Part 4: Get Your Fire Back



Sermon Synopsis 01.25.26
Delivered by Bishop Joseph W. Walker, III

Scripture:
Revelation 2:4–5 NKJV

4 Nevertheless I have this against you, that you have left your first love.
5 Remember therefore from where you have fallen; repent and do the first works, or else I will come to you quickly and remove your lampstand from its place—unless you repent.
________________________________________Prayer: Thank you Lord. You’re such a great God. We center ourselves today thanking you that nothing will keep this word from getting to us. You loved us enough to meet us right at our address, and we know something powerful is going to happen today. Thank you that lives are changed forever. We give you glory, we give you praise. Amen.

I. INTRODUCTION
You know there comes a time in all of our lives when the fire we once had—the one that burned so bright—begins to flicker. You’re still coming to church, you’re still lifting your hands, you’re still saying all the right things… but if you’re honest, something in you is not showing up the way it used to.
You know what it’s like to still pray, but it feels like routine more than relationship. You still serve, but what once brought you joy now feels like obligation. You’ve learned how to look saved, how to sound saved, how to show up saved—but somewhere along the way your passion has faded.
I believe I’m talking to somebody today—somebody watching me right now—who has felt in your spirit, “I needed this word right now.” Because the reality is: “Pastor, I need my fire back.”
You really do love God, but you’re not burning like you used to. You haven’t walked away—but you’ve cooled off.
Life has a way of doing that. The pressures, the pain, the disappointment, the unanswered prayers, the seasons when you kept showing up even when your heart was tired… and little by little, quietly, the fire began to dim.
You know what it’s like to put together the theological phrases, look sanctimonious, make everybody think everything is going well… but inside you feel like something just doesn’t feel right.
I’m talking to somebody today who needs to hear this. Know that revival is in the air. All over this country, all over this world—God is stirring hearts again. People are tired of business as usual. Tired of church without power. Tired of form without fire. Tired of routine without revival.
And when you look at what’s happening in the world—chaos, confusion, moral shaking, spiritual hunger—something in you says, “Lord, don’t do this without me. Whatever you’re doing in this season, Lord, don’t do it without me.”
The times we’re living in demand that we move beyond casual Christianity. It demands a burning fire for God—a passionate pursuit. A heart so full of fire.
And here’s the good news: the same God that lit your fire the first time is the same God that’s going to rekindle it all over again.
Maybe God providentially has you right where you are right now. He’s got you tuned in because He’s trying to tell you: He heard you. He’s aware of where you are. And He’s not asking you to be perfect—He’s asking you to be passionate.
That’s why Jesus, when He speaks to the church in Revelation, says, “You’ve left your first love.” He’s not condemning them—He’s calling them back. This isn’t a word about rejection. It’s a word about restoration.
God is saying, “I remember when your heart burned for Me. I remember when worship was real, prayer was fervent, obedience was joyful. I want that version of you back.”
Mount Zion, this is our moment to get our fire back. And I want you to understand: you’re not going to tune off today unless God does something in your house. You better get ready, because something’s about to break out—and what’s going to happen in this place is about to hit your house.
The Book of Revelation opens with seven letters to seven churches of Asia Minor. These letters were written through John, the beloved disciple, who was exiled on the island of Patmos.
The church in Ephesus was unique because it was known for its strong work ethic, its solid doctrine. They were faithful in labor, strong in service, intolerant of false teaching. On the surface, it looked like the thriving church you would imagine, but beneath all that activity, they lost something essential.
Let’s see how easy it is to work for God and stop working with God. They were busy for Him, but no longer burning with Him.
So Jesus tells them: “You have left your first love.” In essence: “You’ve got a form, but you lost the fire.”
And He sets the foundation for this message, because if you want to put first things first, you’ve got to understand how to get your fire back.
It starts like this:


