Thursday, October 1, 2020

Vision Still Stirs

A Word for the Vision Keeper in a Season of Stillness

 

When It Feels Dormant, God Is Still Moving

There are times when vision feels quiet.
No new instruction. No visible progress. No emotional fire.

But for the Vision Keeper, this truth must be held:

Vision still stirs.

Even when you feel dry.
Even when the excitement is gone.
Even when the journal is closed and the calendar is blank—vision is not dead.

It is simply stirring beneath the surface. Preparing. Maturing. Awakening again.

“For this reason I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God, which is in you…”
(2 Timothy 1:6, ESV)

 


What Does It Mean for Vision to Stir?

To say “vision still stirs” is to acknowledge that vision has rhythm.
It will not always roar. It will not always run. But it will never truly be still.

God often works in silence. He stirs in seasons of rest. He revives in dry places.

  • Stirring looks like renewed clarity after a quiet season.
  • Stirring looks like old ideas regaining urgency.
  • Stirring looks like unexpected confirmation during your wait.
  • Stirring looks like hidden preparation while the world sees nothing.

Stirring is slow—but it is sacred.

 

For the Vision Keeper: Stay Watchful

Those who walk in Obedient Sight must learn to recognize the signs of a stirring season.
Because when vision stirs, it does not always come with a spotlight—it often comes with a whisper.

“Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?”
(Isaiah 43:19, ESV)

When vision begins to stir again:

  • Stay close to what God last said.
  • Reopen the pages where you last felt fire.
  • Make room for fresh direction without forcing it.
  • Fast from distractions that mute spiritual sensitivity.

You do not need to force a move—just stay ready for one.

 

What to Do When You Feel Numb

If your vision feels distant or dormant, try this:

  • Pray, not for clarity—but for awakening.
  • Declare over what looks dead: “God still breathes here.”
  • Speak life over your assignment, even if you are unsure of your energy.

God never gives a vision without also planting a time to revive it.

And if He stirred you once, He will stir you again.

 

Final Encouragement

Vision still stirs.
Not in the spotlight. Not in the noise. But in the quiet, where only the obedient are listening.

It stirs in dry bones.
It stirs in closed journals.
It stirs in the hearts of those who refuse to let go.

The Vision Keeper does not always feel the fire—but they never stop protecting the spark.

So fan the flame. Revisit the pages. Ready your spirit.
Because the stirring you feel is not your imagination—it is your invitation.

And those who walk in Obedient Sight will feel it first.