Posts Tagged ‘discipleship’


Something shifts in the spirit when your desires collide with God’s direction. There are seasons when your heart is set on one thing, yet the Lord—quietly, firmly, and sovereignly—redirects your steps. “A man’s heart plans his way, but the Lord directs his steps” (Proverbs 16:9). For years, Wyoming tugged at me. The mountains, the open land, the country rhythm that feels like home to someone raised in the woods of Maine. Opportunities came, doors cracked open, and the idea of pastoring out West stirred something deep.

Yet heaven remained silent. Not a whisper. Not a nudge. Just holy stillness.

As I continued pastoring the church I still shepherd today, I often asked the Lord for an exit plan. I prayed for clarity, for confirmation, for the green light to pack up and head toward the mountains. But the heavens stayed quiet, and sometimes silence is the loudest answer of all. Then, as 2024 closed and 2025 dawned, the voice of the Lord broke through the stillness with unmistakable clarity: “Disciple a Remnant here in Jacksonville. Take the city for the Kingdom.” Before I could fully process that assignment, He added, “Seek My will for the First Coast region.” Suddenly, the silence made sense—God had been waiting for the right moment to reveal His plan.

My first reaction wasn’t bold faith; it was hesitation. I told the Lord, “I’m not from here. Others born here have greater authority.” But the Holy Spirit confronted that lie instantly. “Who told you that? Wherever you go, you carry the authority of the Father. And when you stand in the place I have called you, that authority intensifies.” His words struck me like fire. Jesus declared, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me. Go therefore…” (Matthew 28:18–19).

Authority is not geographical—it is inherited. It is delegated. It is activated through obedience, not birthplace.

Stepping into 2026, I found myself asking the Lord, “Where is this Remnant You spoke of?” Our congregation is faithful, loving, and growing, but I wasn’t seeing the mountain‑moving disciples He described. They were maturing individually, but the corporate fire, the collective roar, the unified intercession that shakes cities—I wasn’t seeing it yet. And in that moment of frustration, the Holy Spirit whispered again: “Go to Hebrews 11:1 and stay there until the revelation consumes you.” So I went. And I stayed. And I’m still there.

Ever since fully and radically giving my life to the Lord on March 29, 2016, I’ve walked through a refining fire that has burned away self‑will and awakened holy purpose. It has been a season of dying to my own desires, surrendering dreams that once defined me, and embracing the crucible that shapes warriors. In that fire, something deep within me has been quickened—a cry that says, You were destined for this. You were born with a warrior’s heart. Every battle, every pruning, every delay has been forging the steel of obedience for the assignment unfolding now.

The Lord never wastes a surrendered life; He weaponizes it for His glory.

Now, as February 2026 approaches, I remain seated in the furnace of Hebrews 11:1: “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” I have revelation for books—check. I’m mentoring leaders afar—check. I’m walking in obedience—check. But the Lord is showing me that faith doesn’t begin with what you see; it begins with what He said. The Remnant is not missing. The Remnant is forming. The Remnant is awakening.

The Remnant is being summoned by the Word of the Lord, not by my natural eyes.

So what am I missing? Perhaps nothing at all. Perhaps this is the season where faith becomes substance, where unseen promises begin to take shape, where obedience becomes the birthplace of manifestation. Maybe the Remnant isn’t something I find—it’s something God forms through surrendered leadership, persistent prayer, and unwavering trust. And maybe, just maybe, the very thing I thought I lacked is already growing beneath the surface, waiting for the fullness of time. Because when God redirects your steps, He never wastes your longing—He transforms it into fuel for the assignment you were born to carry.

And now, to every warrior in the Jacksonville region whose spirit is burning even as you read this—this is your moment. If your heart has been crying out for something real, something weighty, something Kingdom, hear this call. If you’ve felt the ache of being underutilized, unseen, or spiritually misplaced… if you’ve carried gifts that others didn’t know what to do with… if you’ve longed for an apostolic family where fire, strategy, assignment, and honor flow together—your season of wandering is ending. The Lord is gathering His Remnant, and He is summoning those with a warrior’s heart to take their place in a movement that is rising with precision, purity, and power.

If your spirit leaps at the sound of this—if you know you were born for more than church-as-usual, if you hunger to be discipled, deployed, and developed in a Kingdom family that recognizes and honors what God placed inside you—reach out. The Remnant is forming. The warriors are awakening. The assignments are being released. And there is a place for you in what God is building here on the First Coast.

Give me a shout at remnantwarriors4christ@gmail.com. If your heart is burning, don’t ignore it. That fire is your confirmation.

— Dr. Russell Welch

Dr. Russell Welch is a prophetic teacher, apostolic builder, author, and founder of faith-driven publishing and media initiatives. He is known for crafting bold, Kingdom-centered messages that call the Ecclesia into maturity, doctrinal clarity, and governmental authority. With a passion for equipping the Remnant and honoring generational legacy, Dr. Welch writes and teaches at the intersection of Scripture, history, and spiritual governance, challenging believers to live as sons and daughters who legislate Heaven on earth through truth, holiness, and unwavering fidelity to Christ.

Be sure to check out his book: The Consecrated Firebrand: A Warrior’s Guide to Holy Living, available exclusively on Amazon … here


We are living in a day when every word we speak, every step we take, and every alliance we form carries Kingdom consequence. The Scriptures warn that life and death are in the power of the tongue (Proverbs 18:21), and Jesus taught that our words will justify or condemn us (Matthew 12:37). This is not sentimental rhetoric but legal, spiritual reality: the Ecclesia legislates by declaration when it stands in truth.

