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'26 Disruption Consecration Day 1: Disrupting YOU, His Temple

  • Writer: Pastor Ayeisha Kirkland
    Pastor Ayeisha Kirkland
  • Jan 3
  • 5 min read

Updated: Jan 7


Welcome to Day One of the ’26 Disruption Consecration!


After a powerful night of commencement prayer, from 12:00 a.m. until 12:00 p.m. today we lay aside fleshly distractions, turn our plates down, and lift our eyes to the hills from where our help comes (Psalm 121:1–2). We seek the face of our God.


As stated before, this fast is not merely about abstaining from food. It is a form of legislation. It is synonymous with a hunger strike. We are not starving by preference. We are willingly taking the measures required to produce the change we desire to see. To whom much is given, much is required (Luke 12:48). We are willing to receive what God has for us in 2026 by any means necessary.


Click the link below to join us in prayer at 11 PM tonight:



Today's meditation verses are:

Luke 19:45-47 NLT


45 Then Jesus entered the Temple and began to drive out the people selling animals for sacrifices. 46 He said to them, “The Scriptures declare, ‘My Temple will be a house of prayer,’ but you have turned it into a den of thieves.”

47 After that, he taught daily in the Temple, but the leading priests, the teachers of religious law, and the other leaders of the people began planning how to kill him.


The temple of God is deeply important to Him. In the Old Testament, when David desired to build a temple for God, God did not allow it because there was too much blood on David’s hands (1 Chronicles 22:8; 1 Chronicles 28:3). This reveals that God desires His temple to be holy. More specifically, He desires it to be consecrated, set apart for His use and kept spotless from sinful desecration or contamination by worldly or demonic elements. When the people of God polluted the temple through sin and dishonor, God destroyed His own temple to bring an end to their ungodly practices (2 Kings 25:8–10; Jeremiah 7:11–14). Similar to worship, He would rather have no temple at all than a temple that does not meet His standards. He would rather have no sacrifice than a polluted one (Isaiah 1:11–17; Amos 5:21–24). His passion for His dwelling place is embodied in His confession found in John 2:17: “Passion for God’s house will consume me.”


The temple was never about a physical location. God does not dwell in temples made with human hands (Acts 7:48; Acts 17:24). He dwells in you and in me. Your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, purchased with the price of His own blood (1 Corinthians 6:19–20). That makes us His highest investment. Anything that carries great investment also carries great expectation.


Would you be comfortable with people altering a house you paid everything for without your permission, especially after you left clear instructions? In the same way, Jesus is not pleased when we treat our bodies or our churches however we want. Like the entrepreneurs in Jesus’ day, we have prostituted the temple of God spiritually through our bodies and naturally through our physical churches. We have put the temple up for sale to the highest bidder. Whoever is willing to pay for our personal preferences is often given permission to occupy sacred space.


My prayer decree for us during this fast is simple:

In the name of Jesus, we give God His temple back.My temple will not be sold to sin. Our churches will not be sold to the kingdom of darkness.In the name of Jesus, we cast out everything not of God that is prostituting our bodies and His house.

Jesus, as a disruptor, flipped the tables. He disrupted their economy (Matthew 21:12–13; Mark 11:15–17). This reveals that when the temple is not corrected by obedience, God will correct it by force. He destroyed His own temple in the Old Testament. When Jonah attempted to do whatever he wanted with his own temple, God sent a fish to swallow him (Jonah 1:1–4, 17). This week, I pray we willingly allow God to disrupt our misuse of His temple. If there is anything in us that resists disruption, I decree and declare we experience the disruptive anointing of God that bypasses our permission and forces our will to bend to His government. Free will exists, yet there are moments when God allows circumstances that cause our will not only to bend, but to bow in complete submission.


I decree and declare that just as Jesus taught daily in the temple, our temples will be restored to their original purpose. We will be a house of prayer. We will be a house of the Word of God. We will be a house of spiritual consistency, with daily bread and fire on the altar that never goes out (Leviticus 6:12–13).


In the name of Jesus, we renounce the demonic site we have allowed the temple to become. The enemy is a thief (John 10:10). A den of thieves signifies a place of satanic exchange, demonic agents, and spiritual compromise. You never stopped being an altar. You only stopped being an altar unto God. You remain a place of spiritual exchange (Romans 12:1; 1 Corinthians 10:20–21). The only question is who you have been exchanging with.


In the name of Jesus, we denounce demonic exchanges and embrace spiritual re establishment. We return our bodies to God and say, Jesus, have Your way in us daily.


Lastly, I pray we do not pursue the temple for personal ambition unfiltered by God’s will. It is not impressive to merely be present in the temple. Samuel’s sons were present and still lived in sexual immorality (1 Samuel 2:12–17, 22). The sellers of sacrifices were present and motivated by money. They saw worship as a means of personal gain rather than God’s magnification.


Do you seek God only for what He can give you? His presence alone must be the prize (Philippians 3:8). There is nothing wrong with having needs. It is wrong to pursue God only for what you want. Seek Him for who He is and you will discover that everything you need has already been provided (Matthew 6:33).


In the name of Jesus, during this fast we lay down our personal desires and declare that You are the prize. All we want is You, Your will manifested in our lives, and Your government established in the earth.


Thy Kingdom come (Matthew 6:10), In the name of the King of Kings, Jesus Christ.


Click the link below to join us in prayer at 11 PM tonight:



As the Spirit leads, share in the comments how today’s fast or devotional has impacted you. Release a word of encouragement to someone else in this consecration. We are not walking alone. We are in this together.


2 Comments


Zhy’elle Prosper
Zhy’elle Prosper
Jan 11

I feel like over the last couple of years, I have been consumed in my desires, merely seeking God for what He can do for me. I definitely want to go deeper, but there’s a territorial fear that follows, because I know going all in means giving up my plans for His. It seems as if everything I do falls apart because I don’t give it to God, either that or self sabotage to the point of failure. I know over the next 10 days, I want to allow God to work in my life as scared as I am. Transformation comes with daily surrender, which is hard, but sometimes you’re simply left with no choice. It’s like I’m cornere…

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Ayeisha Kirkland
Ayeisha Kirkland
Jan 12
Replying to

It is definitely scary to trust God with the unknown. It’s like when Abram told God, “go to a land that I will show you”. However, we must remember to trust God with all our hearts and lean not on our own understanding (Proberbs 3:5-6). Many are the plans in a man’s heart but it’s God’s purpose that prevails. Unless the Lord builds the house, we build it in vain.

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