the devil or tests from God, Swilley teaches that adversity itself becomes the teacher. Drawing from The Bible, particularly Isaiah 30:19–21, he argues that every inconvenience, setback, and painful experience can become a doorway into wisdom, growth, and transformation if we ask, “What is this teaching me?” instead of “Why is this happening to me?” The message ultimately becomes a call to reclaim personal agency, rethink inherited beliefs, and consciously align thoughts, words, and energy with love, healing, and abundance. ---------------------------------------- MAIN TAKEAWAYS 1. ADVERSITY CAN BE A TEACHER INSTEAD OF A PUNISHMENT Bishop Swilley reframes suffering through Isaiah 30, explaining that “the bread of adversity” and “the water of affliction” are not evidence of spiritual warfare, but opportunities for awareness and growth. > “Your teachers are the stuff that happens to you.” — Bishop Jim Swilley Instead of asking: * “Why is this happening to me?” He suggests asking: * “What is this teaching me?” Scripture Reference: * Book of Isaiah 30:19–21 * Book of Hebrews 5:8 ---------------------------------------- 2. ALIGNMENT MATTERS MORE THAN SPIRITUAL WARFARE Swilley openly rejects the idea that believers are constantly fighting demons or external evil forces. He argues that most spiritual conflict originates internally through misaligned thinking, fear, shame, and self-sabotage. > “The adversary is you. It’s your thoughts that haven’t come into alignment yet.” — Bishop Jim Swilley He contrasts traditional teachings about “fighting the devil” with the idea that life reflects our beliefs, expectations, and emotional alignment. Scripture Reference: * Book of Genesis 3 * Book of Romans 12:2 ---------------------------------------- 3. JESUS TAUGHT CONSCIOUSNESS, ALIGNMENT, AND INNER TRANSFORMATION Throughout the teaching, Swilley connects the words of Jesus Christ with modern concepts found in quantum physics, emphasizing ideas like: * observer effect * energy * vibration * agreement * consciousness * manifestation He repeatedly points back to Jesus’ teaching that: > “The kingdom of God is within you.” Scripture References: * Gospel of Luke 17:21 * Gospel of Matthew 18:19 * Gospel of Mark 11:23–24 ---------------------------------------- 4. YOUR WORDS AND PERSPECTIVE SHAPE YOUR REALITY A major thread in the message is the power of perception and speech. Swilley teaches that reality is responsive rather than rigid, and that what we repeatedly think and say influences the life we experience. > “Death and life are in the power of the tongue.” — Bishop Jim Swilley He warns against victim mentality and self-fulfilling negativity while encouraging listeners to intentionally focus on possibility, gratitude, and abundance. Scripture References: * Book of Proverbs 18:21 * First Epistle to the Corinthians 2:9 ---------------------------------------- 5. HEALING OFTEN COMES THROUGH REINTERPRETING THE PAST One of the most emotionally resonant sections of the episode centers on trauma, memory, and healing. Swilley suggests that while we cannot literally change the past, we can transform how we understand it. > “You can’t change what happened, but you can change how you observe what happened.” — Bishop Jim Swilley This becomes the foundation for emotional healing, freedom from shame, and breaking cycles of inherited pain. ---------------------------------------- NOTABLE QUOTE > “If life keeps making you madder and madder, you’re spiraling downward. If instead you’re getting smarter and smarter, your adversity has become your teacher.” — Bishop Jim Swilley

21 de may de 20261 h 10 min