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Longivity: Youth Renewed

Posted: Fri Feb 13, 2026 7:02 pm
by adminpc
Resurrection Life Is Working in You

Psalm 103:5 tells us that the Lord renews our youth like the eagle’s. That does not mean we deny the passing of years. It means we refuse to surrender our strength, clarity, and usefulness before God says we are finished. Scripture shows us that Moses’ natural vigor was not diminished at 120, and Caleb declared at 85 that he was as strong as in his youth. This is our covenant.

Under the New Covenant, this promise deepens. Romans 8:11 declares that the same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead now dwells in us and gives life to our mortal bodies. Resurrection life is not only future glory — it is present vitality. It works quietly, steadily, strengthening us from the inside out. We are not trying to look young; we are agreeing to remain fruitful.

If you feel weary, worn, or overlooked, do not settle into decline. Speak life over yourself. Sit upright. Breathe slowly. Read the declaration out loud once each morning. If discouragement presses in during the day, speak it again. This is not striving. This is alignment. Watch for subtle shifts — clearer thinking, steadier emotions, physical stamina, renewed hope. Resurrection life often moves quietly before it moves visibly.

Declaration

Father, in the Name of Jesus, I thank You that You satisfy me with good things and renew my youth like the eagle’s. The same Spirit who raised Christ from the dead dwells in me and gives life to my mortal body. Resurrection life is working in me now — strengthening my mind, refreshing my body, and sustaining my purpose. I will not fade before my assignment is complete. My latter years shall be fruitful, strong, and full of clarity. I rise above weariness like the eagle above the storm. I receive divine vitality and holy endurance. I am inwardly renewed day by day, and I will finish strong. In Jesus’ Name, amen.


For the Unsure Heart

If you are reading these promises and part of you whispers, “I want to believe this… but I’m not sure,” you are not disqualified. You are human. Long seasons can make even strong believers tired. Repeated disappointments can dull expectation. Sometimes what we call doubt is simply fatigue of the soul. Remember, uncertainty does not cancel covenant.

God does not withdraw His promise because your confidence wavers. Resurrection life does not turn off because you had a hard year. Romans 8:11 does not say the Spirit gives life only when you feel strong; it says He gives life because He dwells in you. The promise is anchored in His faithfulness, not your emotional steadiness.

You do not have to feel restored to begin agreeing with restoration. You do not have to see the evidence before you stand on the Word. Start small. Whisper the declaration instead of shouting it. Sit quietly and say, “Lord, I want to believe this for me.” That is enough to begin.

Faith is not the absence of questions. It is the decision to return to agreement even when questions remain.

If your heart feels cautious, let it be cautious in His presence. If your hope feels fragile, let Him hold it. Restoration in God is rarely loud at first. It often begins as a steadying inside — a little more peace, a little more clarity, a small spark of strength where there was only weariness.

Grace is not reserved for the already confident. It is poured out on those who stay.

And if today all you can pray is, “Lord, help my unbelief,” that is still a doorway to resurrection life.

#WatchmanOnTheWall
#StrengthForTheWeary
#longivity