The Crown Table Unleashed
The Crown Table Unleashed
I Took Accountability And My Ego Filed A Complaint
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
Healing rarely arrives with applause; it begins the moment we stop pointing outward and look within. We kick off The Work Within by putting accountability at the center of personal and spiritual growth, showing how to own our part without collapsing into shame. Instead of “I am the problem,” we practice “I made a choice that contributed,” a shift that preserves dignity while unlocking change. Along the way, we explore why self-examination feels threatening to the ego, how blame soothes pride but stalls development, and why identity must be anchored in values and potential—not in isolated failures.
Together we map five practical phases that turn conviction into progress. Phase one is awareness: track patterns and emotional triggers with simple journaling so you can see what repeats. Phase two is acceptance: write and rehearse “I did wrong is not the same as I am wrong,” and replace identity attacks with behavior-based truth. Phase three is ownership: complete prompts like “Even though I was hurt, I chose to” and “I escalated this when I,” so you reclaim authority over your reactions. Phase four is action: use a four-step response model—pause, name the emotion, choose the outcome, respond to match that outcome—to move from impulse to intention. Phase five is accountability partnerships: create safe, structured check-ins that speak to behavior, protect identity, and challenge with compassion.
We also talk spiritual resilience: once you’ve owned it, let it die—don’t relive it for days and call it growth. Practice humility with God and people, confess specifics without wearing them as your name, and choose outcomes that build peace. If you’re ready to trade resentment for responsibility, and reaction for response, this conversation hands you clear tools and language to start today.
If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s doing the work, and leave a review with the phase you’re starting—awareness, acceptance, ownership, action, or partnership. Your story might be the nudge someone else needs.
And remember…
We don’t just speak truth—we live it.
We don’t just carry fire—we steward it.
We don’t just build platforms—we establish altars.
Until next time,
Stay crowned, stay consecrated, and stay in alignment—
Because Heaven is still speaking…
And you were born to echo.
This has been another divine drop from The Crown Table Unleashed—
Where Kingdom conversations reign supreme.
Tempo: 120.0
SPEAKER_04Hey y'all, what's going on? It's season eight, y'all. Season eight. And season eight is titled The Work Within. Listen, I'm excited to get into that thing on today. We're going to follow through this whole season with us being able to do the work within ourselves so that the atmosphere around us can be better, right? Because it always starts with us first. Okay? Listen, I'm excited. Y'all already know who I am, but nevertheless, we're gonna have that introduction.
SPEAKER_06Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening. Meeting you where you are, no matter what time of the day it is. Welcome to the Crown Table Unleashed. Are you ready to be motivated, inspired, and encouraged? It's time for you to get in step with the spirit. Here is your host, Jeffy Clark the Third.
SPEAKER_02Run it up, run it up. Let's go!
SPEAKER_01Spirit in the snow middle bubble slip.
SPEAKER_03That's what I'm talking about, man. That bitch is got that peanut tool in the middle.
SPEAKER_01King control, even right all along.
SPEAKER_04Yo, what's going on, y'all? Ladies and gentlemen, ladies, gentlemen, kings and queens. Glory be to God. Hallelujah, God. Thank you, Jesus, for more time. Thank you, Jesus, for more opportunity. Thank you, God, for every test that we passed. Thank you, God, for every test that we failed, but yet learned so that we could do better the next time. Y'all ain't ready for that one. Hallelujah. God is so good, man. And it's so good to be back on the microphone talking to y'all. I'm actually standing up right now because I don't know where my chair is at. That's that being this uh be in this here room. I think I do know where it said, but I forgot when I came in here. Then I remember once I got once I got in here. Y'all listen, I'm I'm excited, man. It is a new season for me. So I'm excited to um to be before you guys. And I was trying to figure out what I want to do with season eight. And um I was like, you know what, man, this we need to make this thing more personable, man. We need to really dive into some ways um, you know, how we live and how we can just come into complete, complete healing, right? Because it's a lot of us out here, man, and a lot of us, man, we just really, really, really need to heal. Um and the first step in in this healing journey that we're gonna go on on this season, um, the first step is accountability, right? Uh accountability is the door of healing, right? And healing really announces itself with applause. Uh, it slips in quietly when a person decides to stop pointing outward and begins looking inward. Blame searches for a target, ownership searches for truth. One hardens the heart, the other opens it. So, accountability is not self-condemnation. Listen to me. That's important. I need you to understand that. Accountability is not self-condemnation. And I hear the Holy Spirit saying just go into this sandbox a little bit more deeper so you guys can understand when