You Have a Dream. Now What? You Need to Know How to Raise It.

Gary Keesee • July 11, 2017

Last week, I talked about how you shouldn’t give up on your dreams, no matter how hopeless or dead they might look.

You should go read that here.

The Gestation Period

So, what do you do once your dream has been revived, once you’ve put your confidence in God and believe your dream can be birthed as you believe His Word and His promises?

Once the promise has been conceived, there’s a period of time called gestation.

During gestation in the natural, we don’t know how the baby is forming. Sure, a woman may know she’s pregnant, but she can’t see the baby until it’s been birthed. In the same way, you continue to stand on the promise even though you may have no clue how it’s forming.

Soon, a mother in the natural will begin to feel the flutter of movement and then the full-on kicks and rolls of the baby, who is growing and preparing for birth. Things may get uncomfortable for the mother as her body shifts and grows for the baby growing inside her.

The growth of the promise is no different.

Things may begin to shift. You may get pretty uncomfortable. As you hold to the promise, the Word of God may begin to change your thoughts, realign your priorities, and have you thinking thoughts that are much bigger than yourself.

It can be both exciting and scary at the same time.

Birth

Then, when it’s time—when the baby is ready for birth—he or she is birthed into the natural realm. This whole process is powered and produced by the Spirit of God.

Remember, Isaac was conceived as a result of the promise but was born by the power of the Spirit.

Just like a mother must continue to nurture the baby in her womb, you must continue to incubate the promise until, suddenly, the picture is clear, and you begin to see how the promise has been formed and all of the details. Then, the power of God moves in the situation; He brings the details, reveals the plan, and brings the baby into reality.

But your responsibility doesn’t end there.

After you’ve conceived, incubated, and birthed the promise by the power of the Spirit, you have to raise it unto the glory of God.

Raising the Promise

When Drenda and I were broke, we began to believe what God said. We made a decision that we would believe what the Kingdom says about us and not what our circumstances said. Regardless of our past failures, if God said it, we would believe it. We began to apply ourselves to understanding, and we received the promise.

Things began to change on the inside of me.

I had a dream from the Holy Spirit about starting a business I didn’t know how to run, but I saw it clearly in my spirit, so I began to incubate it. I started researching it. The idea that was rolling around on the inside of me kept growing bigger and bigger, and the pieces of the puzzle— the form —began to take shape.

We launched the business.

But the birth is never the end of the promise.

God sees the promise as it will be when it’s finished, or matured.

But we have work to do to get it there.

God knew the business would, eventually, be the answer to our problem, and it would supply all of the finances that we needed to carry out what we were to do.

But the birth is always just one part of the process. I still had a lot to learn. Like parents have to raise a baby, I had to raise the business.

It was frustrating to say the least. We had to learn a lot. I had never raised a dream—my own “Isaac”—before.

I had to remind myself often, “GOD SAID. HE SAID this was the answer. GOD SAID.”

We had to hold to the promise because there were plenty of times, when we waded out in that deep water, that everything in us said, This is scary! Turn back! TURN BACK!

But then the checks started coming in, and we saw the promise as it was maturing.

As a friend of this ministry, we want more for you. we want to help you learn how to release the Kingdom of God into your life. We want to help mentor you to walk out your dreams and reach your God-designed destiny!

September 5, 2025
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By Gary Keesee August 15, 2025
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By Gary Keesee July 14, 2025
Reading Time 3 mins 46 secs – Picture this. You’re standing at the edge of a foggy path that winds through a forest. You’ve never walked this path before. You can’t see more than a few feet ahead. There are no signs. No map. No flashlight. Just a still, quiet voice inside telling you to start walking. Would you? Most people wouldn’t. They’d wait until the fog clears. Until the way is visible. Until they feel “sure.” But that’s not how the Kingdom works. Friend, faith walks before it sees. Hebrews 11:1 (NIV) tells us this plainly: Now faith is confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not see. Not what we can see. Not what we understand. Not what’s guaranteed. Faith is walking when it feels like you’re walking blind, but you’re actually walking guided. Let’s talk about Abraham for a second. God said to him, “...Go from your country, your people and your father’s household to the land I will show you” (Genesis 12:1, NIV). God didn’t show Abraham the land first. He didn’t explain all the details. He didn’t promise a step-by-step plan. God simply said, “ Go, ” and Abraham went. He didn’t argue. He didn’t delay. He didn’t ask for the weather report or route details. He trusted the voice. He walked before he saw. And because of that one step, a generational promise was unlocked. Now, let’s fast forward to the New Testament, to the story found in Matthew 14. Jesus came walking on water in the middle of the night, and Peter saw Him. Peter said, “Lord, if it’s really You, tell me to come.” And Jesus said, “Come.” What did Peter do? He stepped out of the boat and onto the water. Pause and think about that. Peter walked on water—not because he had magic in his feet but because he trusted the One who called him forward. Peter walked before he saw. Yes, he started to sink when he looked at the waves, but before that, he did what no other human besides Jesus had done: he walked on water by faith. Friend, your boat might feel safer. It might feel familiar. But if God is calling you out of it, staying there is more dangerous than stepping forward. Let’s get real for a second. There are seasons when God will not show you the full picture, on purpose. Why? Because if He showed you everything, you’d try to control it instead of trusting Him with it. Faith is trusting His character when you can’t see His hand. It’s saying yes without having every answer. It’s building the ark before the rain comes. It’s marching around Jericho before the walls fall. It’s digging a ditch before there’s a drop of rain. That’s the Kingdom. Here’s what the Bible says: “For we live by faith, not by sight,” (2 Corinthians 5:7, NIV). That’s not a metaphor. That’s a lifestyle. You don’t wait until all your fear is gone to obey. You don’t wait until you’re certain to trust. It means you don’t wait until your finances line up perfectly to give. You walk before you see. Let’s look at one more example. In Acts 9, Saul, who later became Paul, was traveling to Damascus while persecuting Christians when, suddenly, a blinding light stopped him. Jesus spoke directly to him, and Saul was blinded. God then instructed a man named Ananias to go and pray for Saul and restore his sight. Ananias was hesitant because he knew Saul’s reputation for harming believers. Despite his doubts and without any guarantees, Ananias obeyed and went to Saul. He stepped out in faith before knowing the outcome. That single act of obedience set the stage for Paul’s powerful ministry and the writing of much of the New Testament. So, let me ask you… Where is God asking you to walk, before you see? To step into a calling that scares you? To give up something you’ve leaned on for security? To trust Him with your finances? To forgive someone you haven’t gotten an apology from? Whatever it is, I want you to hear this. You don’t have to see the outcome to take the next step. You don’t have to understand the entire path to move forward in obedience. Faith walks before it sees. That’s where the miracles are. That’s where the provision is. That’s where peace is waiting. Your comfort zone won’t get you there. But your obedience will. God doesn’t need your full understanding. He needs your full surrender. So today, let this be your reminder… You don’t have to feel brave. You just have to follow. Even in the fog. Even in the unknown. Even when it doesn’t make sense. Because God is already in the place He’s calling you to. He’s gone ahead. He’s prepared the way. He’s waiting at your next step. So, take it. Because faith? It always walks before it sees.