Hello everyone! Just realized I forgot to switch my settings so you won’t actually see me in the video, you’ll only hear my voice.
In this session we reviewed the Seven Spirits of God — the fullness of the Spirit expressed in seven flames.
We mentioned the twelve internal gates — the entry points of our inner life that must be consecrated and guarded.
And we focused on the Spirit of the Lord — the stem of the menorah, the red flame of redemption, our anchor of identity, authority, and rest.
I also expanded on the red flame of redemption, to include Q&A because there are some layers of wisdom that I didn’t include in the first chapter.
I hope these pieces stir deep reflection in you as well.
The Red Flame as Covenant Bloodline
- In Hebrew thought, blood = life (nefesh). When the menorah’s stem burns red, it isn’t just forgiveness, it’s covenantal identity.
- Redemption doesn’t just “erase sin” — it transfers lineage. You’re no longer tied to Adam’s bloodline of corruption; you’re grafted into Christ’s eternal bloodline.
- That’s why Hebrews 12 speaks of the “blood that speaks a better word.” The red flame is literally the voice of a new covenant identity over you.
Q&A Stirrer: What word do you think the blood is speaking over your life right now? Have you been listening?
The Red Flame and Passover’s Doorway
- At the first Passover, blood on the doorposts marked a boundary line — what’s inside is God’s. That’s what the Spirit of the Lord does: sets ownership lines.
- When the red flame burns in you, it’s like your gates (from earlier) are marked — “This one is Mine.”
Q&A Stirrer: What’s one “doorpost” in your life that you need to mark again with His blood — a relationship, habit, or place where the enemy tries to cross?
The Red Flame and Priesthood Authority
- Priests were consecrated with blood on the ear, thumb, and big toe (Lev 8:23–24). That’s hearing, doing, and walking. The red flame is not abstract—it orders your priestly function.
- That ties redemption to governance: you hear cleanly, act rightly, and walk securely.
Q&A Stirrer: If the blood reorders how we hear, act, and walk, where do you sense God calling you into alignment right now?
The Red Flame as Judicial Fire
- In Revelation, the Lamb’s blood is what qualifies Him to open the scrolls. That means redemption isn’t just personal, it’s cosmic. It’s the legal authority behind heaven’s decrees.
- When you stand in the Spirit of the Lord, you’re not just forgiven, you’re standing in the courtroom of heaven with the verdict: “redeemed.” That’s the foundation of spiritual authority.
Q&A Stirrer: How does it shift your prayer life to realize you’re not begging God to act — you’re decreeing from the authority of blood already shed?
The Red Flame as the Foundation of Rest
- Redemption brings you into Sabbath rest (Heb 4). You don’t strive to earn, you flow from what’s already finished.
- That’s why Jesus could declare “It is finished” — the red flame signals the end of toil and the beginning of governance.
Q&A Stirrer: What’s one area of life where you’re still striving, instead of resting in redemption’s finished work?
The Red Flame as Prophetic Launchpad
- Notice Jesus begins His public ministry in Luke 4 by saying, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me…” The red flame isn’t just personal healing, it’s public commissioning.
- That means every prophetic assignment flows out of redemption. You’re not sent until you’re sealed.
Q&A Stirrer: Where do you sense God might be commissioning you next — and how does redemption prepare you for it?
NOTE: Interesting to me that this teaching landed at exactly 30:30. I never edited anything! In Scripture, thirty marks the age of maturity and stepping into calling—Joseph, David, even Jesus. The double thirty feels like a stamp of heaven: redemption (the red flame) isn’t just rescue; it’s a call into maturity, authority, and governance.
By Brenda Carriere Nash