As sons and daughters led by the Spirit, we must recognize that casual words and careless alignments can open doors for darkness or release heaven’s purposes. Let us therefore weigh our speech with the fear of the Lord and the authority of Christ, knowing that our utterances have legislative effect in the unseen realms.

The unity we were graced for in a previous season was a gift from God, but grace is seasonally stewarded and must be tested by truth. Jesus prayed for oneness that is rooted in the Father’s truth (John 17), not a sentimental unity that ignores doctrine or moral clarity. In this hour, the same unity that once advanced revival may not carry the same covering if it compromises the faith once delivered to the saints (Jude 1:3).

Love covers a multitude of sins (1 Peter 4:8), yet love that abandons doctrine becomes a cloak for error and a pathway for deception. We must love fiercely and speak truth plainly, for genuine unity is forged in holiness and fidelity to the Word.

The enemy has infiltrated structures formed by men in subtle and overt ways, and his strategy is to blur doctrinal lines until truth is indistinguishable from error. Paul warned of those who would pervert the Gospel and teach another Jesus (2 Corinthians 11:4; Galatians 1:8), and we see that tactic replicated today through unequally yoked doctrinal alliances.

When teachers who preach different gospels embrace one another publicly, the watching world is confused and the testimony of Christ is weakened. The Ecclesia must therefore discern with apostolic clarity, exposing error while extending the gospel of repentance and restoration. Doctrine matters because doctrine shapes destiny; what we teach and whom we embrace determines the spiritual climate of our communities.

The enemy exploits compromise to make the world ask why the Church tolerates contradiction, and that question opens a door for unbelief to flourish. When those who claim Christ rub shoulders with those who deny foundational truth, the credibility of the Gospel is eroded and the lost are given reason to doubt. Scripture calls leaders to be shepherds who guard the flock and to be watchmen who sound the alarm (Acts 20:28; Ezekiel 33).

The Remnant Warrior refuses to be silent in such a time; he or she stands as a sentinel of doctrine, not out of pride but out of covenantal responsibility. Endurance, not popularity, is the mark of those who will finish the race and keep the faith (2 Timothy 4:7).

A Remnant Warrior holds fast to the Kingdom doctrines Christ taught—repentance, righteousness, the lordship of Jesus, and the authority of Scripture—and will not bow to cultural pressure or compromise for the sake of acceptance.

This is a call to courageous fidelity: to preach the whole counsel of God, to disciple with rigor, and to align only with those who honor the apostolic foundation. Even unto death, the true Ecclesia will not dilute the Word to be liked by men; rather, it will suffer gladly for the sake of Christ’s glory (Philippians 1:29). Rise up, therefore, in the authority of your sonship, speak with prophetic clarity, and let your life be a legislative act that advances Heaven’s rule on earth.

Many today dismiss doctrine as secondary, but the Word of God makes clear that it is central to the life and witness of the Church. Paul’s charge to Timothy was not to chase novelty or sentiment, but to “hold fast the pattern of sound words” (2 Timothy 1:13) and to guard the deposit of truth entrusted to him.

If the Apostle saw sound doctrine as essential for leadership and endurance, should it not also be woven into the very creed of the Remnant Warrior? For without truth, unity becomes fragile, and without doctrine, love loses its anchor.

I know personally that I would not want to march into spiritual battle alongside someone whose end-times doctrine leads them to retreat in fear, anticipating the rise of evil, rather than advancing in the confidence of Christ’s victory. The true disciples of Jesus understand that the Glory—the Light of Christ within—dispels darkness as they move forward in faith.

The Remnant Warrior must therefore be one who treasures sound doctrine, who refuses compromise, and who marches boldly under the banner of truth, knowing that the Word of God is both sword and shield. This is not optional—it is the foundation of victorious living and the creed of those who will endure to the end.

— Dr. Russell Welch

Dr. Russell Welch is a prophetic teacher, apostolic builder, author, and founder of faith-driven publishing and media initiatives. He is known for crafting bold, Kingdom-centered messages that call the Ecclesia into maturity, doctrinal clarity, and governmental authority. With a passion for equipping the Remnant and honoring generational legacy, Dr. Welch writes and teaches at the intersection of Scripture, history, and spiritual governance, challenging believers to live as sons and daughters who legislate Heaven on earth through truth, holiness, and unwavering fidelity to Christ.

Be sure to check out his book: The Consecrated Firebrand: A Warrior’s Guide to Holy Living, available exclusively on Amazon … here

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/russellwelch


The Spirit is calling the Ecclesia in this hour to stand as watchmen on the walls, discerning the spiritual currents attempting to shape the soul of the nation. Scripture declares, “Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil walks about like a roaring lion” (1 Peter 5:8), reminding the Remnant that vigilance in prayer is not optional—it is commanded. The rise of deceptive ideologies is not merely political but spiritual, seeking to dull discernment and erode the foundations of truth. The Holy Spirit urges His people to pray with clarity, not confusion; with authority, not fear; with the Word, not emotion. In this posture, the Ecclesia becomes the barrier that restrains darkness.