we are taking accountability. Uh, because the enemy would use um uh use a situation where you're going to be accountable to and the enemy will exploit that, okay? So you have to be careful, okay, even when taking accountability, because you still have to be in the right space and the right frame of mind. Because if if you take accountability for something and and and and you allow the enemy to make plays on it, it continue to use it um like days on later, right? You still thinking about something that you were already because once you take accountable accountability for it, it's done, right? It's it's no lingering on about it, it's no um dying three and four times about it, it's done, right? So if uh I'll tell you this, so if you are taking accountability for an action or a situation or an emotion or or anything of any kind of accountability, uh it's beyond um I give it 24 hours. If it's beyond 24 hours and you're still digging at it, um that is a spirit trying to keep it alive in you, right? Keeping you uh uh uh reminded. So let's say, for example, you was in a situation, uh that's a easy, what's an easy situation? Getting angry. So let's just use that one. Um, let's say you was in a situation with somebody and you are you are arguing, right? And you kind of realize that maybe it didn't need to get to the level that it got to, but it got to that level anyway, right? So you're saying in that situation, I'm taking accountability for my portion of that particular situation, right? I was indeed angry. I was indeed angry, right? And my anger um Um manifested into this blown out argument, disagreement that the situation is currently in, right? You take the accountability forward, that person, you know, either receives the accountability or they don't because it's their option, right? But you know, that's that's getting into forgiveness and a whole nother topic that's coming up later. But you you take the accountability for and then you you move on, right? That's because you you've accepted the fact that you had a part in that situation that you could have done more to make the situation, um, make the situation better, right? So you move on. Um, I say 24 hours because some people need time to do to do certain things. So I I I'm telling you 24 hours. Um, you do 24 hours the next day, you're still thinking about it that you got that that you got angry, right? Or it's still being used against you. Um that's the enemy, okay. Um, I'm confirming that to you. That's the enemy, okay? Because once you have accepted the um the accountability, and I'm even hearing this in the spirit, death where's thy sting, okay? Death where is thy sting? Because you can't sting something that I've already put to already put to death, okay. If I've already accepted that I had a part in this accountability journey of being angry, I'm going to I'm it's it's already it's already dead. It has no life, it has no control um over me, okay, over me. All right. Um, so the d I want to explain this um to you guys too. There's a difference between shame and accountability, okay? There's a big difference between shame and accountability. Shame is going to say this. Shame is going to say, I am the problem. It attacks identity, it whispers the failure. The failure defines you. Shame is heavy, paralyzing, and isolating. Okay. So here it is again. Because you have to know it, right? So shame says, I am the problem, right? Um, and the enemy will try to use that to say, or you take an accountability from it, and you keep taking accountability. Let's say, so let's say you move, let's say you you you conquer uh accountability one time, you do it another time, you do it three times, right? You're killing it. And then somewhere along the road, you get down into your you know, into your thoughts, into your mind. And now it's telling, now you're having some more self-reflexion. Like every time I'm I'm I'm coming to something, I'm meeting something, I got that. I'm I'm I'm taking my part for it. I must be the problem. That's what shame says, right? That that is what that's what the enemy is going to use against you, right? But I want you to hear what accountability says. This is what accountability says. Accountability says, I made a choice that contributed to this. This is what I'm this is what I'm saying. Shame tries to take control. Accountability gives you the control, it gives it's letting you know that you have the authority, even in this situation, right? So it said, so it's saying that accountability says that I made a choice that contributed to this. So this addresses the behavior, right? It's not addressing your um your act, the identity, right? Because you're not angry, right? That's not your identity, right? Accountability is clarifying, it separates who you are from what you did. Come on here now. You'll this does not define you. Okay, I want you to know that whatever you're dealing with, whatever it is um that you are dealing with, uh, whatever is happening, this does not define who you are as a person. So whatever your name is, right? So whatever, so Jeffy Clark, um, when I take accountability for something, it does not define me as my identity, right? We're defining the action um that took place. Okay, shame will freeze your growth. Accountability fuels transformation. When a person confesses the two, they either drown in guilt or run from responsibility. But when they understand the distinction, right, they gain power. Accountability gives language to mistakes without stealing dignity. Come