“They overcame him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony…” — Revelation 12:11

There are stories—and then there are weapons.

When a child of God begins to testify—not just with words, but from the deep well of lived redemption—something violent happens in the spirit realm.

We aren’t reciting nice Christian clichés or sweet Sunday school memories. We are dropping bunker busters into the hidden bunkers of darkness. And the enemy knows it.
See, Satan can argue with doctrine. He can twist Scripture. He can even mimic religion. But what he cannot do is unwrite your story.

He cannot edit your encounter. He cannot mute the voice of the one who has seen the face of Jesus in the fire and come out clean.
Every blood-bought, Spirit-ignited testimony carries the residue of heaven’s authority.

It’s not just a memory—it’s a missile. Because when you speak what the Lord has done for you, it tears through lies, shame, and demonic strongholds like a bomb detonating beneath the enemy’s feet. He flees not just because you’re shouting—but because the Spirit backs up every word with power.

Your story—yes, yours—when surrendered to Jesus, carries the same Spirit that raised Him from the dead. So don’t hold it back. Don’t sanitize it.

Let it thunder. Let it shake the gates of hell and remind the darkness that its grip on you has been forever broken.
Every time we testify, we’re not just telling people what happened—we’re announcing what’s possible.

So release it. Declare it. Prophesy with your history. Because your testimony isn’t just a story…

…it’s a supernatural detonation that leaves no hiding place for the enemy.

The following testimony is one that I have in my own life, that everytime it is shared, I can litteraly since the devil seeking a place to hide from it it’s power….

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There are moments that divide your life in two. March 28, 2016 was that moment for me.

It was 1:43 in the morning. I was sleeping in a quiet room in a historic inn in Saluda, North Carolina, when a voice—clear and undeniable—spoke into the silence: “Wake up.”

It wasn’t a nudge from the subconscious or the remnants of a dream. It was a holy disruption, slicing through the stillness like lightning. I sat up, heart pounding. The clock confirmed the time. I turned on the light and searched the room. Empty. I stepped into the hallway—stillness. No footsteps. No voices. Nothing. But something within me had already shifted. I was awake in a way I hadn’t been in years.

Then the voice came again, even more weighted: “Open the Bible.”
I walked over to the desk where a Bible sat, worn and waiting, almost like it had been placed there for this very night. As I opened it, the pages fell to the Gospel of John, and my eyes were immediately drawn to John 3:16. It wasn’t just printed on the page—it glowed in my spirit.

Again, the voice spoke: “Read.” I pushed back: “I’ve read this a thousand times.” But the command came once more, unwavering: “Read.”

And so, out of simple obedience—or maybe exhaustion—I read: “For God so loved the world…” And with those words, heaven invaded.

In an instant, I was no longer in that room. I was back in the kitchen of my childhood home. I was three years old. My father, in a fit of drunking rage, had just struck my mother. He was gripping my brother’s arm, dragging him toward the mechanical ringer of an old washing machine. I, somehow, had escaped my high chair and crawled into the cabinet under the sink—my hiding place. My refuge. My prison.

That memory had haunted me my entire life. But this time, the scene was different. I wasn’t alone.
Jesus was under the sink with me.

He didn’t speak. He didn’t preach. He simply was. Present. Near. Unshaken by my fear, yet fully attentive to it. That one moment rewrote decades of belief. I had always thought I was abandoned in that kitchen. But now I saw—He was with me even then.

Then, like a movie reel spooled by grace, moment after moment from my life unfolded before me. Every scar. Every failure. Every hidden sin. Every silent scream. With each scene, I turned to Jesus and asked, “What about this? Surely this disqualifies me. Surely this is the moment where Your love stops.”

And every time, He looked at me—not with disappointment, but with eyes blazing like mercy—and asked, “Who told you that lie?”
Over and over: “Who told you that lie?”

That question shattered me. Because for the first time, I saw the architecture of my shame—not as truth, but as deception. I had built an entire identity on the idea that I was barely tolerated by God. That I was accepted only because He had to. That the cross was more obligation than desire.

But now I knew: I was never barely tolerated. I was deeply wanted. Loved beyond comprehension. Not in spite of my brokenness, but pursued through it.

When the vision ended, I looked at the clock. 1:45 a.m. Only two minutes had passed. But in those two minutes, I was born again—again. Not to a new set of religious rules, but to a new identity entirely.

The final words of the encounter echoed like a commissioning: “Study the Book of John until you get the revelation of My life for you.”

That invitation became the doorway to a new way of living.

For over nine years now, I’ve lived in the deep waters of the Book of John, learning not just the teachings of Jesus, but the tone of His heart.

And like the Apostle John—who referred to himself not by his achievements, but by how Jesus saw him—I began to claim the truth for myself: “I am the disciple whom Jesus loves.”

Not just forgiven—transformed.

Not just surviving—reborn.

God’s love didn’t simply bandage me—it recreated me. It didn’t just comfort my wounds—it removed my shame. It revealed that I wasn’t a sinner struggling for grace, I was a new creation, born of divine affection. I didn’t have to earn what had already been poured out. I had only to receive.

This wasn’t behavior modification. This was spiritual resurrection.

The love of God is not abstract. It’s not poetic sentiment.

It’s a force more potent than trauma, more healing than time, more trustworthy than logic. It finds you in the most hidden places and refuses to leave you unchanged. It sits with you under the sink, and then walks with you out of it—into light, into identity, into freedom.

I am no longer hiding. I am no longer orphaned. I am no longer lost in the echo of old lies. I am found in the voice that still whispers to this day: “Wake up.”

And I’ll never be the same.

I pray this stirs boldness in your spirit to no longer silence the song of your story. Your testimony—every scar kissed by grace, every moment redeemed by mercy—is not a mark of shame, but a weapon of wonder.

Don’t let the enemy keep your voice buried beneath fear or regret. You carry keys wrapped in hope—keys that can unlock chains in others. So speak, not just for your own freedom, but for theirs. Hell trembles when you remember who you are.

_Dr. Russ Welch
Remnant Warrior Ministries
www.RemnantWarrior.org

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