The Remnant is directed to pray that every ideology exalting itself against the knowledge of God be exposed and dismantled. “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood” (Ephesians 6:12), reminding us that the battle is not against people but against spiritual forces influencing systems and structures. Socialism, communism, and Islamism—when used as instruments of oppression or deception—must be confronted in the spirit, not through hatred but through truth. Holy Spirit calls the Ecclesia to declare that every hidden agenda be brought into the light and judged by the righteousness of God. As these prayers rise, strongholds weaken and the schemes of darkness lose their grip.

The Lord instructs His people to pray for the preservation of freedom, justice, and righteousness within government, for “where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty” (2 Corinthians 3:17). The Remnant must intercede that leaders be shielded from deception and strengthened in wisdom, courage, and moral clarity. Pray that the fear of the Lord—not the fear of man—governs decision-making in every office of authority. Pray that the foundations laid by truth are not replaced by systems that enslave the mind, silence the Church, or undermine the dignity of God’s creation. Through these prayers, the Ecclesia becomes a spiritual firewall around the nation.

Holy Spirit is summoning the Remnant to rise with boldness and prophetic fire, refusing to be passive in the face of encroaching darkness. “Arise, shine; for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon you” (Isaiah 60:1). This is not the hour to retreat—it is the hour to advance. The gates of influence must be reclaimed, not by human strategy, but by spiritual authority rooted in sonship and consecration. The Remnant must decree that the Kingdom of Yahweh arrive in full power, majesty, and glory, and that His perfect will be established in this nation.

The Lord is also commanding His Ecclesia to release prophetic decrees that pierce through the fog of ideological confusion and establish Heaven’s verdict over this land. “You shall decree a thing, and it shall be established for you” (Job 22:28), and now is the time for the Remnant to speak with fire and precision. These decrees must not be vague or timid—they must carry the weight of Heaven’s intention and the clarity of divine justice. Declare that every gate of influence—media, education, government, finance, and culture—be reclaimed for the glory of God. Declare that every counterfeit system bow to the supremacy of Christ and that righteousness be enthroned in every sphere.

Holy Spirit is igniting a fresh commissioning over the Remnant to move from intercession into occupation. “The kingdom of heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by force” (Matthew 11:12), and this is the hour for spiritual warriors to rise and take hold of what belongs to the King. No longer can the gates be left unguarded or surrendered to compromise. The Remnant must step into the battlefield with unwavering resolve, clothed in the armor of God, and armed with the sword of the Spirit. Let every voice rise, every heart burn, and every decree thunder with Kingdom authority.

Remnant of the Lord—step up. Step into the battlefield. Take back the gates. Decree with fire and faith that the Kingdom of Yahweh is here, and His glory shall cover this land as the waters cover the sea. The hour is urgent, and Heaven is waiting for your voice.

—Dr. Russell Welch, prophetic teacher, apostolic builder, and author committed to awakening and equipping the Remnant to reclaim the spiritual gates of culture for the Kingdom of God.

If this message has stirred your spirit and you desire to go deeper, I invite you to explore my books available on Amazon. Each one is written to awaken, equip, and mobilize the Remnant with fresh revelation and practical Kingdom authority. You can find them at amazon.com/author/russell.welch—resources crafted to strengthen your walk, ignite your faith, and empower you to reclaim the gates of influence for the glory of God.


When I look back over my life through the lens of Revelation 12:11, I can see the unmistakable thread of God’s mercy woven through every season. From the earliest years—born into a home marked by violence and alcoholism, then taken at age three and moved from state homes to foster homes—the Lord was already preserving me even when I did not know Him.

By fifteen I had fallen into drugs, and by sixteen into crime, drifting between the streets and instability. Scripture says in Psalm 139:8, “If I make my bed in hell, behold, You are there,” and now I can see that even in those dark places, His hand never let me go. Homelessness, broken relationships, and multiple suicide attempts only magnified how desperately I needed the God my mother had prayed to all her life.

At thirty‑eight I finally surrendered to the Lord, and He began rebuilding what hell had tried to destroy. Marriage, the birth of my son, ministry school, and work followed, yet in 2007 a sudden heart attack threatened to end everything. God intervened with miraculous healing, removing all damage and proving Psalm 103:3 true—“He heals all your diseases.” Even so, I carried a heavy cloud of depression, and though I earned a doctorate in theology in 2015, my view of the Father was distorted by a harsh, condemning theology. When rejection and a false image of God mix, they create a storm of guilt, shame, and condemnation that shadows every step.

By the time I was invited to a ministry retreat, I was desperate for God to speak, convinced that if He didn’t, I would disappear into my old life and leave my family in fear. In the early hours of March 29, 2016, I awoke to a voice saying, “Get up.” No one was in the room or hallway, yet the voice came again: “Read My Word.” When I opened my Bible to John 3:16, the Lord drew me into a vision, taking me back to age three, hiding under the kitchen sink while chaos erupted around me.

This time, unlike my memory of fear and loneliness, Jesus was there, fulfilling His promise in Hebrews 13:5, “I will never leave you nor forsake you.”

He walked me through every moment of rejection, sin, and disappointment, showing me that in each one, the Father loved me and had never abandoned me. When the vision ended, only two minutes had passed, yet it felt like hours in His presence. I felt clean for the first time in my life—inside and out—as every trace of guilt, shame, and condemnation washed away like Isaiah 1:18 declares. His final instruction was simple: “Study the Gospel of John until you find your identity.” Over the next several years, I discovered—as John did—that I am a beloved son, cherished by the Lord.

