Translating The Father's Prophecy To A Practical Life || Worship Service [WORKING]

Two weeks later, the "overflow" didn't drop from the ceiling. It came through an email from a firm that had seen his new portfolio.

But today, the guest speaker, a practical woman named Sister Claire, walked up to the microphone. She didn't shout. She just looked at them.

The service ended, but for Marcus, the worship continued—not in a song, but in the diligent, practical clicking of his mouse and the integrity of his deadlines. The prophecy had been translated. Two weeks later, the "overflow" didn't drop from the ceiling

The air in the sanctuary was thick with the scent of old wood and expectation. It was the monthly “Prophetic Service,” and Pastor Elias stood behind the pulpit, his eyes closed. The congregation sat in a silence so heavy it felt like prayer itself.

In the third row, Marcus—a man whose bank account was currently sitting at fourteen dollars and whose "barn" was a cramped two-bedroom apartment—scribbled the words into his leather-bound journal. Season of overflow. Barns full. She didn't shout

Marcus woke up two hours early. He rebuilt his website. He reached out to ten local businesses. He cleaned his desk—making room for the work he claimed was coming.

As the worship band began a soft, rhythmic bridge, Marcus stared at the words. He’d heard prophecies like this before. Usually, they stayed in the journal, glowing like embers on Sunday but turning to cold ash by Monday morning’s commute. The prophecy had been translated

"The Father says," Elias’s voice dropped to a gravelly whisper that carried to the back row, "that the drought is over. He is preparing a season of overflow, where the barns will be full and the storehouses will groan under the weight of His provision."