II. REMEMBER THE RELATIONSHIP
A. Don’t Let Routine Replace Relationship.

  1. Sometimes the key to reigniting your passion for God is simply remembering how it all began.
    a. When Jesus tells the church to remember, He’s not telling them to live in the past. He’s telling them to locate their passion.
  2. The first step in getting your fire back is to revisit the place where your heart first came to flame—to remember the moment you first got saved.
  3. Do you remember when you loved God so much nobody could take it from you?
    a. I remember when I first got saved. I was a child, but I had such a passion. You couldn’t keep me out of church. You couldn’t keep me from studying the Word.
    b. And then I remember when I was in college—I had what I call a rebirth experience. There’s a moment mama and daddy told you, but then there’s a moment you find out for yourself.
    c. That season in my life—I couldn’t put the Word down. My Bible was full of highlighters. I was reading constantly, studying scripture, praying all the time, seeking God all the time. I couldn’t wait to get to church.
  4. Do you remember how it felt when worship was spontaneous. You didn’t have to wait until you got to the House of God—worship would break out in your car, on your job.
    a. That memory will awaken your momentum. When you recall how good God has been, it ought to reignite your gratitude. When you remember where God brought you from, it ought to reignite your worship.
  5. Sometimes you don’t need a new revelation—you need a renewed recollection.
  6. I just need somebody to shout: Remember! Remember how it used to be.
  7. So ask yourself: what happened? Maybe you let routine replace relationship.
  8. One of the greatest enemies of passion is routine. You can get so used to doing the right thing that you stop doing it for the right reason.
  9. You can sing without sincerity. Preach without presence. Serve without sensitivity.
  10. Routine makes you functional—but not fiery. That’s why God calls you to pause and check your heart. He’s not impressed by motion; He’s impressed by motive.
  11. God didn’t save you for routine—He saved you for relationship. He wants to be more than part of your schedule. He wants to be the source of your strength.
  12. Don’t let what once was fresh become familiar.
    a. When you first fell in love, you didn’t have to be told to call that person, check in, or make time. Your love drove your effort. And when passion fades, the relationship starts to feel like work, but when you intentionally rekindle the connection, it comes back to life again.
    b. That’s why Jesus tells His church: Remember. Before He tells them to repent, before He tells them to return—He says remember.
  13. You can’t reclaim what you refuse to recall. You have to remember where you fell from—not to shame you, but to understand what caused your heart to shift.
    a. Why don’t I read like I used to? Why don’t I pray like I used to? Why aren’t I excited about church like I used to? What happened?
  14. Some people don’t fall away suddenly—they drift slowly. Passion doesn’t disappear overnight; it erodes over time.
    B. Sometimes You Must Look Back To Love Forward.
  15. Pressure – Life gets heavy. Responsibilities multiply. Expectations rise. You try to be everything to everybody, and your time with God becomes what you squeeze in instead of what you build around.
    a. Pressure doesn’t make you stop loving God—it crowds God out. That’s why Jesus says, “Come unto Me, all you who are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. My yoke is easy, My burden is light.”
    i. You’re carrying stuff God never ordained you to carry.
    b. And you get worn down—pressure on your job, pressure in your family—and you say, “I don’t have time.”
    i. Can I tell you something? You’ve got to let some stuff go and let nothing get in the way of your relationship with God.
    c. Pressure ought not make you run from God; it ought to make you run to God.
  16. Pain – Then there’s pain—disappointment you didn’t see coming, prayers that didn’t get answered, losses that still ache.
    a. If you’re not careful, unresolved pain can mess with your passion. You still believe—but don’t feel the same.
    i. You start living with more questions than answers: “Lord, I’m hurting. I don’t really know.”
    b. But you’re not the only one who’s had pain.
    i. Job says, “I lost everything.” Yet he declared, “Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him.”
    ii. Paul says, “I was shipwrecked, beaten, left for dead, snake-bitten.” But he said it was working together for his good.
    iii. Jeremiah says, “Life is hard, pain is real,” but he also says, “This I recall to my mind, therefore have I hope… it is of the Lord’s mercies that we are not consumed… they are new every morning.”
    c. You’re not the only one that’s had pain.
  17. Priority Drift – Nothing sinful—just subtle.
    a. God doesn’t get replaced—He gets relocated. He moves from the center to the margins.
    i. Career, comfort, family, convenience set the pace. God gets whatever time is left over.
    b. Whenever God is no longer first, your passion will fall behind.
    i. That’s why Jesus says: “Remember where you fell from. Go back to that place where prayer was a priority, worship was real, obedience was joyful, love was fresh.”