In 2017 doctors found five nodules on my lungs, but after nearly two years of prayer, they vanished without explanation. Then on November 14, 2023, the enemy attempted once more to take my life through a massive stroke. Yet again the Lord healed me completely, proving Psalm 118:17 true—“I shall not die, but live, and declare the works of the Lord.” My entire journey stands as a testimony that the blood of the Lamb and the word of our testimony truly overcome the darkness.

Anyone who feels lonely, bound by addiction, or worn down by the relentless assaults of the enemy can find the same freedom I found in Jesus Christ. The cross is still the place where every chain breaks, every burden lifts, and every lie of the devil loses its power, for Jesus declared in John 8:36, “Whom the Son sets free is free indeed.”

No matter the guilt, shame, disappointment, or darkness that has followed you, the Father stands ready to receive you with mercy and restore what hell tried to destroy. Bring every wound, every failure, and every hidden battle to the feet of Jesus, and watch Him do what only a loving Father can do. My testimony—and every miracle the Lord has worked in my life—is a quiver full of arrows reminding the enemy that he has lost, and Christ has already won.

Today, thanks to Yeshua HaMashiach my life stands as living proof of what the Father can do when a broken story is placed in His hands. I am joyfully married, walking in a covenant that reflects the goodness and restoration of the Lord. My son is faithfully serving to protect our nation, a testimony to God’s covering and grace over our family.

I have the honor of pastoring a powerful Kingdom family that hungers for the authentic Gospel of Jesus Christ and lives to advance His purposes on the earth. The Lord has also entrusted me to write more than forty books on the faith and to co‑found Remnant Warrior Ministries—an international work carrying the mandate to disciple mountain‑moving believers who know their identity, walk in authority, and refuse to bow to the darkness of this age.

— Dr. Russell Welch Christian author | Apostolic teacher | Co‑Founder, Remnant Warrior Ministries www.RemnantWarrior.org


A life lost is always a tragic and grievous thing, and Scripture teaches us to “weep with those who weep” (Romans 12:15). Yet even in moments of sorrow, the people of God must step back from the emotions that inflame and discern the broader spiritual landscape. The enemy often exploits moments of tragedy to stir confusion, division, and reactionary anger. This is why Proverbs 28:5 says, “Evil men do not understand justice, but those who seek the Lord understand it completely.” We must look beyond the surface and recognize the forces at work attempting to fracture the nation.

America stands at a dangerous crossroads, one that could escalate into deeper national unrest if wisdom does not prevail. Scripture warns that “a house divided against itself cannot stand” (Mark 3:25), and the rhetoric saturating our culture is pushing the nation toward internal conflict. Many voices in the public arena on the left, are stirring hostility, lawlessness, and contempt for order, creating an atmosphere ripe for chaos. This is not merely political tension—it is a spiritual battle for the soul of the nation. The people of God must discern the times and refuse to be swept into the emotional storms being manufactured.

Since when did it become acceptable to lay hands on law enforcement officers who are fulfilling their sworn duty to uphold the law? Romans 13:1–2 reminds us that governing authorities exist because God permits them, and resisting lawful authority invites disorder and instability. The normalization of hostility toward those tasked with protecting communities is a sign of a culture drifting from righteousness. When lawlessness is celebrated, justice becomes distorted, and confusion fills the land. This is why the Remnant must stand for truth, order, and integrity in the public square.

Our nation has become entangled in toxic political schemes that blur moral lines and redefine foundational truths. Isaiah 5:20 warns, “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness.” We see this unfolding as society confuses gender identity, elevates criminal behavior as victimhood, and places those who violate national immigration laws above those who have sacrificed to defend it. Such moral inversion is not merely misguided—it is spiritually dangerous. The Remnant must anchor itself in the unchanging Word of God and refuse to bow to cultural confusion.

What must happen now is a return to accountability, integrity, and reverence for the rule of law. Scripture teaches that leaders are held to a higher standard, and those who use their influence to stir violence or undermine lawful authority must be confronted with truth (James 3:1). Any individual in governmental office—whether on a school board, in local or state government, or in national positions—who encourages hostility toward law enforcement must be held responsible for their words and actions. This is not about political retaliation but about preserving order, justice, and the safety of American citizens. As Proverbs 29:4 declares, “By justice a king gives a country stability, but those who are greedy for bribes tear it down.”

And now, says the Spirit of the Living God, let the Remnant rise with fire in their bones and clarity in their vision. This is the hour to shake off fear, cast down confusion, and stand as burning torches in a nation stumbling through manufactured darkness. For the Lord declares, “My light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it” (John 1:5), and that light is rising through My consecrated ones. Lift your voice, Remnant, for I am igniting a holy boldness in you that no narrative, no deception, and no scheme of the enemy can silence. Stand firm, pray fiercely, and let the roar of the Ecclesia thunder across the land until righteousness breaks forth like the dawn and justice rolls like a mighty river.

~Dr. Russell Welch

Dr. Russell Welch is an Apostolic teacher who leads a local congregation in Jacksonville, Florida, and oversees an international ministry that includes a discipleship school. He is the author of multiple faith‑centered books, with a focus on the Remnant Warriors of the Ecclesia and the pure, unadulterated Gospel of the Kingdom that Jesus proclaimed. He carries a deep passion for the veterans of our nation—especially those who are homeless—and holds a compelling vision to establish a restorative farming community where these warriors can live, be discipled, and experience true healing and freedom from the traumas of war.

