If Nobody Else Sees It, I Do!


 

Delivered by Bishop Joseph W. Walker, III

Sermon Synopsis 11/2/25

 

Scripture: 1 Kings 18:41–46 (NKJV)

41 Then Elijah said to Ahab, “Go up, eat and drink; for there is the sound of abundance of rain.”

42 So Ahab went up to eat and drink. And Elijah went up to the top of Carmel; then he bowed down on the ground, and put his face between his knees,

43 and said to his servant, “Go up now, look toward the sea.” So he went up and looked, and said, “There is nothing.” And seven times he said, “Go again.”

44 Then it came to pass the seventh time, that he said, “There is a cloud, as small as a man’s hand, rising out of the sea!” So he said, “Go up, say to Ahab, ‘Prepare your chariot, and go down before the rain stops you.’”

45 Now it happened in the meantime that the sky became black with clouds and wind, and there was a heavy rain. So Ahab rode away and went to Jezreel.

46 Then the hand of the Lord came upon Elijah; and he girded up his loins and ran ahead of Ahab to the entrance of Jezreel.

Prayer:

Let our faith be strengthened. Let us leave here today better than we came. We thank You that this word will be transformational—shifting us into a brand-new season of vision. We give You glory and praise, in Jesus’ name, Amen.

I.               Introduction

  1. Israel had endured a crippling drought for three and a half years. There was no dew, no rain, and no harvest. Crops failed, cattle perished, and hope itself seemed to dry up. This was not just a natural drought; it was a divine consequence. The prophet Elijah had pronounced judgment on King Ahab and Queen Jezebel because they led the nation into idol worship—the worship of Baal, the Canaanite storm god who was supposed to control rain, fertility, and harvest.
  2. Yet God proved who truly holds control. He shut up the heavens, silencing Baal and exposing the futility of idolatry. The economy collapsed, the land withered, and spiritually, the people were confused. Jezebel financed hundreds of false prophets, while those faithful to Yahweh were forced into hiding. The nation was paralyzed—caught between two opinions, uncertain which god to serve.
  3. Then Elijah emerged with courage and conviction. He called for a public showdown on Mount Carmel: “Let’s see whose God is truly God.” Baal’s prophets cried, danced, and even cut themselves, but heaven stayed silent. Elijah rebuilt the altar of the Lord, drenched it with water, and prayed a simple prayer. Fire fell from heaven, consuming the sacrifice and the water, proving that Yahweh alone is God. The people fell to their knees, crying, “The Lord, He is God.”
  4. It was a breathtaking victory—but the rain had not yet come. After the fire, Elijah turned to Ahab and said, “Go up, eat and drink, for there is the sound of abundance of rain.” There were still no clouds in the sky, no sign of a storm. Yet Elijah heard something in his spirit before it appeared in the natural.
  5. Faith begins there—hearing what others cannot see. There are seasons when God shows you something that nobody else can perceive. You might be surrounded by people who cannot discern what God is preparing to do, but that does not make your vision any less real. Faith allows you to believe what your natural eye cannot yet confirm.
  6. Elijah teaches that we must not confuse silence with absence. Just because the sky is clear does not mean heaven is inactive. God is often moving in unseen realms, aligning moments, preparing rain, and setting up breakthrough. Faith means holding on to what God said even when there’s no evidence yet. You may not have the agreement of others, but. you have the assurance of His word.
  7. For Elijah, the rain symbolized restoration—God’s mercy returning to a people who had endured divine withdrawal. The fire represented purification—God cleansing them of idols before sending new provision. And the small cloud that eventually appeared represented beginning—the first visible sign of breakthrough.
  8. From this story, three key movements of faith emerge.

II.               Prophetic Pronouncement

  • A prophetic pronouncement is the act of declaring what God said before it appears. It is speaking faith into an atmosphere that looks contrary. Elijah announced rain when the sky was still empty. Faith often speaks in contradiction to circumstance.
  • Words matter. Your declaration can set the atmosphere for what is coming. Elijah did not whisper his belief—he announced it. He did not wait for evidence; he used his voice to create it. Your words hold creative power. They shape your expectation and align your reality with heaven’s promise.
  • Faith does not stay silent—it speaks, even when the facts do not support it. Heaven responds to sound. Life and death are in the power of the tongue, and what you release determines what you experience.

A.    Stay in God’s Will Even When It Looks Impossible

  1. Staying in God’s will often requires standing in places that make no sense to others. His will may stretch you beyond your comfort, but it will never fail you. Standing means maintaining a spiritual posture of trust when everything else seems unstable.
  2. To stand on the Word is to stand on God’s logic—the Logos. His truth transcends what looks illogical. Circumstances shift, but His Word remains. When storms arise, His Word becomes your anchor. When confusion sets in, it becomes your compass. When spiritual battles intensify, it becomes your weapon.
  3. Those who live by the Word rehearse His promises until they outweigh their fears. Doubt may echo through the voices of others, but standing in God’s will means holding firm to what He said. Earth and time may pass away, but His Word will never fail.

