Three Keys the Spirit Revealed: Raising the Body From the Dead

(How to Quicken Your Earthly Tent When Doctors Have Run Out of Answers)

Early one morning, Nov 2025, the Spirit of the Lord woke me with fire in my bones and said,

“Write this for the one who has prayed and fasted and still cannot rise from the bed. Write it for the one whose child is sick. Write it plain so My people can live.”

So I’m obeying. This is not theory. This is not another health blog.

This is Spirit-breathed, battlefield-tested revelation “for the last days when the love of many is waxing cold and bodies are breaking because souls first broke.”

There are exactly "THREE PRONGS" the Lord showed me.

Miss one and you stay sick. Walk in all three and even what doctors called “incurable” begins to reverse.

1. Return to the Original Fuel God Put in the Garden

2. Detect & Destroy Every Hidden Deficit

3. Make Your Soul Prosper in Christ

Do them in this order. Do them together. Watch God be God in your flesh.

LEGAL DECLARATION                                       

bvthomas.com claims no liability.This is my God-given right to relay what was shown me in the Spirit. This is NOT medical advice, diagnosis, or prescription.Check everything with a qualified functional medicine practitioner, especially if you are on medication.        
FIRST: SEE HOW THE ENEMY GOT IN 

The Spirit showed me two armies clashing inside every sick person:

THE ENEMIES – man-made poison disguised as food.

THE SOLDIERS – five early-warning systems God placed as your first line of defence.

When the enemies win, the soldiers collapse, and disease marches straight in.

The five soldiers that break FIRST: 

1. Insulin signalling

2. Gut wall integrity

3. Microbiome balance

4. Mitochondria (your cellular power plants)

5. Cortisol rhythm

The enemies that kill them: 

– Refined carbs & hidden sugars

– Industrial seed oils

– Ultra-processed foods & additives

– High-fructose corn syrup

– Alcohol & chemical-laden meats

– Artificial sweeteners & emulsifiers

One mouthful of the enemies = one bullet into your soldiers.

PRONG 1 – RETURN TO THE ORIGINAL FUEL 

(Drive the enemies out with the food from the Garden)

Genesis 1:29 and Genesis 9:3 — that’s the original diet. Everything else is a deviation that opened the door.

Stop feeding on the curseEat only: 

– Vegetables and fruits straight from the dirt (especially bitter greens, beets, berries, avocados, olives)

– Clean pasture-raised eggs, limited clean meat/fish (Leviticus 11 list)

– Raw honey, cold-pressed olive oil, coconut oil, grass-fed butter/ghee

– Herbs, spices, fermented foods, tiny amounts of sprouted ancient grains if tolerated

Two warnings from the Spirit: 

– Stop spraying perfume directly on your neck and thyroid — you are poisoning your hormones.

– Stop gorging on spinach, beet greens, and rhubarb — the oxalates will form crystals in your kidneys and you’ll wonder why healing is blocked.

30–90 days eating ONLY the original fuel and many “incurable” labels fall off.

PRONG 2 – DETECT AND DESTROY EVERY HIDDEN DEFICIT 

(Precision tracking + targeted supplementation)

Even eating perfectly today, most of us inherited depleted soil and toxic bloodlines.

You must find the leaks.

Do these two tests (the Spirit keeps highlighting them): 

1. Hair Tissue Mineral Analysis (HTMA) – use Trace Elements Inc. or Analytical Research Labs (no blood, just hair)

2. DNA Methylation / Genetic Testing – Gary Brecka’s 10X Health test or equivalent

You will see copper/zinc imbalances, heavy metals, thyroid/adrenal collapse, “and critical SNPs like MTHFR” that stop you using normal B-vitamins.

Then supplement like a sniper, not a shotgun — under guidance. 90 days of the right fuel in the right amounts and people literally feel ten years drop off.

PRONG 3 – MAKE YOUR SOUL PROSPER 

(The prong the church almost completely forgot)

“Beloved, I wish above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in health, even AS thy soul prospereth.” (3 John 2)

“It shall be health to thy navel, and marrow to thy bones.” (Proverbs 3:8)

I don’t care if you eat organic kale grown by angels and swallow 50 supplements a day —

if you are walking in bitterness, unforgiveness, lust, fear, or pride, you are quenching the Spirit who wants to quicken your mortal flesh (Romans 8:11).