You can find Dr. Welch’s book on Prophetic Watchmen titled “Restoring God’s Prophetic Voice: Unleashing the Watchman’s Power in the Church” here on Amazon as well as his aother books


There is a sobering question before us: why are so few shepherds addressing the spiritual threats shaping our generation, especially on advancing threat of Islam in our nation? When voices fall silent, it is often because ears have grown dull to the directives of the Holy Spirit, or because fear of backlash has eclipsed obedience.

Yet Scripture reminds us, “God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power, love, and a sound mind” (2 Timothy 1:7). The Remnant must discern the times with courage, refusing to bow to intimidation or cultural pressure.

It has become painfully clear that much of the mainstream Church has redirected its spiritual warfare toward building platforms, gathering crowds, and crafting messages that are palatable and popular. This pursuit of relevance has come at the expense of the true Gospel of the Kingdom being proclaimed and the expansion of Christ’s rule within the cultures of this world.

But the Kingdom does not advance through applause—it advances through truth, obedience, and the bold proclamation of Christ. “Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness” (Matthew 6:33) remains the mandate, not the pursuit of influence.

If hesitation is rooted in weak theology, then now is the hour to return to the revelation of the God we serve—the One who sits enthroned above the circle of the earth (Isaiah 40:22), who has no rival, no equal, and no threat to His dominion. Jesus declared, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Me” (Matthew 28:18). The Father watches over His children with fierce tenderness, “like a hen gathering her chicks under her wings” (Matthew 23:37). A people who know their God will never tremble before the schemes of men.

Therefore, Remnant Ecclesia, rise. Shake off the slumber of passive Christianity and stand firm in the courage of the Kingdom. This is the hour to speak truth with love, to war with wisdom, and to shine with unshakable confidence in the supremacy of Christ. “Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord rises upon you” (Isaiah 60:1). Let the true sons and daughters take their place.

This is the hour to take back the houses of the Lord—not with anger or fleshly striving, but with the authority of sons and daughters who know the voice of their King.

We have been commissioned to reoccupy what rightfully belongs to Jesus the Messiah, the One to whom “all authority in heaven and on earth has been given” (Matthew 28:18). The enemy has squatted long enough in places meant for truth, holiness, and the uncompromised Gospel of the Kingdom.

Let the Remnant stand firm, clothed in the armor of God, discerning the times, and refusing to yield sacred ground to cultural pressure or spiritual apathy. “Those who know their God shall be strong and do exploits” (Daniel 11:32), and this is such a moment. The King is calling His warriors to rise—not in fear, but in faith, reclaiming His territory with humility, boldness, and unwavering allegiance to His Word.

Dr. Russell Welch Co-Founder Remnant Warrior Ministries Warrior’s Discipleship School

Link to Dr. Welch’s books


When I was seventeen, the Lord gave me a dream of a vast farm filled with people clothed as in the days of Jesus, with long hair and beards, ministering to others who were dressed in combat gear. At the time, I did not understand the meaning, nor did I grasp the prophetic nature of what was being shown.

Yet the Word reminds us, “In the last days, God says, I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your young men will see visions, your old men will dream dreams” (Acts 2:17). This dream was a seed planted by the Spirit, waiting for its appointed time to unfold. I would dream this dream again and again over the course of the next 37 years.

Years later, in 2018, I dreamed again, and upon waking, the Holy Spirit began to speak. He revealed that the farm represented a community devoted to bringing in homeless veterans, offering healing, and discipling them into warriors for Christ. I asked why they remained in combat gear, and He said, “Because it was in that season the enemy took them captive.”

Yet I saw disciples tending to them, and the Spirit declared, “These too were once wounded, but now they are healed and restored, and they are dedicated to discipling their fellow veterans.” Truly, this is the fulfillment of Isaiah 61:1, “He has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim freedom for the captives and release from darkness for the prisoners.”

In 2019, the dream returned, and this time I was entering the property. At the gate was a sign that read, “New Creation Ranch – A Veteran Restoration Community.” The name itself echoed the promise of 2 Corinthians 5:17, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!” This was no ordinary farm; it was a prophetic picture of restoration, a place where the broken would be made whole, and where warriors would rise again—not for earthly battles, but for the Kingdom of God.

More recently, the dream shifted to a graduating class. Each disciple who had been healed and trained was being commissioned to go forth and establish house churches. As I awoke, the Spirit reminded me of my long-held conviction for the home fellowship model. In July, a father in the faith prophesied that my wife and I would begin planting house churches, and since then I have heard the Spirit whisper, “Glory Houses – Ecclesia Government Houses.”

This aligns with the promise of Matthew 16:18-19, where Jesus declares, “I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven.” The ranch and the house church movement are not separate—they are one prophetic assignment.

Last night I had the dream again, and when I awoke I could literally smell the farm. When I started praying about it, Holy Spirit spoke boldly: “This is the Father’s calling on your life. You and your wife have been commissioned for this assignment.”

As you have sought first His Kingdom and His righteousness, He has matured you through seasons of trials, refining fire and revelation. Now the fullness of the vision is coming forth—land titles are being transferred, checks are being written, and laborers are being called from across the nation: farmers, mechanics, and skilled tradesmen.

The promise of Matthew 6:33 resounds, “Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.” The hour is approaching, and as we remain faithful, we shall see the dream manifest before our very eyes.

