It’s okay, you’re safe here.

 As uncomfortable as it is, reality states that wounding is part of the human experience. Trauma happens on all levels (spirit, soul, body) and we do a disservice to each other when we minimize trauma as merely a painful experience. Spiritual trauma being one of those issues minimized including relationship fractures being one of those painful experiences. Let’s call it like it is… if you think you are hemorrhaging somewhere be it spirit, soul, or body… you probably are.

The idea of this ministry is not to nurse our wounds or bond over traumatic experiences, but instead find the return on investment for going through that pain and turning the pain into a factory of life producing functions for the edification of each other. This will only happen when you unpack your pain. Unbox your design. And understand on all levels what it means to feel safety within a community. It’s a process. It’s a journey. Safety is not a one size fits all thing, but if you assess your personhood for your specific measurements, safety begins to fit your personhood the way Father designed you to fit into safety.

Some people have a niche anointing for safety, while others have a colossal bigness for being able to be boldly and courageously look premature death in the face and say, “not today. not this time. Not this person.” The earned authority doesn’t happen because of chance, it happens by overcoming. And I’ll be the first to say that  overcoming isn’t safe. Overcoming is bumpy, sometimes what seems to be brutal, but it makes for well armed sons and daughters in the Kingdom. Here’s another disclaimer: In this journey with The Most High, I will assure you he’s not a safe God, but he’s All Good. And with His perfect essence and unending perfection, He established   protection by his Word and by a spiritually binding and legal blood covenant with Jesus of Nazareth. His safety is extended to those who bare the name of The Most High as Sons and as Brides. It’s okay to know know what that means or looks like. It’s okay to exhale here. It’s okay to slowly lower your clenched jaw and rest your shoulders comfortably. None of us have arrived, but being together makes the journey much more bearable.

Glad you are here, my friend.

Meagan Mozingo