Get alone with God and let the searchlight in: 

– Who have I not forgiven from my heart?

– Am I entertaining sexual sin in image or thought?

– Am I walking in love or offence?

– Which wisdom am I yielding to — wisdom from above or wisdom that is earthly, sensual, demonic? (James 3:15-17)

– Am I fully submitted or still the boss of my own life?

Repent. Forgive. Renounce. Speak the Word. Pray in tongues until the atmosphere shifts.

When the soul lines up, the body has no choice but to follow.

“If this word just set you on fire but you don’t know where to start, I made three simple guides for you. Click below — they’re free.”

[Guide 1] First 7 Days Eating the Original Fuel 

[Guide 2] How to Order & Understand Your Two Tests ← Global version (default) 

[Guide 2 Europe Edition] How to Order Your Tests – EUROPE / UK EDITION ← Europe version    – “← If you live in the UK or Europe, click here for your local, faster, cheaper labs (including Body Fabulous UK)”

[Guide 3] 40-Day Soul Prosperity Prayer Plan

The THREE Fathers: A Journey of DISCERNMENT, Redemption, and Abundant LIFE

Every soul navigates a world shaped by three fatherly voices, each vying to define our identity, purpose, and destiny. The father of lies, Satan, whispers deception, cloaking destruction in the guise of freedom. His voice, as John 8:44 declares, is the origin of falsehood, seeking to impede souls from the life of God by ensnaring them in spiritual deadness. He exploits the potential for despair, tempting us with lies like “you are unworthy” or “you are alone,” aiming to bind us in darkness and separation from truth.

The earthly father, through whom we enter the world, shapes our early sense of self. Yet, as a fallen soul himself, he is subject to the law of sin and death (Romans 7:23), influenced by the devil’s deceit or his own human frailty. Some earthly fathers nurture, but others, swayed by sin or brokenness, may crush their children’s spirits, conditioning them to believe they are “good for nothing,” rejecting them outright, or leaving them as orphans—whether physically absent or emotionally distant, raised by others or left to fend for themselves. Even the best earthly fathers, bound by imperfection, cannot fully meet the soul’s deepest need for unconditional love.

Yet above these voices rises the Everlasting Father, God Almighty, whose love is boundless and whose presence is eternal. As Isaiah 9:6 proclaims, He is the Everlasting Father, and through His Son, Jesus Christ, He calls all souls to come to Him, that they might have life—life abundant and full (John 10:10). Unlike the father of lies, who seeks to steal, kill, and destroy, or the earthly father, whose failures may wound, God pursues weary souls with a promise: “I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you” (John 14:18). Through Jesus Christ, who paved the way for liberation from sin, the devil, and darkness, God offers salvation, adoption, and a restored identity as beloved children (Romans 8:15).

For those who walk in faith, a spiritual father—whether a mentor, pastor, or guide—may serve as a bridge to this divine truth. As Paul describes in 1 Corinthians 4:15, such figures facilitate rebirth into Christ, echoing the Everlasting Father’s call and guiding souls toward His light. These spiritual fathers, though imperfect, help navigate the journey from spiritual deadness to abundant life.

Life, then, is a journey of discernment and redemption: to reject the lies that bind, to forgive the earthly flaws that wound, and to answer the call of Jesus Christ to abundant life. The father of lies exists to thwart this journey, exploiting the spiritual deadness of souls to keep them from God’s truth. The earthly father, swayed by sin or brokenness, may reinforce these lies through rejection or failure. But the Everlasting Father, through His Son, seeks those weary souls, offering liberation from sin’s dominion and the devil’s deceit. Jesus’ invitation is clear: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28).

To choose the Everlasting Father is to embrace a transformative truth: that we are never alone, never forsaken, and always loved. It is to step into a destiny where lies are exposed, wounds are healed, and the soul finds its eternal home in the abundant life offered through Christ. This is the profound reality of God’s love—a love that pursues, redeems, and restores, calling every soul to rise above deception and brokenness into the fullness of His salvation.

