“I Push Back”

Courtroom of Heaven Pushback Prayer

BACK TO SENDER❗️

Righteous Father, in the name of Jesus Christ, I enter into Your courts this morning by the blood of the Lamb, and I take my place before the throne of grace with boldness, not in my own righteousness, but in the finished work of Jesus Christ. I stand before You as Your daughter, redeemed, justified, and covered by the blood. I stand in the authority You have given me to tread upon serpents and scorpions and over all the power of the enemy, and nothing shall by any means harm me.

This morning I present my case before Heaven, and I push back.

Father, I ask that every accusation spoken against me in the spirit be silenced by the blood of Jesus. Every voice that says I am too much, I push back. Every voice that says I am not soft enough, I push back. Every voice that calls my strength brokenness, I push back. Every voice that calls my discernment pride, I push back. Let every lying spirit be overruled in this court.

Father, I renounce every agreement I have made knowingly or unknowingly with limitation, delay, poverty, confusion, rejection, and low level love. I break agreement with the lie that I must shrink to be accepted. I break agreement with the lie that I must settle to be loved. I break agreement with the lie that I must accept crumbs when You have ordained abundance for my life. Let every illegal contract be revoked now in the name of Jesus.

By the blood of Jesus, I cancel every covenant formed in my bloodline that invited struggle, delay, perversion, poverty, or limitation. I revoke the right of every spirit that has claimed access to my life through generational doors. Every bloodline curse, I push back. Every spirit of delay, I push back. Every spirit of complacency, I push back. Every anti progress spirit, I push back. Every anti marriage spirit, I push back. Every anti prosperity spirit, I push back.

Father, let the record of Heaven show that I no longer agree with what has been fighting me. I reject fear disguised as humility. I reject false peace that keeps me small. I reject manipulation that tries to control my emotions. I reject every arrow sent to distract me from my assignment. Every word curse spoken over my life, I send it back to the place it came from, and I declare that it has no power over me.

Every spirit that tried to convince me that my boundaries were wrong, I overrule it now. My boundaries are not rebellion. My strength is not brokenness. My discernment is not pride. My voice is not too loud. It was given to me by God, and I will not turn it down.

Father, I ask for a ruling in my favor this morning. Rule against delay. Rule against limitation. Rule against poverty. Rule against perversion. Rule against confusion. Rule against every spirit that has tried to punish me for being strong. Let divine justice speak on my behalf.

For it is written that the kingdom of heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by force. So this morning I take back territory. I take back my authority. I take back my confidence. I take back my discernment. I take back my joy. I take back my destiny. I take back my inheritance.

Every power of darkness interfering in my life from any direction, I command you to release your hold now by the blood of Jesus, by the authority of Jesus, by the word of God, and by the power that has been placed inside of me.

I push back. I overrule. I revoke. I reclaim. I advance. And nothing shall by any means harm me.

In Jesus’ name, Amen.

The Power Pusher, LICSW

European Parliament Names ‘Christianophobia’ in Formal Resolution for First Time

From the Daily Declaration by Kurt Mahlburg

Christianity is the world’s most persecuted religion, the European Parliament recently declared, using the term ‘Christianophobia’ in a formal resolution for the first time.

The European Parliament has used the term ‘Christianophobia’ in a formal resolution for the first time, declaring Christianity the most persecuted religion in the world and calling out the EU’s failure to appoint a coordinator to combat anti-Christian hatred — a position that already exists for Islamophobia.

The resolution, adopted in Strasbourg earlier this year, stated in Paragraph 84: “Christianity remains the most persecuted religion in the world today, with more than 380 million people affected.”

“There is no European coordinator responsible for combating Christianophobia, even though a coordinator has been appointed to combat Islamophobia,” it added.

The Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Union (COMECE) welcomed the resolution and urged the European Commission to act on it.

“Taking note of this important statement by the European Parliament, COMECE encourages the European Commission to give serious consideration to the appointment of an EU Coordinator responsible for this field,” the bishops’ body said in a statement last month.

The resolution — formally titled the Annual Human Rights Report 2025 and adopted under reference TA-10-2026-0014 — also condemned the persecution of Christian communities in the Middle East.

It described Christian communities from the Middle East as “among the oldest in the world,” noting they continue to face “severe persecution, discrimination, forced displacement and restrictions on their freedom of religion or belief.”

In January, Pope Leo XIV had raised the same concern. “We must not forget a subtle form of religious discrimination against Christians,” he said, “which is spreading even in countries where they are in the majority, such as in Europe.”

Coalition and Pushback

The specific language of Christianophobia was the result of sustained amendment work by centre-right and conservative MEPs.

The European People’s Party (EPP) and the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) drove the provisions, with Dutch MEP Bert-Jan Ruissen (ECR) and Croatian MEP Davor Stier (EPP) leading the effort in coordination with Aid to the Church in Need. The Patriots for Europe group also supported the text.

The final vote drew backing from a cross-partisan majority that included a significant portion of the Renew Europe group, whose members argued religious freedom is an indivisible pillar of human rights.

Radical left groupings and some Greens opposed the specific mention, reportedly concerned it would create a hierarchy among victims of religious hatred.

The Observatory on Intolerance and Discrimination Against Christians in Europe (OIDAC) welcomed the result, noting the Parliament “not only acknowledges the global scale of anti-Christian persecution but also highlights an institutional asymmetry within the EU’s existing anti-discrimination architecture.”

The Coordinator Question

COMECE proposed that the future coordinator’s title refer to “anti-Christian hatred” rather than ‘Christianophobia’, to align with existing EU positions on other communities and to avoid a term built on the contested concept of ‘phobia’.

The bishops’ body also called for dedicated funding through the EU’s forthcoming AgoraEU instrument.

The push for the role has been building for over a year. In December 2024, COMECE adviser Alessandro Calcagno told a European Parliament conference: “The time is ripe for the appointment of an EU Coordinator to combat anti-Christian hatred.”

In November 2025, COMECE Vice-President Mgr Czeslaw Kozon raised the same call directly with EU Commissioner Magnus Brunner.

The resolution also called for the timely appointment of an EU Special Envoy for Freedom of Religion or Belief — a post that has remained vacant for more than a year.

A Framework for Action

The resolution is political in nature and does not bind the European Commission to act. Whether the Commission appoints a coordinator — and on what timeline — remains to be seen.

The text of the resolution notes that the EU’s post for combating Islamophobia already exists as a standing institutional position.

COMECE’s statement drew a direct line: the protection of Christian communities in Europe “must become tangible” through both a dedicated coordinator and financial support.

The resolution, COMECE said, marks a point at which the European Parliament has moved beyond recording statistics toward providing “a legal and political framework for action.”

Quote for the Day

In the Western world, luxury, tradition, and pride often suppress the flow of the Holy Spirit. I have ministered in many places saturated with worldly content and comfort where the anointing of the Holy Spirit could not flow in the same way as in these poor countries. Retha McPherson