Experience Miracles Wherever You Go… even in unexpected places!
Is your heart crying out for more? Do you long to experience the supernatural? Do you want to live a life marked by Kingdom adventure? Then join Joanne Moody for a life-changing faith journey in Everyday Supernatural!
Since experiencing her own life-changing supernatural healing, Joanne Moody has made it her mission to give away the love and miracles of Jesus everywhere she goes. She believes this is the power and privilege of every believer!
In Everyday Supernatural, Joanne Moody serves up a spiritual feast of captivating testimonies, practical teaching, and powerful activations. You will walk away emboldened with the knowledge that God is intent on using everyday people to perform His miracles and reveal His Son to the world!
Everyday Supernatural will empower you
Overcome the barriers to receiving your own spiritual breakthrough.Be filled with supernatural faith that Jesus wants to move through your life.Fulfill your destiny and take your place in the unfolding story of God in the Earth.Confidently pray for miracles by using the prayers, activations, and strategies provided.Operate in the authority of Christ to see salvation, healing, and supernatural power in your day-to-day life.
Jesus wants to work through you to supernaturally touch the people around you. From your local grocery store to your workplace, from your school to your favorite coffee shop, it's time to begin releasing miracles everywhere you go!
Not a huge fan of this book. I’m a huge fan of this woman’s testimony, of the miraculous work of God through her traveling ministry, and the stories were encouraging. But when you read a couple of the chapters, you’ve basically read it all. And that makes for a very poor book in my opinion. I feel like this was all about her stories and offered very little to me. Why I’m rating it so low is because this book could have been a great opportunity to capitalize on the storytelling and offer even more to readers, but that never seems to happen. The repetition made the book disengaging and boring by chapter four or five.
I also have a personal issue with using the passion translation, an issue that’s pretty well known in the Christian community. I’m not against the MSG, but it feels like she doesn’t see anything wrong with solely relying on these translations to understand and expound on the text.
I’m a charismatic follower of Jesus and I definitely would bend more towards that side of understanding the Word than a reformed side. But I still felt disconnected and bored with this book. Definitely a bummer.
From the days of the vineyards' "doing the stuff" to Toronto and Brownsville and South America and who knows where else, there are people who are signposts to a whole other world. This book is a map to the signpost.