on here, somebody. So, why do we avoid looking at ourselves? All right, why do we avoid looking at ourselves? And this is this is a profound question to me because I asked this to a friend of mine's. Uh, we were having a conversation about accountability. I said, I don't see what's so hard about saying um um taking accountability, right? Or just saying, you know, I did it and it happened. That was my portion of whatever happened, and so be it, right? It's cool, right? We could because at the end of the day, our goal should be should be to get to a resolution, right? Um and um, you know, but I can I can see this, but I still I still kind of battle with with the thought of this, okay? And I and I explain a little bit more like what my mindset be when it comes to this right here. See, self-examination is uncomfortable. I don't understand why it would be uncomfortable because it's me, okay. You know, maybe in the front of somebody else, right? Or maybe even more so for a stranger. Come on, Holy Spirit. I I I I got you. I hear you, I hear you. Self-examination is uncomfortable, it disrupts the story who we tell ourselves about being right, justified or misunderstood. Come on, we avoid reflection because it threatens our ego, it exposes patterns we would rather ignore, it requires humility, it removes safety, uh safety net of victimhood, right? Blame is easier, blame keeps the spotlight somewhere else, but growth demands light in hidden places. Look at Eric can feel like stepping into a room with no applause, no excuses, no audience, just truth. Yet the room is where healing waits. So we have to be okay with being with ourselves, right? We have to be okay with looking at ourselves, right? Because um, because sometimes we can be ourselves worst enemy, and that's just the truth, that's just the fact, right? It it happens, but we have to be okay with our egos being hurt, we have to be okay with shining a light on the patterns, we have to be okay with um um with being able to have humility. We have to be okay um to not be the victim, right? And even when we thinking about people and taking accountability, this is the same atmosphere we need to have, even when we're talking about God, right? We got to have humility when it comes to God. We have to have, we cannot have our egos, you know, be present when we're talking to God. And we sure cannot be coming to God as a victim, right? We have to take accountability for the actions and things that we are taking, that we are taking place. Like, God, you listen, I know that I did that and I contributed to that gossip. I knew that was, I knew it was a lie, but because I didn't like the person and I was built with the person, I still went ahead and spread it the lie, right? Um that's a take accountability, right? Um now the question is, does that make you a liar? Right? What but what do we say? What did we say? That taking accountability is not identifying who you are as a person, right? So we're not we're not taking on as your identity because we're not saying that we are those particular sins, okay? We are bigger than that, we are greater than that, and Jesus Christ is on our life, okay? Um so let's move on to number three. How blaming other delays our growth, right? Pointing the finger, right? Blaming gives temporary relief, it soothes pride, it protects the image, but it but it quietly delays development. So let me get let me get this right here. Blame gives temporary relief to soothes pride. That's also a spirit, right? Spirit of pride, it protects the image, that's also a spirit, right? Vanity, right? So what are we what are we what are we doing when we come on here, come on, y'all. What are we doing? What are we doing when we are blaming others, right? We are giving room for pride, we are given room for vanity to live, we are given authority for spirits to thrive, okay? We are giving permission within the spirit realm for those spirits to have access by what we are allowing to happen. Come on now. This is how powerful you are. Um I want you to know if you listen to me under the sound of my voice, I'm just wanting you to know how powerful you are and how much you sanction in your life. I just want you to know how much authority you have in your life. I just want you to know how much control you have in your life. Okay. I want you to know how much control you got in your life. So when everything, when everything is someone else's fault, lessons go on go unlearned, patterns repeat, relationships fracture, emotional maturity stalls. Growth begins the moment a person says, even if they were wrong, I did how did I respond? They were dead wrong. You gotta be dead to the right. But how did you respond to them? How did you respond to that situation? Blame keeps you stuck in yesterday, ownership prepares you for tomorrow. I told you. I told you. You move on with accountability, you don't stay stuck with accountability. You you you find release with a can with accountability. You don't get stuck with accountability, okay. Number four, owning your your reactions even when others were wrong. Okay. This is the turning point. Someone may have betrayed you, someone may have lied, someone may have failed you, their actions are theirs, but your reactions are yours. You cannot control what we what was done to you. You can control how you process it, how you respond, and how long you allow it to shape your identity. Accountability is not accepting abuse, it is accepting responsibility for your eternal response. The statement that