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The Book of Mysteries The Book of Mysteries by Jonathan Cahn
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“So open now your mind, your heart, and your life. For it is only the open vessel and an open heart that can contain the infinity of God.” The Mission: Today, open your mind, your heart, and your life to that which you don’t yet know, that you might contain that which is greater than yourself. Isaiah 55:1–9; Jeremiah 33:3; 2 Corinthians 4:7 Filled”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“if you live inside the will of God, if you follow the directives of God, if you carry out His assignment, if you set your course on fulfilling His mission, then you will live in the authority of God. Then every rank in this universe must yield to your steps, every door must unlock, and every gate must open. So make it your aim to live your life wholly in the will of God. Find your mission and fulfill it . . . And you will walk in the power and the authority of the Almighty.” The”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“Even for those who know and love the Lord there is fallow ground. Whatever part of your life has not been touched by God’s love and truth—that is your fallow ground. Whatever area of your life remains unchanged, unredeemed, ungodly, and dark, whether of actions, thoughts, habits, emotions, or ways—that is your fallow ground. And the law of the fallow ground says that it is that very thing, that very soil, that very area you haven’t allowed God to touch and change—that will bear the most fruit. It is that part you must plow, and sow, and water. For it is that ground that is waiting to bear a harvest. As it is written in the Prophets, ‘Break up your fallow ground; for it is time to seek the Lord.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“It’s called the ‘fallow ground.’ It’s the ground purposely left unsown, unreaped, and unharvested. You see, if one works the same land the same way over and over again, the soil becomes depleted and the land grows less and less productive. Therefore, farmers would, every so often, allow a field to rest, to lie fallow, unsown and unreaped. So if we planted on ground that had been allowed to lie fallow, what might we expect to happen?” “It would become fruitful, more fruitful than other ground?” “Yes,” said the teacher. “And this is the law of the fallow ground, a law that contains one of the most important secrets of living a fruitful life. What is the fallow ground? It’s the ground that hasn’t been touched, worked, or cultivated. And what is the fallow ground in God? It’s the ground that hasn’t been touched by God. It’s every life, every heart, and every soul, that hasn’t allowed God to touch it, that hasn’t allowed God’s life to enter in. It is, therefore, crucial that you sow the Word and love of God to the fallow, to the lost, the unsaved, the unknowing, to the farthest and the most ungodly—to the fallow ground. And if they receive, they will bear much fruit.” “Does the law of the fallow ground also apply to those who know God?” “So much so,” he said, “that applying it can transform your life. Even for those who know and love the Lord there is fallow ground. Whatever part of your life has not been touched by God’s love and truth—that is your fallow ground. Whatever area of your life remains unchanged, unredeemed, ungodly, and dark, whether of actions, thoughts, habits, emotions, or ways—that is your fallow ground. And the law of the fallow ground says that it is that very thing, that very soil, that very area you haven’t allowed God to touch and change—that will bear the most fruit. It is that part you must plow, and sow, and water. For it is that ground that is waiting to bear a harvest. As it is written in the Prophets, ‘Break up your fallow ground; for it is time to seek the Lord.’” The Mission: Identify the fallow ground in your life. Open it up to this day, to the touch of God, His Word, and His will. Let it bear its harvest. Hosea 10:12; Matthew 13:23 Neru Lachem”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“over the long run, continuance, consistency, and perseverance overcome everything else. And the small upward steps, taken every day, will end up lifting you to the heights. God has called you not only to love, but to keep loving; not only to believe, but to press on in believing; and not only to do right, but to persevere in doing it. When you do that, then the power of your love, your faith, and your righteousness will be multiplied . . .”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“When you hear of a world beyond this world and a life beyond this life, when you hear of heaven, you're hearing of it as a child in the womb. You've never seen it or touched it. And yet everything within you was made to know this world and live within it... a heart made for a love that is perfect and without condition, a soul yearning for that which is eternal, a spirit longing to live in a place of no death, no fear, no tears, no darkness, and no evil. And yet you live in a world of imperfection, of corruption, of pain and evil, of darkness and the absence of love. And as it was in the womb, so too this world can never answer the longings of your heart or the purpose for which you came into existence. And every tear, every sorrow, every disappointment, every unfulfilled longing is just a reminder that you're not home, and that you were made for something more, to be a child of heaven... and that this life is only the beginning of real life and the matrix of the world to come.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“God is the Yarden. It is the Most High who is the Descender. Only He can fully descend. And so the Descender humbled Himself, descending from the heights to come into the world and taking the form of man. And as the Jordan descends to Galilee, so the Descender came to the land of Galilee, and there gave life to those in need. And in the same way that the Jordan descends from Galilee to the Dead Sea, the lowest point on earth, so from Galilee the Descender went down to the lowest of depths, to death and judgment. For God is love. And the nature of love is to descend that it might give of itself, and that we, in its descent, might find life.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“That which you take of this world and keep to yourself is not that which you are... but that which you are not. It is that which you are empty of. Those who take from this world and don't give are the empty. Those who seek to gain love from this world, but not to give love... are the loveless. And those who seek to get blessed from the world but don't bless... are the unblessed...the black flowers.