B.    Stand on God’s Word Even When Others Doubt It

  1. Standing on the Word is not passive endurance—it is active confidence. You can’t fall when your foundation is divine truth. You can’t drown when your faith is anchored in His voice. When you stand on the Word, the Word stands up for you.
  2. You may not have agreement from those around you. Resources may be limited. Opportunities may appear closed. But the Word of God still works. When all else fails, a Word sustains. People don’t gather for spectacle—they come for substance. They come for a Word that steadies them through chaos.
  3. So declare what God told you. Speak over your life what heaven has already decreed. Call forth what you cannot yet see, because your pronouncement positions you for God’s performance.

III.               Patient Through the Process

  • After declaring rain, Elijah climbed Mount Carmel and bowed with his face between his knees. This posture mirrored the birthing position in ancient Israelite culture—his physical act symbolized spiritual travail. He wasn’t just praying; he was pushing something into existence.
  • Faith is not tested in the fire of revelation but in the silence of waiting. Elijah’s servant went out six times and saw nothing. Yet Elijah kept praying, kept believing, kept pushing. The seventh time, a small cloud appeared. It started small, but it signaled something significant.

 

  • Faith requires persistence. It means staying low in prayer when the reports keep saying “nothing.” It means understanding that nothingness is not punishment—it’s the delivery room of manifestation.

A.    Keep Worshipping While You Wait

  1. Waiting reveals whether you truly worship or merely react. Praise is reactive—it celebrates what God has done. Worship is proactive—it honors who God is.
  2. Worship means lifting your heart when circumstances are unclear. It is choosing reverence over resentment. Worship says, “Even if I don’t know how or when this will work, I still know who God is.” It is the highest form of maturity—faith that finds peace in uncertainty.
  3. To worship while waiting is to trust that God’s timeline is not delayed but deliberate. He’s developing you as much as He’s delivering for you.

B.    Keep Working Even When It Looks Like Nothing’s Changing

  1. Faith does not sit still—it works while believing. Elijah’s servant kept going back to the seashore, looking again and again until something shifted. Six times, he saw nothing. On the seventh, he saw a small cloud rising out of the sea—the size of a man’s hand.
  2. The cloud may have looked small, but its meaning was enormous. God often hides abundance in small beginnings to test whether we’ll trust the process. The small sign was not the full storm—it was proof the system of heaven was working.
  3. Your next miracle may rise out of what once brought you pain. The sea that had been a place of fear became the birthplace of favor. What once tried to drown you now delivers you. The same water that destroyed idols produced rain for renewal.
  4. The shape of the cloud—a hand—symbolized divine involvement. It was God’s way of saying, “My hand is moving.” When people exit your life, when doors close, when opportunities shift—see the hand of God. Every subtraction is setup for divine addition.
  5. Formation always precedes fullness. Don’t wait for thunder to shout. Rejoice when you see formation, because if it’s forming, it’s coming. Don’t despise small beginnings; the small cloud signals that drought is breaking and promise is approaching.

IV.               Praise Him for His Power

  • The sky darkened. Winds rose. Heavy rain began to fall. And the hand of the Lord came upon Elijah, giving him supernatural strength to outrun Ahab’s chariot to Jezreel. What started in prayer ended in power. What began in faith concluded in fulfillment.
  • God’s power not only meets needs—it accelerates outcomes. When He moves, delays are canceled. When He acts, years of drought can end in a single downpour.

A.    Be a Witness When the Promise Shows Up

  1. When God’s Word manifests, testify. Be a living witness of what faith can birth. The rain was not random—it was a sign that God restores what was lost.
  2. The downpour confirmed Elijah’s prophetic word. It showed the people that obedience produces outcome and that no false god could ever match Yahweh’s faithfulness. When your promise appears, don’t hide it. Share it so that others can see the evidence of God’s integrity.
  3. Your life becomes the proof text that He still performs His Word.

B.    Expect a Wonder Because God Always Exceeds Expectations

  1. God doesn’t deal in minimums—He works in miracles. When He sends rain, it’s abundant. When He restores, it’s overflowing. He exceeds the very boundaries of what we thought possible.
  2. Expect acceleration where there was delay. Expect overflow where there was lack. Expect strength where there was weakness. God’s track record guarantees that His next move will surpass the last one.
  3. Elijah’s story reminds us that God is both promise and performer. The same God who sent fire to prove Himself sent rain to bless His people. And the same God who began a work in you will complete it.

Closing Reflection

  1. What began as a faint sound became a storm. What started as a whisper in the spirit became visible evidence in the natural. A prophet’s declaration became a nation’s deliverance.

 

When nobody else sees it, keep seeing it. When others stop believing, keep believing. When there’s no sign in the sky, keep listening for the sound. God will never show you something He doesn’t intend to bring to pass.

 

Faith will always seem foolish until the rain starts falling.

 

Keep speaking what He said. Keep standing on His Word. Keep worshipping through the waiting. Keep working through the silence. And when you see the cloud forming, even if it’s small—praise Him.

 

Because rain is on the way.

 

Title Reminder: Nobody Else Sees It, I Do!

 

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About growintheword

I consider myself a Christian with an envangelistic calling. I like music, art, and computers. I belive that God gives us our gifts so that they may be used for his glory. It is my desire that everyone in the world comes to know God and have a personal relationship with him by means of music, evangelistic ministry, and by understanding the word of God.
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