Summary of "Unleashing Healing Power Through Spirit Born Emotions - Session 6"
Core idea
The speaker teaches that the Holy Spirit is an active, pervasive energy (Greek: energēo / energeia, dunamis, exousia) that fills and flows through people, empowering healing, miracles, authority, creativity and productive “flow.” Wellness and effectiveness come from tuning into that Spirit-energy rather than relying only on human/flesh strength.
How the Spirit’s energy commonly feels (signals to notice)
- Warmth or tingling in the hands (especially when praying or laying on hands).
- Inner quickening: sudden wells of faith, compassion, peace, joy, hope or other fruit of the Spirit.
- A flow of words or insights through the lips (words of wisdom/knowledge; “oracles of God”).
- Vivid inner pictures, impressions or “seeing” with the eyes of the heart.
- Physical responses in devotional prayer (shaking, trembling) when sensing the flow.
Practical self-care and spiritual practices to cultivate the flow
- Begin by intentionally inviting the Spirit: open worship or prayer with a direct welcome (for example, “Holy Spirit, be present, anoint our eyes, release compassion and power”).
- Use the “eyes, ears, emotions, hands” of your heart deliberately:
- See (visualize) the presence/light of the Spirit (e.g., shimmery bluish light, River of Life imagery).
- Listen inwardly for guidance.
- Allow spirit-led emotions (compassion, peace) rather than soulish reactivity.
- Use hands to pray and minister (expect warmth/flow).
- Tune to flow: relax, be childlike, smile, and intentionally pick up flowing thoughts, pictures and feelings rather than forcing outcomes.
- Ask specifically for fruit or gifts (for example, peace, mercy, compassion, words of wisdom) and expect them to well up.
- Invite the Spirit before ministering/healing: ask Him to release compassion and power through you into the person.
- Practice short devotional visualizations (for example, the River of Life flowing from the throne into the room/body) and meditate until you sense the flow.
- Journal and meditate: record experiences and written impressions about the Spirit’s energy; study relevant scriptures and the listed uses of energēo / energeia.
- Keep it simple and consistent: ask, believe, receive—don’t force or rely on your own strength.
Productivity and creativity (flow) tips
- View work energized by the Spirit as “living” work — you’ll often experience ease, creativity and higher productivity when tuned to the Spirit.
- Seek “open doors” God provides rather than striving to pry doors open; walk confidently through doors you sense are opened by the Spirit.
- Use spiritual faculties intentionally in corporate worship or workplace settings to enter a flow state more quickly: visualize, tune, and follow impressions.
Practical outreach steps to apply this week
- Look for people in daily life who appear hurting and ask permission to pray for them; be prepared to lay hands and expect simple, quick ministry encounters.
- Practice the seven-step miracle/prayer model referenced by the speaker (available in the chapter/website) when praying for others.
- Read and meditate on the scriptures and the appendix listing uses of the Greek word for “energize” to learn the scriptural pattern and build confidence.
Warnings and mindset notes
- Avoid trusting solely in “flesh strength” or personal ability — the speaker frames that as spiritually limiting.
- Don’t grieve the Spirit by ignoring or failing to honor His presence; actively invite and honor Him.
- Distinguish spirit-led emotions from soulish reactions; aim for spirit-tuned responses.
Recommended resources and actions
- Journal daily about what you sense; keep practices simple and childlike.
- Review the chapter appendix or online blog that lists the ~40 New Testament uses of the Greek energetic word (energēo / energeia) and meditate on those verses.
- Look up and try the seven-step prayer model on the speaker’s website for practical structure in healing/prayer ministry.
Presenters and sources mentioned
- The speaker/presenter (references personal journaling and experiences)
- The Bible (scriptures quoted or referenced include: Galatians 5:6; Colossians 1:17; John 6:63; Hebrews 4:12; Hebrews 6:1–2; 1 Corinthians 16:9; Philippians 2:13; 1 Peter 4:10–11; Habakkuk 3:4; Psalm 16:8, etc.)
- Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (TDNT)
- A.T. Robertson — Word Pictures of the New Testament
- CWG Ministries (speaker’s website / blog and the book’s appendix with the 40 uses)
- The “seven-step miracle/prayer model” (referenced in the chapter and on the website)
Note
The speaker offers a seven-step model for prayer/healing; this can be converted into a simple one-page checklist if you have access to the chapter or would like a general outline.
Category
Wellness and Self-Improvement
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