04/07/2026
Lessons from the Feast of Unleavened Bread
1) Fast, Focused, Obedient Living
The Feast of Unleavened Bread teaches urgency in obedience. Israel did not have time to let the bread rise—they moved when God said move.
This season reminds me: God comes first.
Not later. Not when it’s convenient. Not when I feel ready.
I choose to obey quickly, live focused, and move when He speaks—no delay, no compromise. This is not for every season, but there are moments where God calls for immediate, decisive obedience.
2) Dominion Over the Flesh
Do something you flesh always refused to do!!
Chooses Discipline over Desires!
Talk to a person you avoided. Confront a situation you feared. Make your flesh do what it didn't want to do!!
My Flesh—its fears, cravings, desires, and appetite—will not rule me.
I choose a crucified, disciplined life so I can follow the cloud without resistance.
I live for the sweetness of His presence by being obedient to His Voice.
His presence and Word working in me, is heaven to me.
3) Health and Peace Through Discipline
Am I willing to make intentional, strategic sacrifices in what I eat and how I live?
God’s wisdom teaches me to do willingly what sickness will eventually force me to do.
If I choose rest and eat for health—not just pleasure—I can walk in strength, peace, and effectiveness.
4) Deliverance Requires Effort
Coming out of bo***ge is not easy for the natural man.
Freedom has a cost.
But I’ve learned this:
The cloud, the water from the rock, and the bread from heaven are enough.
Everything else is extra.
I have learned, in whatever state I am, to be content.
5) Serving God Requires Sacrifice
There are seasons where serving God demands intentional sacrifice.
You eat unleavened bread for a time.
You deny comfort for a purpose.
God’s work is not always convenient—but it is always worth it.
There is a deep sweetness in obedience and a fullness of joy on the other side.
6) Removing Leaven Brings Freedom
Removing the leaven—hate, malice, unforgiveness—from my heart brings true liberation.
When I let those things go, something lifts.
The soul becomes light, clean, and free.
As it is written:
“Therefore let us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness; but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.” (1 Corinthians 5:8)