unlocks maturity sounds like this here. I was hurt, but I chose bitterness. I was disappointed, but I reacted with anger. I felt unseen, so I withdrew instead of communicating. That level of honesty does not weaken a person, it strengthens them. The power of saying, I contributed to this. There is something liberating about a mini contribution. It sounds simple, it feels revolutionary. I contributed to this argument, I contributed to this dist uh to this distance, I contributed to this misunderstanding. When you own your part, you reclaim power, you stop being a passive participant in your own life, and healing begins the moment responsibility replaces resentment. Okay? Come on here, somebody. So let's let's let's let's let's walk here. So phase one is awareness, right? You have to be aware in order to um to be able to accept the to self uh accountability, right? So you have to be aware of the patterns, the emotional triggers, and I would encourage you guys to um to journal uh journal reflection to know what's happening, okay? So write down write down phase one on whatever you got by your side right now, and I want you to write awareness, right? And I want you to figure out what your triggers are, and I want you to figure out what the patterns are. So what does this mean? This means that you ain't gonna fix it today that you listen to this podcast, but you might fix it by the end of the week, okay, because it's gonna take time. So that means you're gonna have to get into something where you can actively figure out what's happening, what's going on, right? But still still work on your you know how you respond to these certain things, okay? So phase one, write down awareness. And for phase one, you're doing patterns, you're looking for patterns, and you're looking for emotional triggers. And I want you to write those things down. After you find those patterns and those triggers, I want you to move to phase two, which is acceptance. And I want you to put this here I did wrong is not the same as I am wrong. Write that down. I did wrong is not the same as I am wrong. Y'all got that? I'm asking y'all if y'all got that, like y'all gonna respond. Oh my goodness, man. Alright, so let's let me define these, uh, define these points, define this for you. I did wrong is not the same as I am wrong. There is a settleable fracture that happens inside of a person when behavior and identity become fused. A mistake becomes a label, a failure becomes a name, and action becomes a definition. That fracture is where shame builds a throne. Okay? Here's the core distinction. Behavior answers the question, what did I do? Identity answers the question, who am I? When those two collapse into each other, growth suffocates. If a person says, I lie, that is a behavior. If a person says, I am a liar, that becomes identity. Pay attention. One invites correction, the other invites condemnation. Behavior can be confronted, identity must be protected. Why do we confuse those two though? So we learn early that mistakes bring labels. Children hear you're bad instead of that choice was harmful. Over time, that brain come on internalizes this message. Wrongdoing equals worthlessness. I'm teaching on the day. So when we fail, we do not evaluate behavior, we attack ourselves. The confusion often develops because we fear rejection, we equate performance with value. We have internalized harsh voices from authority figures. We mistake conviction for condemnation. But conviction corrects behavior, condemnation attacks identity. When identity absorbs behavior, three things happen. Defensiveness rises. If admitting wrongdoing feels like admitting worthlessness, people will defend themselves at all costs. Growth stalls. If I believe I am the problem, why try to change? Shame becomes chronic. Instead of learning from failure, a person lives under it. However, when behavior is separated from identity, something shifts. A person can say I responded poorly without believing I am a poor person. That distinction creates oxygen. Replace identity statements with behavior statements. Instead of I am toxic, instead of I'm just broken, instead of I always ruin things. I want you to practice this and write this down for your phase two. Phase two. That reaction was unhealthy. I handled that, I handled that poorly. That pattern needs work. Language reshapes perception. Perception reshapes behavior. Actually, I'm finna ask you this. Who are you apart from your worst decision? Okay. Who are you apart from your worst decision? Question number two. What values do you actually want to live by? Number three, if you were mentoring someone else, would you define them by one mistake? Now let me help you create identity anchors such as I am someone learning emotional maturity. I am capable of growth. I value integrity even when I fail to live in per live it perfectly. Identity should be rooted in potential and values, not in isolated failures. Guilt says, Guilt says that action violated my values. Shame says I am fundamentally flawed. Healthy guilt leads to repair. Toxic shame leads to hiding. Repair is growth, hiding is stagnation. When a person learns this separation, they step, they stop collapsing under mistakes. They begin learning from them. You can admit I hurt someone without believing I am unworthy of love. You can acknowledge I was wrong without declaring I am wrong. This is not self-ex self-excusing, it is self-respecting. And self-respect is necessary for real accountability. So I want you to practice this. Column