The DEEDS John Knew: A Messiah REVEALED in Mercy 

Why Jesus Answered with Actions, Not Armies

Opening: The Spark in the Quiet

I was mulling over Matthew 11 in my quiet time when Jesus’ words jumped out: “Go and tell John what you hear and see.” Why those specific deeds—blind seeing, lame walking, dead rising? It got me wondering—what did John already know about the Messiah? The question wouldn’t let go. Here was John the Baptist, the thundering prophet of the wilderness, now caged in Herod’s prison, sending disciples to ask Jesus, “Are you the one, or should we wait for another?” (Matthew 11:3). Jesus doesn’t reply with a title or a throne. He points to actions—miracles that ripple with meaning. It’s a moment that begs us to dig deeper: what lens shaped John’s hope, and how did Jesus’ deeds both fit and flip it?

John’s Prison and the Messiah He Expected

Picture John: wild hair matted, voice once roaring “Repent!” now hushed by stone walls. He’d baptized Jesus, seen the Spirit descend like a dove, heard God declare, “This is my beloved Son” (Matthew 3:17). That day at the Jordan, John knew—he pointed and said, “Behold, the Lamb of God” (John 1:29). But now, months later, he’s in chains, and Jesus isn’t storming fortresses. John’s own preaching had an edge: “The axe is laid to the root of the trees… His winnowing fork is in his hand” (Matthew 3:10, 12). He’d heralded a Messiah of fire and judgment, a kingdom-shaker. Yet Jesus was out there touching lepers, not toppling tyrants.

Was John doubting? Maybe. Or maybe he just needed clarity. Raised as Zechariah’s son, a priestly heir (Luke 1:5), John was no stranger to the scrolls. He’d quoted Isaiah 40:3—“Prepare the way of the Lord”—to frame his mission. He knew the Prophets’ promises: a shoot from Jesse’s stump (Isaiah 11:1), a preacher of good news to the poor (Isaiah 61:1), a healer of the blind and lame (Isaiah 35:5-6). Zechariah 9:9 even hinted at a humble king—“your king comes to you… riding on a donkey”—a detail easy to miss amid cries for liberation. Under Roman rule, John might’ve blended these with a hope for deliverance. He knew the Messiah’s deeds would signal God’s reign. But which deeds?

Jesus’ Answer: Deeds That Echo Isaiah

Jesus’ reply is no offhand remark. “Go and tell John what you hear and see,” he says, “the blind receive their sight and the lame walk, lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, and the dead are raised up, and the poor have good news preached to them” (Matthew 11:4-5). These aren’t random—they’re a checklist from Isaiah’s playbook. “The eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; then shall the lame man leap like a deer” (Isaiah 35:5-6). “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me… to proclaim good news to the poor” (Isaiah 61:1). Jesus isn’t just doing miracles—he’s fulfilling prophecy, step by step.

Why the specificity? Because John knew the script. Jesus’ answer leans into that knowledge: “You’ve read the signs; here they are.” It’s confirmation tailored to a prophet’s lens. But notice what’s missing—no axe, no fire, no Roman ruin. Where John saw a winnowing fork, Jesus offers a healing hand—echoing Zechariah’s lowly king more than a warrior. The Messiah’s deeds signal God’s kingdom, yes, but they prioritize mercy over might, renewal over revolution. “Blessed is the one who is not offended by me,” Jesus adds (Matthew 11:6)—a gentle nudge. Was John tripped up by a Messiah who didn’t match the full picture he’d painted?

The Gap: Judgment Deferred, Compassion Now

That gap—between John’s fiery vision and Jesus’ quiet works—holds the tension. John wasn’t wrong to expect judgment; the Old Testament brims with it (e.g., Malachi 4:1, “the day is coming, burning like an oven”). Isaiah pairs healing with justice (11:4, “he shall strike the earth with the rod of his mouth”). Jesus would later speak of separating sheep from goats (Matthew 25:31-46). But here, the Messiah unveils phase one: compassion breaking in. The dead rise not to judge but to live. The poor hear hope, not doom.

John’s question isn’t failure—it’s human. Locked in darkness, he needed to reconcile the Messiah he proclaimed with the one he saw. Jesus’ deeds didn’t cancel the script; they reordered it. The prophets fused near and far—restoration now, reckoning later. Isaiah 53 whispers this too: a servant “pierced for our transgressions” (v. 5), bearing grief before bringing glory. Jesus lives that split: the “already” of mercy, the “not yet” of wrath. John’s lens wasn’t blurry; it just hadn’t zoomed out to the cross, where this suffering Messiah would fuse justice and mercy (Psalm 85:10).