Let’s pray and decree that this dream will become a reality in 2026. Thousands of veterans are in dire need of assistance, many are taking their own lives, and the government of this world has no answers or solutions. In contrast, the Government of our King and His Kingdom does, and everyone who is called by His name, is granted the authority to legislate His Will.

~Dr. Russell Welch Co-Founder Remnant Warrior Ministries Warrior’s Discipleship School

New Creation Ranch


There is a shift in the order of the house, and I feel it burning in my bones. The Chair of the Father is not empty; the scepter has not fallen; the mantle has not lost its weight. Heaven has issued a decree, and I cannot ignore it. I hear the sound clearly in my spirit: the Father is Fathering again in the earth, and I am answering His call.


In 2020, I watched a son seated where a father once stood. The oil did not flow by seniority but by assignment. The mantle searched the house and found the youngest, and Heaven did not apologize. Animosity rose, but rebellion did not prevail. As I witnessed the apostolic order measure the house, I realized this was not a man receiving a chair—it was a generation bowing under the government of fatherhood.


That night, while my wife slept peacefully in our hotel room, I wrestled. In the stillness, the restlessness in me met the gentleness of the Ancient of Days. Then I heard the distinct voice of the Father—different from Holy Spirit and different from the Son, as I have always known it to be. He said to me, “I will father you now, even as I fathered Abraham.” The word did not merely soothe me; it established me. Peace rolled over me like a river and washed away the residue of striving, and a fresh covenant was cut in my heart.


I asked, “What about me, Lord?” and the answer was not explanation but alignment. It became clear that He was calling me to step fully into leadership and to separate from the one under whom I had been raised. The reasons are written in Heaven; I need not publish them on earth. What I do know is this: His order overruled my questions, and His Fathering steadied my feet.


The Father then made His wisdom unmistakable to me: He would father me through many voices. Not through one pedestal or personality, but through several He Himself would appoint. I would recognize them by the way the atmosphere shifts when they enter a room, by the weight of holiness that hushes the mind and steadies the heart, by the fear of the Lord that bends the knees of angels and rattles the bones of demons. I am not chasing fame; I am embracing sonship saturated in glory.


For years I have marveled at men whose very presence changes the temperature of a room—men in their late eighties, nineties, and even beyond a hundred. I wondered who fathered them, or if they had reached a maturity where there was no disruption to the frequencies of Heaven within them. Today I believe it is the latter. There is a maturity where the inner climate remains unbroken by the winds of earth. In that place, one walks with the Host of Heaven while still breathing earthly air. This is the path the Father is leading me to walk.


I also see the contrast with painful clarity. Some have rejected counsel, correction, and direction, and have enthroned themselves on seats that ooze with pride. Their words multiply even as their authority withers. They grow louder in the courts of men while remaining silent in the courts of Heaven. The result is confusion, division, and a loss of holy fear. I renounce those patterns and refuse that seat.


In recent months I have heard seasoned generals speak with one witness: if I will not walk under authority, I will not carry the authority of the Throne. This is not about control; it is about alignment. This is not the silencing of sons; it is the amplification of the Father through sons. I honor authority not to idolize people, but to recognize the King in the order He has established, and to bend before Him when He speaks through those He appoints.


I have learned to honor and to discern. I recognize the voices the Father assigns—not by fame, signatures, or platforms, but by the atmosphere that shifts when they speak, by the fragrance of Heaven that lingers when they depart, by the plumb line that appears within my soul when their words land. When Holy Spirit whispers to me, “Listen—the Father’s voice is coming from that one,” I choose willing submission and joyful obedience.

What I’m about to write is not intended to offend any of the seasoned voices connected to my walk, past or present; I honor each one of you.


Heaven bears witness in my life to vessels through whom the thunder of the Throne is clean: Arthur Burt, Ron McGatlin, and Samuel Brassfield. Rooms changed temperature when they entered; the fear of the Lord rose like incense when they spoke. Arthur now stands among the great cloud, yet his echo continues to instruct me to remain small enough for God to be great. The others remain as living plumb lines before me, proving that age under the anointing is not decay but depth, not retreat but rootedness, not an ending but a finishing well.


This is my charge and my confession: I am a son under governance. The Father is restoring His house with order and tenderness—apostles who truly father, prophets who truly weep, pastors who truly tend, teachers who truly anchor, evangelists who truly burn—all braided under the Headship of Christ. I am being separated, not from love but from misalignment, not from people but from patterns. The reason is written in Heaven, and my answer on earth is obedience without apology.


I step into the place where the frequencies of Heaven run unhindered through a yielded life. I choose to walk with the Host while I breathe earth’s air. I ask for steps that keep time with the Throne, and words that are few yet foundational. I honor the seating of sons even when mantles fall contrary to human order, and I bless those whom Heaven chooses without jealousy or resentment. In this posture of holy submission, I open my mouth to the thunder of the Father and I refuse to let the scepter pass me by.


The Father is thundering again in the earth, and I bow to bear the roar. I will walk under authority to carry authority. I will welcome many fathers that reveal the One Father. And I will remain small in my own eyes that I might become great in the hands of the King.