one, right? Column one on the phase two, I want you to practice, practice, practice, just put practice exercise at the top. Okay, we still in gold. I got more phases, but this is up on the phase two. Phase two was a lot. Column one, I want you to put identity attacks that use that use on um they use on themselves. Column one. Column two, behavior-based truth statements. Examples. Growth requires honesty, but honesty without identity, safety becomes cruelty. You did something wrong. This is a moment. You are wrong. This is a prison. And healing refuses to live in a prison because healing ain't gonna do it. Alright, let's move on to phase three. Under that, under that chart that you just wrote down. Let's go to phase three. And this is about ownership, right? Ownership. Ownership is not is not taking all the blame, it's taking your portion. Okay. So um under phase three, put ownership. Okay. And I want you guys to do this. And I want you to complete these sentences under your phase three. Even though I was hurt, I chose to. Okay. Do y'all hear that? Because I I feel that. Even though I was hurt, I chose to. What did you choose to do? What did you choose to do? And this is your moment to be honest. Just be honest. My part in this situation was. My part in this situation was, and this right here flows so naturally to I and it's probably because I'm married, man. So it's like it's always two, right? It's always on my part and your part. So it's it's beautiful. I can stand here and and and talk about this. It's a love for real. My part in this situation was, and write that down. Then move on to the next one. It says, I escalated this. I escalated this when I come on. Woo! Jesus. Jesus. I escalated this when I. What part of this situation did it escalate? Right? Come on, man. Come on. This is real work today. Uh this episode this episode one now. I just let y'all know this episode one. I escalated this when I, okay. And write this one down too. I avoided this by. Okay. I avoided this by. Alright. This is the pivot of healing. The moment someone can say calmly and clearly, I contributed, they move from victim posture to growth posture. Write down phase four. Write down phase four. Write down phase four. It's called action. Write down phase four and write down action. Awareness without action becomes frustration. Ownership without strategy becomes shame. Reaction is automatic. Right? Response is intentional. Pause is power. Right. So here's a four-step response model. I want you to write down. Four-step response model. You can put that down too, up under your phase, phase four action. The four-step response model is this. Number one, pause before speaking. Right? Give yourself time to make sure you heard correctly what the what they have said or what or make sure you understand the situation. Bible says, all of thy giddy, get an understanding. And then name the emotion that you are feeling. And then choose the outcome you want. Respond in alignment with that outcome. Okay. Respond in alignment with that outcome. Now that's great power right there. Because you are dictating the where this is where this is going. Okay. You are dictating where this is going. Choose your outcome. And then you respond in alignment with the outcome that you want to see. I want you to write this down. How do you respond differently when criticized? Number two. How do you respond differently when ignored? Number three. How do you respond differently when disappointed? Action is where new new neural pathways are formed. Phase five. Phase five. Phase five. Phase five. Phase five. This might be working better even for married folks. For you single folks. You have to find you some good friends to get in on with this. Phase five, write down accountability partnerships. Truth spoken in love. I want you to create safe structured environments where growth is reinforced. And I want you to understand this healing deepens in community. Healing deepens in community. Good friends, good family, good marriages. You got some guidelines for accountability partnerships. Confidentiality is non-negotiable. Right? Speak to behavior, not identity. Right? Don't attach things to yourself. He's talking about the behavior. Ask reflective questions before giving advice. Challenge with compassion. And here are some check-in questions. What pattern did you notice this week? Where did you deflect responsibility? What did you own? And what will you practice next time? Accountability is not policing, it's partnership. I want you guys to understand this too. Because we're teaching this. I'm teaching my thought on teaching is that you are teach you are learning something because you want to know how you can do better or be better, right? So that you can be better. So that you're not repeating mistakes. So so I'm not on here running my mouth, giving you guys things for you guys not to pass, right? Um, I know we like to say, uh, every day I'm doing something. No, no, no, no. Yeah, yeah, I I get it to a degree. I get it. I'm not saying you mean we're not. But if we're actively sitting in in teachings, right? Not just on this podcast, but church, seminars, whatever, um, those tools that we are getting, we ought to be using to be better. So that we're not still saying every day is a day. Some days we need to be saying, Oh, yeah, I did that today. I I conquered that day. I conquered that today. The enemy tried me and I bust them, right? We don't need to be saying, uh, the enemy got me. I tried again tomorrow. Okay. Uh got