III. REPENT FROM THE RUT
A. Passion Fades When Pride Rises.

  1. Jesus says: repent.
  2. Repentance isn’t condemnation—it’s correction. It’s a decision to turn around and move in the direction of your destiny.
    a. We don’t like repentance because we live in a day where everybody wants to feel good. But repentance is God sharpening you.
    b. We want to be sharp, but we don’t want to be cut.
  3. Correction is not condemnation. It’s God cutting you to correct you.
    a. So God, cut me wherever You need to cut me. Do with me whatever You need to do, because I’m tired of being dull.
  4. Now watch this: a rut is not that you’re not moving. It’s you’re just not making progress.
    a. You’ve got energy, but you’re in the same place. You’re functioning, but not flourishing.
    b. You can get stuck doing the right things without the right heart. But when repentance enters, renewal begins.
  5. Repentance says: “Lord, I allowed my comfort to get in the way of my commitment.”
    a. It’s not about guilt—it’s about growth.
    b. God doesn’t expose the absence of fire to embarrass you. The moment you turn toward God, you meet mercy.
    c. And that’s how you get out of the rut and back into the rhythm of revival.
  6. Passion fades when pride rises.
    a. Pride convinces you, “I can handle this by myself.” But pride blocks God’s power.
    b. God resists the proud and gives grace to the humble.
    c. God can only heal what you’re honest about.
  7. You’ve got to get to a place where you say, “God, I humble myself. I need You.”
    a. When you humble yourself and allow the Spirit to have full control—that’s when God reignites the flame.
    B. Revival Begins When Repentance Becomes Real.
  8. I told you earlier: there’s a revival taking place. And revival comes when repentance becomes real.
  9. This ministry is experiencing a second boom. Started in 2025, and now in 2026 we’re seeing it. Souls coming. Lives transformed. Families tuned in. Generations and ethnicities coming together because people are hungry for the Word of God.
  10. We already see God moving. Hearts are softening. Worship is deepening. God is bringing us to a new level of authenticity.
  11. You can’t manufacture revival. You can’t manage it. You have to submit to it.
  12. Revival doesn’t start with a packed service. It starts with surrendered hearts.
  13. Repentance is not just “Lord, I’m sorry.” It’s “Lord, I’m ready.”Somebody shout: Lord, I’m ready!
  14. All throughout scripture, revival follows repentance.
    a. When David confessed instead of concealed, God restored him. When Peter wept bitterly after denying Jesus, he didn’t lose his assignment—he was repositioned for Pentecost.
    b. Every time repentance is real, revival is released.
  15. You cannot reignite what you refuse to recognize has gone dim.
  16. God can’t heal what you won’t repent of.
  17. So in this moment we’ve got to be honest with God about where we are—because God is faithful to restore who we’re called to be.
    a. “If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, pray, seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways—then I will hear from heaven, forgive their sin, and heal their land.”
  18. Somebody give God praise—revival is about to break out in your house, in your business, in everything you put your hands to.

