Hear God. Speak Life
Why Prophecy Was Never Optional
When Paul wrote to the church in Corinth, he wasn’t writing to spiritual elites. He was writing to a messy, gifted, spiritually hungry group people who had encountered God’s power but struggled to live it out with wisdom and love. And right there, in the middle of that beautiful chaos, he said something striking:
“Follow the way of love and eagerly desire spiritual gifts, especially that you may prophesy.”
—1 Corinthians 14:1
Why prophecy?
Because prophecy is what happens when love listens to God and speaks for the sake of others.
It’s not fortune-telling. It’s not ego. It’s not a mic drop or a magic trick. Prophecy is when heaven speaks into earth’s ache. When someone dares to say what God is saying—not with cold precision, but with the warmth of His heart.
Because we forget.
We forget who we are. We forget what He’s promised. We forget what He’s already done. Prophecy is how God reminds us—in real time, through real voices—what’s more real than our fears.
In Corinth, Paul saw a church teetering between power and pride. They had gifts, yes, but Paul redirects their hunger: Desire the spiritual, but especially this—desire to hear God for each other.
Why? Because prophecy builds people up. It doesn’t just dazzle—it strengthens. It doesn’t puff up—it pierces through. It calls the gold out of the rubble. It doesn’t leave you impressed; it leaves you changed.
We need that again.
In a world saturated with opinions, what we need is the voice of the One who never changes. We don’t need more noise. We need words that carry weight—words soaked in the Spirit, words that restore, confront, heal, and call forth destiny.
Paul’s invitation wasn’t just for the Corinthians. It’s for the church today. Not a suggestion. Not a bonus. A call: eagerly desire. Let your spirit lean forward. Crave it. Long for it. Ask God to trust you with His heart.
But let it flow from love. Prophecy without love is a gong. Love without prophecy can be mute when it matters most. But prophecy born of love? It carries both the roar of heaven and the whisper of healing.
This is not about platform. It’s about people.
Paul wasn’t trying to build a brand. He was trying to build a body—one that could hear the Head and speak as He would. He knew that prophecy, rightly handled, could keep the church tender, courageous, and aligned with the living God.
So maybe it’s time we stop treating prophecy like it’s rare or reserved. Maybe it’s time to remember Paul’s words for what they are: a dare to believe that the God who speaks still speaks—and that He wants to do it through us.
Not for spectacle.
For strength.
Not to impress.
To anchor.
Not to show off.
But to remind each other that God is still moving, still speaking, still choosing ordinary people to carry the extraordinary.
Eagerly desire.
Because when you do, you’re not just reaching for a gift—you’re reaching for the God who gives it.
And the church is never stronger than when it remembers what He’s said.
We are bulding the doxa app to better remember what God has promised (prophesies) and what he has done (testimonies) so we can fight the good fight (and win).