The Deeper Truth: A Messiah for the Margins

Step back, and Jesus’ choice of deeds whispers something profound. Blind, lame, lepers, deaf, dead, poor—these aren’t power players. They’re the overlooked, the outcast. Isaiah’s promises weren’t just for kings but for the crushed (61:1, “the brokenhearted”). Jesus doesn’t march on Jerusalem; he kneels in Galilee’s dust—foreshadowing the cross, where he’d be “numbered with the transgressors” (Isaiah 53:12). This Messiah redefines “kingdom” not as conquest but as care. John knew the signs, but Jesus shows their soul: God’s reign begins with the least, not the loudest.

That’s where my quiet-time question landed me. If John knew the deeds, why the doubt? Because they didn’t look like triumph—at least, not yet. Jesus answered with actions that fit the ancient promises perfectly—Isaiah’s healings, Zechariah’s humility, the servant’s sacrifice—yet flipped the script on how they’d unfold. The Messiah John heralded was real, just not the shape he’d braced for.

For Us: Seeing the Signs We Didn’t Expect

John’s story mirrors ours. We too carry scripts—about God, life, deliverance. We scan for thrones when he offers touch—ultimately, a cross. I’d expected a Messiah of might too, not one whose proof was a leper’s smile or a pierced side. But that’s the point: the signs we demand aren’t always the ones we get. Jesus didn’t just answer John—he answered me, and maybe you. “Tell what you hear and see,” he says. What do we see? A kingdom sneaking in through mercy, building to a day when the axe falls true. Blessed are we if we’re not offended by it—by a Messiah who rode a donkey, bore our sins, and calls us to the margins still.

“The Perilous Path of WILFUL SIN and its Aftermath”

Have you ever wondered what happens when a person wilfully commits sins after receiving the knowledge of the truth? It’s important to note that this isn’t referring to the sinful nature that we all contend with due to the non-redeemed state of our mortal bodies. Rather, it’s talking about wilful sinning.

According to Romans 6:16,19/7:18,23/8:23/2Cor 10:5/Phil 3:21/1John 1:8/ 3:2/1Tim 6:11,12, this kind of sin is quite serious. If a person commits this kind of sin after receiving the knowledge of the truth, they’re essentially counting the blood of the covenant, wherewith they were sanctified, as an unholy thing. This is a direct insult to the Spirit of Grace.

If someone falls away after receiving the knowledge of the truth (being led away with the error of the wicked, fall from your own steadfastness – 2 Peter 3:17 – them who draw back unto perdition – Hebrews 10:39), it’s difficult to renew them again unto repentance. It’s like a dog returning to his vomit or a fool returning to his folly. If someone has escaped the pollution of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ but becomes entangled with them again, they’re essentially starting over. This is found in Hebrews 6:4-6/10:29/Pro 26:11/2Pet 2:20-22.

If someone through the absence of faith denies the Lord who bought them (For example, the Israelites during their time in the wilderness – Jude 1:5/1 Corinthians 10:1-13/Hebrews 4:6), it’s a grave mistake. They’re essentially giving the reason for the way of truth to be evil spoken of. This is found in 2Pet 2:1/1Cor 10/15:17/John 12:48/ Rom 11: 20-22. It’s important to remember that whatsoever is not of faith is sin, and all unrighteousness is sin. This is found in Rom 14:23/1 John 5:17. If someone commits wilful sinning after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there’s no more sacrifice for their sins. They can expect a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries.

There are people who claim to know God but do not follow the teachings of Christ. Their hearts have become hardened and their consciences desensitized, leading to a lack of remorse and reluctance to seek the Lord’s intervention (Mediatory advocacy: intermediary support/ conciliatory representation). This is mentioned in 1 John 1:7/2:1,10.

In Acts 13:46, when Paul and Barnabas attempted to share the word of God with the Jews, they rejected it and deemed themselves unworthy of eternal life. This denial of the Holy One and the Just is also mentioned in Acts 3:14. Moreover, they showed disdain towards the Son of God in John 5:43 and Luke 19:14, just as they had disregarded the law of Moses in Hebrews 10. As a result, their sins have remained, as stated in John 9:41 and 15:22. Furthermore, their blasphemy against the Holy Ghost is condemned in Matthew 12:24,31,32. Their deliberate commission of the unpardonable sin, known as “sin unto death,” is therefore unforgivable.