~Dr. Russell Welch
Elder/ Apostolic Teacher Founder and Shepherd of Remnant Warrior Ministries / Remnant Warrior School of Spiritual Warfare.

www.remnantwarrior.org


Examining the Roots and Rationale of the Modern House Church Movement

The landscape of Christian worship has seen a marked shift in recent years, with a growing number of believers drawn to the simplicity, intimacy, and shared responsibility found in house church models. Notably, leaders like Francis Chan—through the “We Are Church” movement—have catalyzed much of this momentum, calling for a return to practices reminiscent of the earliest Christian communities. But how closely does this model align with the ecclesia of the first century? Is the yearning for deeper fellowship, mutual edification, and mission-focused stewardship truly a recapturing of the spirit and practice of the New Testament church?

The Early Church: An Overview

In the earliest decades following Christ’s resurrection, Christians did not gather in grand sanctuaries or dedicated religious spaces. Instead, the ecclesia—literally the “called out ones”—met in the homes of believers, sharing meals, prayers, teaching, and the breaking of bread. These gatherings were intimate, familial, and participatory. The Apostle Paul greets several house churches in his letters (see Romans 16:5, 1 Corinthians 16:19, Colossians 4:15, Philemon 1:2), and the Book of Acts describes believers meeting “from house to house” (Acts 2:46; 20:20).

The Scale and Spread of House Churches

Scholars estimate that by the early fourth century, just before the conversion of Constantine and the legalization of Christianity, roughly 400,000 house churches may have existed throughout the Roman Empire. Early Christian gatherings were often limited by social and legal constraints—persecution made public worship risky, and believers relied on the hospitality of others to sustain their communal life. The structure of the house church provided protection, fostered strong relational bonds, and encouraged the active participation of all members.

Francis Chan and the “We Are Church” Movement

Francis Chan’s vision for the church echoes this ancient paradigm: small, reproducible communities where every believer is discipled and equipped to disciple others, where giving supports the needs of the poor and the progress of the gospel, rather than maintaining facilities or programs. This model intentionally removes the distance between leadership and laity, emphasizing shared spiritual responsibility and communal discernment. House churches, in Chan’s approach, are designed to multiply rather than accumulate members, keeping gatherings small enough for authentic fellowship and accountability.

Theological and Practical Resonances

The allure of the house church model lies in its resemblance to the early ecclesia in several key ways:

  • Mutual Edification: In smaller gatherings, believers can truly “walk together” in the faith, bearing one another’s burdens and spurring one another on toward love and good deeds (Hebrews 10:24-25).
  • Shared Leadership: Rather than relying on a single pastor or professional staff, leadership is distributed, echoing the plurality of elders and the priesthood of all believers seen in the New Testament.
  • Simplicity and Stewardship: Without the financial and logistical demands of maintaining a large building, house churches can direct more resources toward mission, mercy, and tangible needs.
  • Intimacy and Accountability: Smaller communities naturally foster deeper relationships and create space for honest confession, mutual encouragement, and genuine discipleship.
  • Missional Flexibility: Like the early church, house fellowships can adapt rapidly, meet in a variety of settings, and more easily multiply as new believers are added.

Challenges and Considerations

Of course, the house church model is not without its challenges. New Testament house churches functioned in a unique historical context—one shaped by persecution and social marginalization. Today, house churches must navigate questions of doctrinal oversight, sustainability, and unity within the broader body of Christ. And while intimacy can flourish, so too can insularity or division if not intentionally guarded against.

Modern Institutional Churches: Strengths and Struggles

Many believers, as mentioned, find connection difficult in larger, “corporate” congregations. While megachurches offer resources, programs, and opportunities for impact, some lament the loss of familial closeness and meaningful participation that marked the earliest gatherings. The yearning for something deeper—a place where everyone is known, needed, and able to contribute—is a legitimate call back to the roots of Christian community.

Chan’s description beautifully echoes the “Starfish” model advocated by Wolfgang Simson, a concept drawn from his influential writings on organic, decentralized church life. In this model, leadership is not centralized or hierarchical but is instead multiplied, much like the regenerative abilities of a starfish—if you cut off one of its arms, it grows another. The focus shifts from building institutions to cultivating people, and from collecting followers to equipping leaders who can, in turn, nurture new communities.

In practice, as this describes, a group of believers gathers in a home and intentionally mentors emerging leaders from within. Once the group reaches a size (for example, 15–20 members) that naturally limits intimacy and active participation, another gathering is launched—often in a nearby neighborhood or adjoining town—under the guidance of one of these mentored leaders. The process repeats, encouraging organic multiplication rather than dependence on a single “mother church.”

Periodically, these house fellowships unite in larger general assemblies—monthly or quarterly times of worship, testimony, celebration, and communal discernment. These gatherings strengthen the shared identity and broader unity of the movement without diminishing the intimacy of each local assembly. New baptisms, shared stories, and collective prayer for healing and mission become the heartbeat of this extended family, echoing the rhythms seen in Acts 2:42–47 and Acts 4:32–35.

Such a model is indeed closely aligned with the patterns described in the Book of Acts, where believers met from house to house, shared resources, and appointed elders in every place. The absence of heavy financial commitments to building maintenance frees up funds for tangible mission—caring for the poor, supporting local and overseas outreach, or responding generously to crises within the network. When a member faces hardship, the entire fellowship can rally support, embodying the mutual care that marked the earliest Christian communities.

In essence, the Starfish model resists institutional inertia by prioritizing mission, discipleship, and adaptability. It embodies the principle that every believer is a priest, that every home can become a hub of the Spirit’s work, and that leadership is a gift to be multiplied, not hoarded. While no model is without challenges—questions of doctrinal soundness, healthy accountability, and sustainable multiplication must all be addressed—this approach offers a compelling, deeply biblical vision for church as a living movement rather than a static organization.

