Voice of Revival Weekly

There Is a Capacity for More

We are just a day removed from the Omega Panel, and I’m still processing everything that unfolded. Episode 150 of Voices of Revival marked the final cast of 2025 and became a six-hour conversation with 30 voices gathered around one central question: what is God saying as we step into a season of transition?

What was shared was not accidental. Themes emerged without coordination. Scriptures resurfaced without prompting. A clear invitation echoed through the night. God is calling His people to greater capacity, deeper unity, and renewed obedience. Below is a recap of the night for those who joined us live, and for those who are catching up now.

As we close the door on 2025, Voices of Revival is officially done for the year. That said, we are not slowing down. We are simply repositioning. When the calendar flips, we will hit 2026 running.

Multiple prayer initiatives will begin launching with the new year as we start building once again toward Riverfront Revival. This next phase is foundational. Quiet. Intentional. Rooted. We are also currently waiting on the IRS to finalize approval of our 501(c)(3). Once that happens, several exciting ventures that have been sitting in seed form will begin to unfold.

We are also greenlit to launch a new teaching series focused specifically on dreams and visions. This is something I have been preparing on the back burner for well over a year, and I am genuinely excited to begin releasing it. There’s a strong chance this series will span two full months, as there is far more depth here than I initially anticipated.

Beyond all of that, I’m simply excited for the Christmas season. The final weeks of the year are always my favorite. Christmas is the best time of the year, and I will not be convinced otherwise. Useless trivia for you: my home is a full-blown Christmas wonderland. We may or may not have fifteen trees spread throughout the house. Don’t judge me.

With that said, here’s a recap of the Omega Panel and what God began to speak as we closed out the year together.

Voices of Revival Episode 150 | The First of Many Victories

The Omega Panel marked the final Voices of Revival cast of 2025. Episode 150 brought together 30 guests over the course of a six-hour live conversation, all with one shared focus: pressing into what God is saying as we move through a season of transition. This was not a panel built around predictions or trends, but a collective posture of listening, discerning, and responding. What emerged was a clear and unified thread. God is inviting His people into greater capacity, deeper unity, and faithful obedience as the next season unfolds. Below is a recap of the night.

The Omega Panel was never meant to be a normal podcast. It was never designed to be a roundtable of opinions or a highlight reel of good moments. From the opening minutes, it became clear that this night was a convergence. A single thread was being woven through many voices, many stories, and many scriptures, all pointing toward the same conclusion. God is inviting His people into something more, and the question before us is simple. Will we answer?

The night opened with Brian Erisman setting the spiritual trajectory. He centered our attention on the Prayer of Jabez, not as a prosperity slogan, but as a posture of surrender and trust. Enlarge my territory. Let Your hand be with me. Keep me from evil. Brian framed this moment as the first of many victories. What God is doing now is not the destination. It is the opening breakthrough that signals momentum. A doorway moment. A declaration that God is beginning to expand what He can trust. The warning was just as clear. Do not mistake the first victory for the finish line.

Josh Grimes followed by grounding the idea of expansion in discipleship. Increase in the Kingdom does not come through programs, branding, or activity. It comes through people who are formed, sent, and multiplied. Territory is not only geography or influence. Territory is hearts and lives transformed by Jesus and then entrusted to carry Him to others.

Early in the night, Ryan Johnson stepped into what became an impromptu keynote that anchored the entire conversation. He took us to David. Before Goliath, before the crown, before the platform, there were lions, bears, caves, and obscurity. God does not expand what has not been formed in secret. Authority in public is born from obedience in private. The victories we see are never isolated moments. They are the visible fruit of long, hidden faithfulness.

Cotey Hembree pressed into unity and authenticity. Not unity built on performance or image, but unity rooted in Jesus Himself. He challenged the counterfeit versions of church that prioritize platforms over presence and personalities over obedience. His call was simple and weighty. Strip away what does not matter. Return to Jesus. Let the Spirit lead without manipulation or control.

Tia Haresh continued that thread by emphasizing quiet faithfulness. Faith that does not need recognition. Obedience that does not demand affirmation. She reminded us that much of God’s work happens in places that are unseen and uncelebrated, and yet deeply powerful.

Mark Burd spoke into endurance. Resistance is not evidence that something is wrong. Often, it is confirmation that God is advancing. Opposition increases when territory is being taken. Pressure does not mean retreat. It often means alignment.

Caleb Ingram brought clarity to the mission. Keep the gospel central. Do not confuse peripheral conversations with spiritual depth. We are not here to win arguments or build ideological tribes. We are here to get people to Jesus. Everything else must remain secondary.

As the night unfolded, Isaiah 54 began to surface again and again. Unprompted. Repeated. From different voices and different angles. Enlarge the tent. Lengthen the cords. Strengthen the stakes. Expansion requires room, structure, and reinforcement. God is not only promising increase. He is calling His people to prepare for it.

Elijah Beers stepped directly into that theme with a word that captured the heart of the night. Enlarge your capacity. He shared how God had challenged him to recognize that enlargement does not begin with doing more. It begins with making room. God’s dreams are rarely limited by His power. They are often limited by our capacity to receive, steward, and sustain what He gives. Elijah outlined how capacity grows through obedience, pruning, and intimacy. Stretching trust. Removing distractions. Deepening the secret place. God does not delay dreams to frustrate us. He enlarges us so the dream does not crush us when it comes.

David Coffey brought the conversation into the realm of community and healing. The Church is not optional. It is the means God uses to heal, restore, and strengthen His people. From James 5, David reminded us that healing is tied to confession, prayer, and relationship. Bitterness, isolation, and keeping score undermine the very body God designed to carry His power. If we want to strengthen the stakes of the tent, we must strengthen our love for one another.

Jason Bowman tied unity and prosperity together in a way that reframed both. From Psalm 1, he reminded us that the rooted man prospers. Prosperity, in its biblical sense, is not indulgence. It is advancement. To prosper means to push forward. Jason connected this directly to Isaiah 54, pointing out that the same language of prosperity and pushing appears in the promise that no weapon formed against us shall prosper. There is an external push of opposition, but a greater internal push of the Kingdom through the Word of God. Whichever one we strengthen will determine what advances.

As the night moved toward its close, Kenan Snider and Ethan Robison were invited to collectively weigh what had been spoken. Their conclusion was striking in its simplicity. Everything shared was an invitation. An invitation to unity. An invitation to the secret place. An invitation to obedience. An invitation to identity. God is not merely speaking. He is calling. The mission does not need to be complicated. Believe He is who He says He is. Trust that He knows what He is doing. Expect the unimaginable.

Chris Pilcher closed the night by bringing the invitation into the present moment. From Matthew 25, he reminded us that faithfulness is not only measured by grand vision, but by what we do with what God places in our hands today. Do not bury the assignment of the day. Do not overlook the small moments. Steward them. Move with them. God is not looking for perfection. He is looking for availability.

When all was said and done, the message was clear. God is enlarging His people. He is calling for unity. He is strengthening capacity. He is advancing His Kingdom. This was not hype. It was alignment. This was not an ending. It was the first of many victories.

The invitation has been extended.

The only question that remains is this.

When God calls, will we say yes?