Those who didn’t follow (disregarded) Moses’ law was severely/mercilessly punished based on the testimony of at least two witnesses. If we disrespect the sanctifying power of the covenant’s blood and show irreverence towards the Spirit of grace by being entangled in the world’s impurities, we’ll face even harsher consequences (Romans 11:21 warns, “For if God didn’t spare the natural branches, take heed lest he also doesn’t spare you.”) This is discussed in Hebrews 6:4-6, 10:26-29, 2 Peter 2:20-22, 1 John 2:15-16, James 4:4, and Romans 12:2.

It is important to note that several individuals, including Judas Iscariot, Demas, Ananias, and Sapphira, as well as Balaam, the wicked kings of Israel and the nation of Israel itself, faced consequences for their actions, as mentioned in various biblical passages such as Matthew 26:14, Acts 5, and 2 Timothy 4:10. We need to recognize that Jesus won’t shed his blood again and that forgiveness necessitates bloodshed, as outlined in Hebrews 9:22. Additionally, there won’t be another offering for sin (singular), which God condemned through his son’s flesh, as explained in Hebrews 10:18, Romans 5:12, and 8:3.

For if we sin wilfully (also means, loving this present world like Demas, departing from faith –1Tim 4:1/2Tim 4:4,10/1John 2:15,16/James 4:4 – and err from faith –1Tim 6:10/Hebrews 6:4-6/ Jude 5 – wickedly depart from God (an apostate) – Jeremiah 5:6,10,11/2 Thessalonians 2:3/Psalms 18:21/Jude 1:5/1 Corinthians 10:9,10 – dreadful among all sins – sin unto death –1John 5:16,17 – done wilfully – intentionally (Presumptuous sins) – by personal choice – backsliding Israel, unlike the Gentiles, who knew God, refused to repent and wickedly departed from the living God – Jeremiah 2:13 – we have no right to pray for such –1John 5:16/Jeremiah 7:16/ 11:14/14:11 – for it is impossible to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame – Hebrews 6:4-6.

To willingly and intentionally sin is to display a love for the present world (thus submitting to the power of the air – Ephesians 2:2 – which is spiritual fornication – James 4:4/1John 2:15,16) akin to that of Demas, resulting in our departure from the faith. This is a grave offence, leading to apostasy and a wicked departure from God. It is a sin unto death that we have no right to pray for. Renewal unto repentance is impossible for one who commits such a sin, as they crucify the Son of God afresh and put Him to open shame.

Israel, who knew God unlike the Gentiles, committed a serious sin by refusing to repent and wickedly departing from the living God. This backsliding only amplified the severity of the offence.

He that despised Moses’ law died without mercy under two or three witnesses: Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy (we who are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses – Hebrews 12:1), who hath trodden underfoot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing (by spiritual fornication – that is coalescing with the world or be carnally oriented), and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace? (Hebrews 10:26-29) – after that, we have received the knowledge of the truth (after that you are cut loose from the umbilical cord of the Spirit, to be led – them that are mature in spirit, that are of full age – Hebrews 5:13,14), there remains no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries (but if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanses us from all sin (this sin is due to the presence of sin within every one of us – Rom 6:16/ 7:23/1John 1:8-10/2Cor 7:1 – sin not unto death –1 John 5:16,17, yet could lead to death if neglected or unattended – Rom 8:13); and hence when we confess our sins (if we are remorseful), he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness –1John 1:7,9 – All unrighteousness is sin -1John 5:17

In conclusion, it is imperative to understand that wilful sinning after receiving the knowledge of the truth is a grave matter that should never be taken lightly. Such actions not only insult the Spirit of Grace, but also disrespect the sanctity of the covenant’s blood. It is crucial to avoid being entangled in the world’s impurities and to respect the sanctifying power of the covenant’s blood. Those who fall into wilful sinning and commit the unpardonable sin will face severe consequences. Forgiveness necessitates bloodshed, and Jesus won’t shed his blood again. Hence, it is essential to stay steadfast in the truth and avoid wilful sinning at all costs.