IV. RETURN TO THE RESPONSE
A. God Wants The Same Pursuit You Had When You First Believed.

  1. Jesus says: now that you remember and repent, do the first works again.
  2. That’s your call to action.
  3. It’s not enough to remember. It’s not enough to repent. You’ve got to respond.
  4. When was the last time you just read the Bible—paper Bible—just opened it and said, “Lord, speak to me”?
  5. When was the last time you got on your face in your house and said, “Lord, speak to me”?
  6. When was the last time you worshiped God and you weren’t asking Him for anything—you just wanted to give Him glory?
  7. You might as well practice right now at home. Walk through your house and thank God for what you’ve been walking over: “Lord, thank You I’ve got food. Thank You I’ve got soap. Thank You I’ve got what I need.”
  8. The same excitement that drove you then has to drive you now, because fire doesn’t fall on stagnation—fire falls on pursuit.
  9. God wants the same pursuit you had when you first believed. He wants that thirst. That hunger. That energy.
    B. When You Do The First Works Again, You Rediscover Your First Wonder.
  10. When you do the first works again, you rediscover your first wonder.
  11. Sometimes the key to seeing God move in ways you’ve never seen is going back to what was essential for God moving the first time:
    a. Prayer. Worship. Service. The Word.
    b. Not busy work—holy habits.
  12. All through scripture: miracles followed devotion.
    a. Elijah rebuilt the altar and put wood in order—and fire came down.
    b. Jehoshaphat put worship at the head of the army—and God sent ambushes against the enemy.
    c. The early church got in the upper room on one accord—and the Holy Ghost fell, chains broke, thousands were saved, and passion was restored.
  13. Mount Zion, let me give you some church history: this church was built on passion for the Word.
    a. This church didn’t grow by hype—it grew by hunger.
    i. It grew by Bible study. Prayer matters. Worship matters.
  14. When you return to those fundamental practices—beyond the lights, beyond the glamour, beyond being known and seen—God will move like you’ve never seen Him move.
  15. If you remember the relationship, repent from the rut, and return to the response, you’re going to see the fire fall again.
    a. Somebody say: fire fall again!
  16. When the fire comes back, the atmosphere changes. Cold hearts get warm. Dead places come alive. Darkness loses its grip. What once felt heavy becomes holy again.
  17. When the fire comes back, it doesn’t argue—it transforms the room.
  18. It doesn’t have to explain itself—it illuminates.
  19. It doesn’t struggle—it spreads.
  20. When God brings the fire back, miracles don’t have to be forced—they just flow.
  21. I declare over this house: God is about to resurrect and reignite fire.
    a. Somebody shout: fire!
  22. Lord, we repent. We repent for being too lazy. We repent for being too entitled. We took blessings for granted.
  23. But we recognize right now: if it had not been for the Lord who was on our side, we wouldn’t have what we have.
  24. And when God reignites our fire, when the devil comes with discouragement to make you resign, you’ll declare like Jeremiah: “I was about to give up, but His Word was like fire shut up in my bones.”
  25. Listen: a fire goes out in a fireplace, and the homeowner doesn’t call the gas company saying something is wrong with the supply. Most of the time nothing is wrong with the source.
    a. The issue is simple: the fire hasn’t been tended. The embers cooled. The flame faded.
    b. You don’t need a brand-new fire. You just need to stir the embers.
    c. At home right now, grab somebody by the hand—your family members.
  26. The devil tried to say it was over for you, but we’re stirring it back up.
  27. I need my power back. That’s all I need.
    a. I’m not going to let this business, this clutter, these distractions get in the way of my relationship with God.
  28. Isn’t it something that God gave me this sermon in Nov 25 and would have your pastor preach this on the fourth Sunday of January 2026? We didn’t know you’d be snowed in, stuck at home—forced to be still—and God would say, “I’m trying to reignite your fire. I’m trying to get your passion back.”
  29. You ought to be running back to the house of God. Come on, worship. Hallelujah.
  30. I want it back. I want it back. Thank you, Jesus.
  31. Right where you are, you heard this word today and you’re saying, “Lord, I want my fire back. I want treado get back in alignment. I want to put first things first.”2
Unknown's avatar

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.
This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a comment