me today. I slept today. No, no, no, no, no. We need to be to a point where we're saying, Jesus had me today and I bust that enemy down. We need to be saying, Jesus had me today, and I knocked the enemy on his behind. We need to be saying Jesus uh uh said we were able to tread on um snakes and scorpions. We need to start treading. Yeah, I stepped on a big snake today. I stepped on a big poisonous scorpion. We need to have that kind of mindset when we are sitting through um these teachings, um, where people are pouring and giving it uh you know, giving advice for us to be able to be what more than a conqueror. Stop playing, man. Stop playing now. Stop playing now. Stop playing. We got to do better, right? We got to do better. And being accountable being accountable accountable is okay, guys. Being accountable is okay. Listen, I am done. That is it. Impactful. I hope, man, listen, I hope you guys, I hope you guys enjoyed. Sorry, I hope you guys enjoyed today's episode, man. I enjoyed teaching it and I enjoyed talking to y'all, man. Um, I am let me tell y'all, let me tell y'all this before I go. Let's talk about some personal things that's going on as it relates to the podcast and stuff like that. Because I I be wanting the podcast to grow, man. Um, and just be, you know, everything it can be. And just be everything that it can be, man. So I was actually actively went out again. And I think I'm gonna have to start just doing it in increments so that it can come to pass, uh, instead of just putting it out. Because if if I think about it, if I had started, um, and this is why I say you you you know, let me started this a year ago, I would have the cameras for season eight, right? So I went and I priced and I said, Um, the FX30, three cameras. You need a wide angle, and then you need the guest shot, and you need the shot for you, right? Um, so that's three cameras, right? That's two, four, six, right? Um, because sometimes sometimes them cameras be on sale, y'all. So I can usually get them for about I could probably get them for like eight. So if you know you can't be moved, but nevertheless, but nevertheless, okay. So I was looking at so it's like six grand, y'all, and then it's like all the other stuff that I that you need to go with it and stuff, and and I was like, man, if I hadn't made that investment a year ago, two years ago, or even if I think about um how long I've been doing the podcast right now. So I have eight seasons, right? So that's two, four, six, eight, and I do two seasons a year, that's four years. I've been doing this for four years. So imagine if I had a planned when I first started that eventually I want to go video and I can do it in four years, because I'm here at season eight. Oh man, I would have it, I would have it, right? Um, so I'm gonna I'm gonna get the ball rolling on that, guys, because I really want to bring that video aspect of things, because I know people like to watch things, it's hard to start sometimes for people to listen, and podcast has really become a video kind of thing, right? Did y'all listen? Did y'all see Netflix has podcasts? Yo, Netflix, man. So, you know, listen, I gotta do it, man. Gotta put everything into it, gotta stop playing with it, and you gotta really go for it, right? And I even told the Lord, I said, Lord, I'm gonna breathe, I'm gonna do what I do, and you're gonna breathe on it, right? And that's how that's how I thought should be anytime that we are dealing with God. I'm gonna put my foot forward and God is going to breathe on it. So, Father God, we thank you for today, Father God. I thank you for every person, Father, listening to this under the sound of my voice on today, Father God. I thank you for their life. I thank you for where they're going, God. I thank you, Father God, that you are still leaning in their direction, that your hand is still upon their very life. Oh, Father God, I thank you, Father, that they were able to sit here, Father God, and listen to this teaching, God. So, Father God, I ask, Father God, that this seed, Father, grow, Father God, grow good, grow boldly, grow smoothly, Father God. May it be a strong, mighty sequoia tree, God. May it be a strong, mighty oak tree, Father God, within that life of God. May they become planted in these in these things, oh God. Hallelujah, Father God. May they see, Father God, the brightness of their future and the brightness of their situations, Father God. May they be inspired, Father God, to run into the next encounter, God, not because they they want to fail, but because they want to see victory, because they want to step on the head of a snake, because they want to step on the head of a scorpion. Father God, I pray, Father God, right now, Father God, that they feel empowered, they feel conquered, uh, they feel as a conqueror. Hallelujah, Father God. In the mighty name of Jesus, God, I thank you, Father. Hallelujah. God, continue to breathe on them, Lord, right now, Father God. Continue to breathe on them right now, Father God. Feel the atmosphere, feel the situations and the circumstances, Father God, take control where it is necessary. I'm out, y'all, and I love y'all, and I'll see y'all next time.
SPEAKER_05Thank you for listening to this episode of the Crown Table Unleashed with Jeffy Clark III. If you found today's episode meaningful and impactful, share it right now with your friends and family. Tune in again right here, same place, same time, and remember, we're meeting you where you are no matter what time of the day it is.