Month 6:5, Week 1:4 (Revee/Shavu'ot), Year:Day 5942:152 AM
2Exodus 5/40
Gregorian Calendar: Thursday 16 August 2018
The Nation of Rwanda
Prophetic Vision of Its Ruling Spirits
Introduction
This morning as I awoke I was taken in the Ruach (Spirit) to Kigali, Rwanda, where we have a fledgling mission and what I was shown was a picture of the spirit operating in the land.
Vision of the Building
I found myself in a building that was very rudimentary. It was plain and barely furnished. The door was locked and the windows shuttered up. The strange thing is that the door was locked both from the inside and the outside, and the windows were shuttered both from the inside and the outside.
Between Conscience and Fear
There were two authorities or powers at work, but they were not 'full' or 'complete' powers. The power they exercised was in part substantial or tangible, and in part illusion or unreal. On the outside were the governmental authorities such as the 'police', here representing the conscience of the people as programmed by both the lies and the thruths they believe. On the inside was the raw psychic power of fear that seeks safety behind shelter.
Two Minds at Work
The governmental authority relied on this fear to do its policing for them - the fear of the citizens - and in return the state gave protection...and yet at the same time did not give protection because the state was itself of two minds, being both law-abiding and lawless. It was a curious combination of state force and anarchy. This is a picture of the spirit, principality or power at work over the land of Rwanda.
The Jungle as a Wall
But this was not all. Behind me, where there should have been a wall, it was all open to the outside. A few miles away was a huge, very dense forest or jungle. This was the 'back wall' of the 'house', which represents the dwelling place of the Rwandan people. Anyone who wished could 'escape' into the jungle if they wanted but it was so 'dense' and 'unknown' that the people feared to go into it to escape the spirit of repression over them. It was part of the open-prison system. The jungle represents the unknown and it is fear of the unknown, particularly in the spiritual dimension, that keeps people trapped where they are.
Stirring Up A Hornet's Nest
Finally, in the house, was the Rwandan sister of a Christian friend of mine. She is, in a sense, representative of your typical Rwandan. At some point Rwandan believers are going to have to identify this controlling spiritual principality and renounce it, individually, as families and as congregations. They cannot be empowered with the end-time Sukkot Anointing until they do, and no amount of correct theology alone will enable them. But to resist it means to stir up a hornet's nest for there are always consequences to stirring up the kingdom of the fallen one. Nevertheless it must be done.
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