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Stay Tuned | Valley YTH Tracy | Amancio Rosas | September 28 2025 Summary

I open by welcoming everyone and setting the tone: we’ve been learning how to stay tuned spiritually, and tonight we’re going deeper into what it means to live with the Holy Spirit. I start with Acts 2:17 to remind us that the Spirit is still active, God pours out His Spirit, and people will prophesy, see visions, and dream dreams. After praying, I explain a key foundation: the Holy Spirit is not just power, He’s a Person. He has mind and emotion, and Christianity is relational. Living with the Spirit means having real “heart-to-heart” moments with God, not treating Him like something we command.

From there, I introduce the first major point: God can speak through sleep and dreams. I talk about how we live in a world full of distractions, especially our phones, and how sleep is one of the few times we’re truly quiet and undistracted. I use Job 33:14–15 to show that God speaks “now one way, now another,” including through dreams and visions of the night. I explain the context: Job is suffering, feeling like God is silent, and one of the speakers in that passage points out that dreams can warn, guide, protect, and humble us.

Then I share my personal story: when I was in high school leading a Christian club, I would pray after school by my locker. One day after taking a nap, I had a dream where everything was pitch black, something covered my mouth, and I couldn’t speak. I had to call on Jesus internally, and when I said His name, I woke up. I use that to teach that not every “nightmare” is meaningless, sometimes it’s spiritual, sometimes it’s preparation, and sometimes it highlights an attack or a threat. I tell them: the enemy wants to silence our voice, but Jesus gives us authority and awakening.

I also explain that not all dreams are the same. Some are simple and direct, but others are symbolic and require discernment. I use a funny example from my own life: I had a weird dream like a “Temple Run” maze with spider webs and avocados that I was collecting for points. It didn’t make sense at first. But then at work in produce (where I literally deal with avocados), a customer approached me and started a deep conversation, about hope, the Bible, imperfect people, and the need for real human connection that technology can’t replace. I explain how that moment felt like confirmation: even if the dream seemed silly, it heightened my awareness that God may have been preparing me for a specific encounter where I could plant seeds and represent Jesus well.

Next, I move into the second way God speaks: circumstances. I read Genesis 50:20 and walk through Joseph’s story, how Joseph had dreams, was rejected by his brothers, sold into slavery, falsely accused, forgotten, and still remained faithful. I emphasize that Joseph didn’t control his circumstances, but God shaped him through them. Even the painful parts became part of a bigger plan that saved lives. I bring it home by saying that sometimes a broken friendship or a closed door becomes clear later: what felt unfair might actually be protection or redirection.

Then I teach the third way God speaks: impressions, inner checks, promptings, “notifications” from the Spirit. I use Acts 16:6–7 to show Paul trying to go one direction for ministry, but the Holy Spirit blocking it. I explain that sometimes God stops what we want to do, not because it’s bad, but because He has a different assignment that matters more in that season.

I share personal examples: when I was newly saved, I went to a party and got a strong impression to leave. I didn’t want to, especially because it was raining and I had to walk home, but I obeyed. Later, when I was older and more mature in my faith, I went to another party with friends and again got a warning impression. We left, and soon after someone texted saying the police showed up because things got dangerous. I don’t claim I know every detail spiritually, but I emphasize that sometimes God gives impressions to protect us, redirect us, or keep us from outcomes we’d never see coming.

After that, I shift the message into posture: how do we respond when God speaks? I use 1 Samuel 3:9 “Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening”, to show that listening is a mindset. I remind them it’s amazing to read the Bible and be inspired, but inspiration without obedience isn’t the goal. I give an analogy: we’re not meant to stay “charged” like batteries forever, we’re meant to be empowered so we can power up others through the gospel.

I close with Jeremiah 33:3: “Call to me and I will answer you and tell you great and unsearchable things you do not know.” I explain that I can only be limited in what I know about them, but God knows them completely, how He wired them, their calling, their gifts, their future. So I challenge them: Are you listening? And I clarify: listening isn’t just feeling spiritual, it’s making decisions, handling friendships wisely, resisting temptation, and asking, “How can I make an impact?”

Finally, I pray that the Holy Spirit would increase our awareness of Him daily, speaking through rest, guiding through circumstances, warning through impressions, and shaping our attitudes so we respond with love and grace instead of hate and gossip. I pray for true safety in a chaotic world by staying in His hands.

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3 Views On The Word “Create”

Audio Version Of This Post

It’s not surprising that I have felt a tug in my heart to focus on this one specific word “consecrate.” But wait isn’t this post about the word “create” yes it is but before we get into that let’s go through a little update about the motive behind this explanation.

Consecrate:

To consecrate is to be set apart, to be in total commitment for God and His purposes. This is the definition that I came up with because of my past experiences of how this word meant in my personal life. It is common in our lives to be comfortable, acceptable about certain habits and attitudes, and forget our focus on the kingdom, and learning to navigate the life that God has called us to live by.

I am currently going through the Pentateuch as a personal study through the first five books of the Bible. Currently, in my University classes, I am taking the Torah which is the Hebrew Term for Law. It wasn’t until I came to this explanation of what “create” means, opened up a whole new meaning in my personal life. Let’s go ahead and dive in.

To Create Is To Separate:

We can look throughout the Genesis Story that God decides to separate things when creation was happening. From darkness between light, water between sky, and water between ground. (Genesis 1:1-9)

I am reminded of the scripture regarding David to “create a clean heart”

“Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me.” Psalms 51:10

To have a clean heart, God must separate our hearts which are wicked to bring renewal and restoration as you could see that this impacts us to have the right spirit as our attitudes and actions are being changed but separation is the key.

My question is what is something you need to allow God to separate in your life for creation to personally take place? In order for God to create there must be separation.

To Create Is To Give Life:

As you go on regarding the creation story we see an element of life-giving when it comes with the terms of “produce, make, give,” those are life-giving terms to illustrate creation. (Genesis 1:24-31)

This is the most common view that people have. Which makes sense because our main purpose is to create things that are good in our lives. Through Christ scripture states that:

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here! 2 Corinthians 5:17

How is this new creation becoming? It is becoming due to the giving life to the new. The newness is what is developed in the process of creation. From the beginning God created through life-giving terms we have confidence that our new creation is life-giving.

Jesus states His purpose on why He came according to the gospel of John.

“The thief’s purpose is to steal and kill and destroy. My purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life” John 10:10 NLT

Other translations focus on the word “have” which you can’t have something without it being created.

To have newness and life we must separate and then allow life to begin but even before life can start to express this is the most important aspect that we tend to forget.

To Create Is To Let Things Die:

While we know that God created life, Humans because they decided to be disobedient towards God allowed Sin to come into the world to provide death. This was not God’s design because out of God’s protection He wanted to protect us from this state for not even being close to the tree of Life. While Death was used as a curse, God can use this to provide a way for creation to be purified. (Genesis 3)

It was the death of Jesus that provided life and reconciliation for us to have a relationship with God. What was once a consequence of sin from the fall is now the solution for salvation in our lives.

We are commanded to “put to death” of our earthly nature according to Paul.

5 Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature: Colossians 3:5

Death is good in this reasoning because if we do not do our part of putting things to death, the new cannot be cultivated through the Holy Spirit. Do you remember that this should be done daily as Christians?

Then he said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me. Luke 9:23

We are no longer living for ourselves because we put our desires to death and now we are living for Christ as living sacrifices to seek the Will of God. The purpose of creation to is to be in the Will of God!

Creation in essence is a process of separation, life giving, and death.

What are certain things you need to allow God to separate?

What are certain things you must say no and put to death In order for God to renew, restore, and give life in your life?