On that note, back in 2004 I had a conversation with my spiritual father about this and he mentioned in India, where house churches have experience expodential growth, the set up the model as follows, when a member has been discipled amd they leave the group the become and elder, and these house are broken down into territories where each house group leader as an elder, walks in unity thte other elders, They wilo generally form thses into groups of twelve house Church. Then one elder is chosen by Holy Spirit, from which each elder gets a witness to, and that elder represent the twelve house Churches in a regional conferanmce of elders.

Ultimately, whether in rented halls, humble homes, or public spaces, what matters most is the living witness of Christ’s body—flexible, generous, Spirit-led, and fiercely devoted to one another and to the world God loves.

Conclusion: Returning to the Roots?

In sum, the contemporary house church movement, and models like Francis Chan’s “We Are Church,” are in many ways an intentional return to the rhythms and relationships of the first-century ecclesia. While not a perfect replication—history cannot be rewound—there is a powerful resonance between the early gatherings of believers and today’s house church fellowships: a longing to know Christ together, to serve one another, and to bear witness to the world in the context of simple, Spirit-empowered community. Whether in homes, sanctuaries, or under open skies, the heart of the church remains unchanged—the people of God, called together, living out the gospel in word and deed.

~Dr. Russell Welch

Elder/ Apostolic Teacher: Highway to Heaven Church and Founder and Shepherd of Remnant Warrior Ministries / Remnant Warrior School of Spiritual Warfare.

www.remnantwarrior.org


A Contemplation on Scripture, Church Culture, and the Call to Consecration

Romans 12:1-2, as rendered in the Amplified Bible, offers a powerful summons to believers: to dedicate ourselves wholly to God, presenting our bodies as living sacrifices, and refusing conformity to the patterns of this world. Rather, we are urged to pursue continual transformation through the renewal of our minds, testing and approving God’s good, acceptable, and perfect will.

Setting the Scriptural Foundation

At its heart, these verses call for a life of consecration—a holiness not merely of outward form but of inward devotion. The apostle Paul’s words reach across centuries, challenging each generation to discern the difference between what is genuinely God-honoring and what is merely the prevailing current of culture.

Cultural Expressions and the Pursuit of Holiness

Throughout history, the Church has found itself navigating tension between cultural adaptation and sacred distinction. In every era, believers have grappled with questions about clothing, music, adornment, and customs—seeking to understand where adaptation ends and compromise begins.

The example of tattoos among pastors in the modern American Church surfaces as one such point of conversation. For some, tattoos may represent a freedom in Christ, a canvas for testimony and artistic expression; for others, they may symbolize conformity to secular trends or a departure from traditional notions of reverence.

Yet, the deeper question extends beyond tattoos or any particular external marker. It invites each of us to ask: Are we, in our hearts and actions, offering ourselves fully to God? Are we seeking to align every aspect of our being—body, mind, and spirit—with Christ’s likeness? Or are we subtly reshaping the boundaries of holiness for the sake of convenience, acceptance, or personal preference?

The Challenge of Modernization and Scriptural Integrity

As the world shifts, there can be a temptation to reinterpret, dilute, or ignore certain scriptures to better fit the spirit of the age. Paul’s exhortation stands as a gentle but firm warning against this: “Do not be conformed to this world… but be transformed.” The transformation he describes is thorough, inward, and ongoing—a renewal that resists superficiality for the sake of true spiritual depth.

Scripture warns against selective obedience and self-serving reinterpretation. The story of humanity’s first fall, as recounted in Genesis, reminds us of the peril in choosing personal judgment over divine instruction. God’s call to holiness has always been an invitation to trust, surrender, and obedience, even when it stands in contrast to popular opinion.

Clean Hands, Pure Hearts, and Approaching the Holy

To “climb the mountain of the Lord”—to enter His presence—is not a matter of outward ritual alone, but of inward purity and integrity. Psalm 24 declares, “Who may ascend the hill of the Lord? Those with clean hands and a pure heart.” It is possible, as you note, to misinterpret God’s grace as license for continued rebellion, rather than as the power to walk in newness of life.

Holiness, then, is not about legalism nor about careless liberty; it is about being clothed in the righteousness of Christ, standing in humble awe before God’s consuming fire.

Inviting Self-Examination and Humble Seeking

Rather than passing judgment on others—whether pastors with tattoos or congregants without—it falls to each believer, each community, to prayerfully examine their motives and practices in the light of God’s Word. The altar is a place for honest questions, surrendered hearts, and listening for Heaven’s answer.

Conclusion

The words of Romans 12:1-2 challenge every generation to forsake superficial conformity, to resist the easy path of cultural accommodation, and to instead pursue a life marked by sacrificial worship, radical renewal, and unwavering devotion to God’s perfect will. May we, as the Remnant, respond not with self-righteousness but with humility, seeking clean hands, pure hearts, and the clothing of Christ’s righteousness as we navigate an ever-changing world.

We would love to hear your comments on this topic.

~Dr. Russell Welch

Elder/ Apostolic Teacher: Highway to Heaven Church and Founder and Shepherd of Remnant Warrior Ministries / Remnant Warrior School of Spiritual Warfare.

www.remnantwarrior.org