Affirmative Prayer: Remembering What’s Already True

In a world so often focused on fixing, solving, or seeking, there is a quieter way to pray—one that doesn’t plead or strive, but simply remembers.

Affirmative Prayer is this way.

Rather than asking for something to change, Affirmative Prayer speaks from the heart of what is already whole. It affirms healing, clarity, peace—not as distant goals, but as present truths unfolding through divine intelligence and love.

This form of prayer begins not with a problem, but with Presence. It recognizes that what we seek is not outside us, but within us, and that by aligning with the truth already held in the heart of the Divine, we soften into grace.

Yeshua is in favor of this kind of prayer. His teachings invite us to pray from trust, to align with our inner Self, and to remember our oneness with All That Is. Affirmative Prayer reflects this spirit: not asking for what we lack, but affirming the truth of who we really are.

The Heart of Affirmative Prayer

Unlike traditional prayers that ask or beg, Affirmative Prayer:

  • Focuses on truth, not trouble.
  • Speaks in the now, not the not-yet.
  • Begins with connection, not disconnection.

It doesn’t deny pain or challenge—but gently lifts our awareness above them, into the field of divine possibility and remembrance.

An Example of Affirmative Prayer

Let’s say you are navigating uncertainty. Instead of saying, “Please help me find clarity,” Affirmative Prayer might sound like this:

I am one with the Divine source of wisdom and grace.
The path ahead is clear, and I walk it with trust.
I give thanks for the unfolding blessings already on their way.
Tathasthu. So be it.

Why This Matters

Affirmative Prayer invites us to pray not from fear—but from faith.
Not from lack—but from love.
It’s a shift in posture, a surrender to the greater wholeness already alive within us.

When we speak truth, we begin to remember it.
When we remember truth, we begin to live it.

May these prayers remind you of what has never been lost.
May they lead you back to the still, sacred ground of your own being.
Tathasthu – So be it.

Stillness Meditation

A Return to the Self

Opening Prayer

Beloved Presence,
You who are not separate from me,
You who dwell in the quiet center of all things—
Let me remember You now.
Let every breath bring me home to what never left.
May this moment be a doorway into the stillness
where only Truth remains.

Tathasthu – So be it.

Guided Meditation

Gently close your eyes.
Allow the body to settle.
Let your breath find its natural rhythm.

There is nothing to do.
Nothing to fix.
Nothing to become.

Simply notice.

Notice the breath—
not to control it, but to feel its presence
like a quiet tide rising and falling within you.

Feel the space around the breath.
The stillness between each inhale and exhale.
The pause that holds everything.

Let the mind be soft.
Thoughts may come. Let them.
They are clouds passing across the sky of your awareness.
You are not the thoughts—you are the sky.

Now, rest in what is here without effort.
No reaching.
No resisting.

Only this.

This still presence,
this sacred awareness,
this gentle unfolding
that needs no name.

And in this stillness,
if it arises, let the sense of “I” dissolve.
Not gone—just transparent.
Just a wave remembering it is the ocean.

Let there be only this: Silence.
Peace.
Being.

Remain here as long as you feel called.

Closing Affirmation of Truth

I am as I was created—
Whole,
Free,
Timeless.

In stillness, I remember:
There is only Love.
There is only the Self.
There is only God.

Tathasthu – So be it.

Meeting Yeshua Anew: A Voice of Love, Presence, and Truth

Who is Yeshua—really?

Beyond the religious imagery, beyond the doctrines, beyond the cross and the crown… there is a voice. A presence. A deep, abiding love that continues to speak to us—not from the past, but from the timeless dimension of Spirit.

In recent years, many have come to know Yeshua again through channeled works such as Jesus: My Autobiography by Tina Louise Spalding and the non-dual teachings brought forth by Gina Lake. In both voices, Yeshua emerges not as a figure of religious authority, but as a gentle, unwavering guide inviting us to return to the truth of who we are.

His message? That we are not separate. That we are already whole. That the Kingdom of Heaven is within, accessible here and now through surrender, presence, and love.

Yeshua’s purpose is not to be worshipped—but to be known. Not in form, but in essence. He speaks from unity, not duality. His words—whether through ACIM or the non-dual reflections offered through Gina Lake—call us inward, toward stillness, truth, and the deep peace that surpasses understanding.

He is a teacher of the heart. A mirror for the divine Self within us all. And he continues to meet us wherever we are—without judgment, without fear, only with love.

This blog is an open space for exploring his message in a new light. If you’ve always felt drawn to Jesus but couldn’t relate to the religion around him, you’re not alone. You may be hearing the quiet call of Yeshua—the one who speaks not to your beliefs, but to your Being.

Let this be a beginning. A gentle unfolding. A walk with the Beloved.

“You are as I am—an extension of the mind of God, filled with creative power, love, and joy. There is no separation between us, except in your belief that there is.”
Yeshua, from Jesus: My Autobiography, channeled by Tina Louise Spalding