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NOAH
A MAN ON THE EDGE OF TIME

Noah-Dream-Part-Two-FullBibleTimeline

PART III:
THE BRIDE, THE KINGDOM, AND THE AGE TO COME

SECTION 12 — Becoming the People of the Next Age

The final section of Part III reveals the heart of your entire project: the church is not only surviving the end of the age — she is being prepared to govern the next one. Tribulation is not termination. Shaking is not annihilation. Crisis is not conclusion. It is transition.

 

Noah was not the end of the old world — he was the beginning of the new.
The disciples were not the end of Israel’s hope — they were the beginning of the Church’s global mission.


We are not the end of the story — we are the threshold of the Kingdom.

 

As Kenneth Hagin beautifully expressed:

“The believer’s authority begins where his understanding
of the covenant begins.”

 

The end-time church must rediscover covenant identity.
She must see herself not as a survivor, but as a steward.
Not as a victim of history, but as a vessel of destiny.
Not as a passive bride, but as an emerging wife, prepared to reign.

 

The Transition into the Kingdom

The Bible presents the transition between ages not as oblivion but as inheritance. The saints will judge the world (1 Cor. 6:2). They will reign with Christ (Rev. 20:4). They will receive cities, responsibilities, nations, and authority (Luke 19:17). This is not poetic language — it is the architecture of the age to come.

 

To become the people of the next age, the church must cultivate:

  • intimacy with God like Noah

  • intercession like Abraham

  • Spirit-dependence like the disciples

  • covenant identity like the early church

  • Kingdom expectation like the apostles

  • endurance like the saints in Revelation

 

The world shakes, but the saints rise.
The nations tremble, but the church is steadied.
The systems crumble, but the Kingdom approaches.

 

And when the transition comes, the people who walk with God in this age will rule with Him in the next.

At the edge of the age, the church stands where Noah, Abraham, and the disciples once stood—between the world that is collapsing and the world that is coming forth. This is the holy tension where destiny is revealed.

The Flood did not end Noah; it commissioned him.
The fire did not silence Abraham; it clarified him.


The cross did not stop the disciples; it empowered them.

So too, the shaking of our time will not end the church.

It will unveil her.

For she carries covenant like Noah,
intercession like Abraham,
and Spirit-born authority like the apostles.

When the storm passes and the nations fall silent,
the people who walked with God in this age
will rise to govern the next.

The Bride will become the Wife.
The servant will become the ruler.
The remnant will become the Kingdom.

And the church—refined, awakened, unshakable—
will step into the age that Christ prepared
before the foundations of the world.

 

 

 

 

FOOTNOTES — PART III

Sections 10–12 Combined Sources

  1. Genesis 18–19 — Abraham’s intercession for Sodom; Lot’s entanglement with the city.

  2. 2 Peter 2:7–8 — Lot’s righteous soul vexed by the wickedness of Sodom.

  3. Genesis 13:12 — Lot pitching his tent toward Sodom.

  4. Genesis 18:22 — Abraham standing before the LORD in intercession.

  5. John G. Lake — Teachings on the life of God within the believer and walking in divine purpose.

  6. Luke 17:28–32 — Jesus’ reference to the days of Lot and the warning to “Remember Lot’s wife.”

  7. A. W. Tozer — Reflections on courage and the character of the church in a fearful world.

  8. Hebrews 12:27–29 — What cannot be shaken will remain; God as consuming fire.

  9. E. W. Kenyon — Writings on faith, confession, and spiritual authority in times of pressure.

  10. Genesis 6–9 — Narrative of Noah, the Flood, and covenant continuity; Noah as transitional figure.

  11. Genesis 12–22 — Abrahamic covenant, faith, and covenant identity shaping a remnant family.

  12. Acts 1–2 — Disciples transformed from students to apostles after crisis and empowerment.

  13. 1 Corinthians 6:2 — Saints will judge the world in the age to come.

  14. Revelation 20:4–6 — Reigning with Christ during the millennial kingdom.

  15. Kenneth E. Hagin, The Believer’s Authority — Covenant-based authority and identity in Christ.

  16. Watchman Nee, The Spiritual Man — Insights into walking in the Spirit through crisis and transition.

  17. Irenaeus, Against Heresies — Covenant continuity and the trajectory of redemption across eras.

  18. Chrysostom, Homilies on Genesis — Commentary on righteous living within corrupt generations.

  19. FullBibleTimeline.com — AM chronology and covenant succession from Adam to Abraham to Noah.

THE IS THE FINAL SECTION OF: NOAH, A MAN ON THE EDGE OF TIME

THANK YOU FOR READING.

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