When was the last time you went back?
Not a quick gratitude. Not a general acknowledgment that God is good.
The full stop. The honest, specific, this-is-what-He-did-in-my-actual-life backward look.
Before a voice can go public, it has to go back. Because you cannot declare what you have forgotten. And most of us — if we're honest — have let the details of what God has done get soft around the edges. The urgency of it fades. The specificity blurs.
Phil Wickham opens the PROCLAMATION arc right there. REMEMBER.
"Remember those walls that we called sin and shame. Remember those giants we called death and grave. But He came and He died and He rose."
This isn't a history lesson. It's a personal inventory. The walls that were real in your life. The giants that stood in your specific way. The moment He came — for you, in your story, on your actual road.
Most of us rush past this position. We want to get to the declaration — the boldness, the public moment, the voice that goes out. But the declaration without the memory is just noise. It has no weight.
The weight comes from the witness.
From standing in what He actually did and saying — out loud, to yourself first — this is our God. He did this. He saved me. I have evidence.
That's where PROCLAMATION begins.
Not with courage. With memory.
What are the walls He brought down in your story?
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