So that which you would have your life become is the very thing you must give. Therefore, live a life of giving love, and you will have love. Live a life of giving your possessions, and you will be rich. Live a life of blessing others, and your life will always be blessed. For the light shines on every flower. But each flower becomes only the light it gives back.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“Obey the will of God you do know, and it will lead you to the will of God you don’t.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“which we walk. So we walk in the direction in which we look. And where we look, we walk.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“SERPENT”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“What you think you have is only entrusted . . . borrowed. And when you think you have what you don’t have, you live in conflict with the truth. And you’ll end up fighting to keep what you don’t have. It is only when you let go that you can live in the truth.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“Yes,” said the teacher, “the love of God. The love of God is the arm of the Almighty. And there is no greater power in this world.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“That’s why, deep down, in the center of our being, in the deepest part of our heart, we seek to be filled.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“and you have. It’s the One who is called ‘the Christ.’ The word Christ comes from Christos. Christos is a translation of the Hebrew word Mashiach, Messiah. The name Mashiach is linked to oil. It means the Anointed One, the One anointed with oil.” “He whose name is like oil . . . the Bridegroom.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“So true worship is never done by compulsion, but freely from the overflow of your heart.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“If you withhold blessing, your blessings will be withheld.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“THE MASADA MYSTERY WE WERE STANDING in the middle of a large valley, harsh and forbidding. “The prophet Ezekiel was taken in a vision to a valley filled with dry bones, which, by the hand of God, would rise and come to life and become a massive army. It was a prophecy that the nation of Israel, though utterly destroyed, would one day by God’s hand be resurrected from the grave.” The teacher began to walk through the valley, unfolding the mystery as he went. “In the first century the Romans destroyed the nation of Israel. The nation’s last stand took place on a desert mountain fortress called Masada. It was there that her last soldiers would meet their end. So Masada became the grave of ancient Israel. But then, after two thousand years, the nation of Israel was resurrected by the hand of God as foretold in the vision of dry bones. The people were resurrected, the cities were resurrected, and the Israeli soldier was resurrected. And then the resurrected nation decided to return to its ancient grave.” “To Masada? Why?” “To excavate it, to dig it up. The man in charge of the excavation was one of the nation’s most famous soldiers and archaeologists. And Israeli soldiers helped in the excavation. So now on the grave of Israel’s ancient soldiers walked her resurrected soldiers to see what lay hidden in its ruins.” “And what was hidden in the ruins?” “A prophetic mystery . . . a Scripture. It had been buried and hidden there for almost two thousand years.” “And what did it say?” “It was from the Book of Ezekiel, the section that contained the prophecy of the Valley of Dry Bones: ‘Thus says the Lord God: “Behold, O My people, I will open your graves and cause you to come up from your graves, and bring you into the land of Israel.”’ So the prophecy was hidden right there in Israel’s ancient grave, waiting for ages for the day that it would be uncovered, the day when its words would be fulfilled and the nation resurrected from its grave. You see, God is real. And His will is to restore the broken, bring hope from hopelessness, and life from death. Don’t ever give up. For with God, nothing is impossible . . . even restoration of a nation from a valley of dry bones.” The Mission: Bring your most hopeless situations and issues to God. Believe God for the impossible. Live and move in the power of the impossible. Ezekiel 37:12–14; Luke 1:37 The Masada Mystery”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“MAN BORN TO PAUSE AND ASK”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“So if you walk in the Spirit,” I said, “life will go from a drag . . . to a breeze.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“it is wisdom to bless Israel and the Jewish people.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“The Mission: Make Him who is the Cornerstone, the cornerstone of all you do today. Build everything else from that foundation.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“you. And thus you are no longer of the world. You’re in the world, but no longer of it. You no longer belong to your circumstances, nor to your past, nor to your sins and limitations. You are no longer bound to such things. You no longer belong to this world. You belong to the Bridegroom. You’re free. You’re the calah!”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“The Mission: Today, even in the most unlikely or lowest of circumstances, set up your portable mountaintop and dwell with God on the heights.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“The only way to find the meaning and purpose of your life is to find it in a mystery . . . the mystery of Him . . . and to make that mystery the cause of everything you do . . . and the reason . . . for everything you are.”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“The apostle Paul?” “Yes. The name Paul or Paulus comes from the root word pauo, which means to pause, to stop, to desist, to cease from one’s course, or to come to an end. So the man whose name was linked to pausing and stopping finally pauses and stops. God caused him to finally stop, to desist, and come to an end. So his whole life, from the moment he received his name, was leading up to that moment.” “And what about his”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries
“Proverbs 3:6; Philippians”
Jonathan Cahn, The Book of Mysteries