
Bro. Adrian Cunningham | Hope Redemption Worship Center | Guest Exhortation
Hope Redemption Worship Center welcomed guest speaker Adrian Cunningham, and he delivered a strong, direct exhortation built around prayer, wisdom, and spiritual growth—without pretending life is easy.
He reminded the church that God still answers prayer, often through people who are praying behind the scenes. Sometimes, when you feel like your words aren’t reaching, there is a praying mother, praying father, pastor, bishop, or faithful believer interceding for you—praying even when you don’t know it. His point was clear: we don’t make this journey alone. While salvation is personal, support is communal—and prayer helps carry people when their faith feels weak.
Adrian also challenged the congregation to examine their worship. He spoke plainly about how easy it is to “look cute” in church but refuse to participate—refuse to clap, praise, or engage. He warned that many people only realize the value of their strength after it’s threatened. His message was a wake-up call: use what God gave you while you have it—your voice, your hands, your health, your time.
From there, he turned to deliverance and breakthrough. He encouraged the church that God is already aware of what we are in, what we came out of, and what we’re about to face—and that God has already made a way. He urged people to stop assuming they’re alone in their battles and to believe that heaven is still working on their behalf.
One of his strongest warnings was about sharing too much with the wrong people. He spoke on discretion and spiritual protection, saying that some doors of elevation require silence. Not everyone can handle your story, and not everyone who smiles with you is for you. He cautioned that people may hold your past against you, but God does not. Your past is your past—some things came into your life just to pass through and push you higher.
He closed with a clear challenge for 2026: promotion, growth, and higher levels require higher effort. Like climbing stairs, each step up demands more strength—but it’s worth it.
His final charge was unforgettable: “Launch out in the deep.” Don’t stay on the shoreline where it’s safe, familiar, and crowded. Ask God to open only the doors meant for you—and to shut the doors the enemy tries to use. Then press forward with faith.
Key Takeaway: Stop living on the “shore.” Trust God, move with wisdom, and launch out into deeper purpose.
