The Powers of the Age to Come
There is a realm the prophets glimpsed,
a dimension the early saints tasted—
not fully entered, but touched as a whisper on the edge of time.
They called it the powers of the age to come—
a Kingdom not of words, but of glory;
not built by human hands,
but formed in stillness before the foundations of the world.
This realm is not far.
It is here.
Not tomorrow.
Not after death.
But within reach to those whose hearts have been awakened
by the flame of I AM.
The powers of the age to come are not magic tricks or signs for applause.
They are the natural fragrance of union.
They are what flows effortlessly
when a soul lives not from mind,
but from Spirit—
not as a seeker,
but as a son.
To walk in these powers is not to “perform miracles,”
but to embody Presence so deeply
that mountains move because you have become stillness itself.
It is to speak and fire responds.
To think and heaven agrees.
To love and watch time bow.
It is to dwell in the frequency of Eden—
where matter bends to Light,
and creation listens to its unveiled king.
This is not about acquiring power,
but remembering essence.
These are not gifts to be grasped,
but identities to be unveiled.
We do not chase the age to come.
We are it—
for the One who was, and is, and is to come
now lives as us.
The old wine is passing.
The systems of mixture are crumbling.
And sons are rising in quiet flame,
carrying scrolls of divine architecture in their breath.
They are not here to revive the past,
but to birth what has never been seen:
Heaven, not visiting Earth—
but marrying her.
And when this union is fully realized,
even the stars will sing a new song,
for the powers of the age to come
will be no longer future—
they will be now.
🔥 Key Scriptures for Reflection:
Hebrews 6:5 — “...who have tasted the good word of God and the powers of the age to come.”
Romans 8:19 — “The creation waits in eager expectation for the sons of God to be revealed.”
John 14:12 — “...greater works than these shall you do, because I go to the Father.”
1 Corinthians 4:20 — “For the Kingdom of God is not in word, but in power.”
— Joe Restman