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Hey Reader, You’ve done the work. Five weeks of it. You named the wilderness. You faced the giants. You stopped waiting to feel ready. And you still haven’t said the one sentence that matters. You’ve circled the mountain. Prayed around it. Called it being “open to whatever God wants.” But be honest, a private hope never has to be defended. Keep it vague, and if it doesn’t happen, nobody ever saw you want it. This Sunday, in the finale of GIVE ME MY MOUNTAIN, we closed that exit. The Big IdeaAt 85, Caleb walked up to Joshua in front of the leaders of Israel and said seven of the most audacious words in the Old Testament: give me my mountain. He named the exact hill country, named the giants still living on it, and claimed it out loud in front of witnesses. The moment he did, it stopped being a promise and became his inheritance. Your second act is not a request you whisper. It’s a claim you make out loud. A promise you can quietly abandon is a promise you eventually will, the whisper isn’t safer, it’s just a slower way to lose it. Watch The Full MessageIf you missed it or want to sit with it again, the full message is up now. This Week’s PracticeName your one mountain out loud in front of at least one witness this week, the specific mountain, not a vague “I’m believing for big things.” Then take the first irreversible step toward it, the one you cannot quietly walk back. Join Us This SundayOur next in-person gathering is July 12, 2026 at 10:30 AM Central. We’ll be at 7941 47th Street in McCook, Illinois. This is our monthly in-person service. If you’ve been watching online, this is your moment. Bring somebody with you, or just come as you are. New season. New room. We want to see your face. July 12. 10:30 AM. 7941 47th Street, McCook. Be there. Listen: Still StandingThis week’s episode goes deeper on the same fight: what it costs to stop whispering a promise and start claiming it out loud. If Sunday’s message got under your skin, this is where it gets personal. P.S. You’ve claimed the mountain. Now you need a system to actually take the ground. That’s exactly what the Second Act Intensive is built for, the on-ramp from claim to conquest. Reply to this email and I’ll send you the details this week. That’s the finale of GIVE ME MY MOUNTAIN. Six weeks. Thank you for walking the whole thing. Now go take it. With love and expectation, |