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When Heaven Invades Earth

When Heaven Invades Earth

A Practical Guide to a Life of Miracles
by Bill Johnson 2005 192 pages
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Key Takeaways

1. The Normal Christian Life is Supernatural.

It is abnormal for a Christian not to have an appetite for the impossible.

Hunger for impossibilities. Christians are designed with a spiritual DNA that hungers for the impossible to bow to Jesus' name. This means expecting and experiencing supernatural signs and wonders as a natural part of everyday life, not just a rare occurrence. The lack of miracles isn't God's will, but often a result of our limited thinking.

Ordinary people, extraordinary Father. The stories of healing and transformation shared are not due to exceptional individuals, but ordinary people serving an extravagant God. They simply made room for God, believing in His goodness and taking risks that God honored with extraordinary results. This demonstrates that anyone can live a life where heaven invades earth.

Power is inexcusable. Excuses for powerlessness are unacceptable because our mandate is clear: raise a generation that openly displays God's raw power. This journey requires a renewed mind, possible only through a desperate pursuit of the Holy Spirit, leading to an authentic gospel of the Kingdom. The Kingdom is not just talk, but power.

2. Jesus Modeled a Life Dependent on the Holy Spirit.

If He performed miracles because He was God, then they would be unattainable for us. But if He did them as a man, I am responsible to pursue His lifestyle.

Jesus' self-imposed limits. Jesus chose to live with the same human limitations we face, having no supernatural capabilities of His own as a man. He explicitly stated, "The Son can do nothing." This was crucial so that His miracles, wonders, and signs, performed as a man in right relationship with God and dependent on the Holy Spirit, would be a model for us.

Our potential is His lifestyle. If Jesus performed miracles as God, they would be beyond our reach. But because He did them as a man, we are responsible to pursue His lifestyle of complete dependence on the Holy Spirit. Our humanity, cleansed by Christ's blood, is now distinguished by how willing we are to live dependent on the Spirit.

Commission restored. Mankind was originally commissioned to subdue the earth, extending God's dominion. This authority was lost through sin but reclaimed by Jesus. His declaration, "All authority has been given to Me... Go therefore," means He got it back so we could use it. We are restored to His plan of ruling, enforcing Calvary's victory by destroying the devil's works through the power we've received.

3. Repentance is Changing Your Mind to See the Kingdom.

Most Christians repent enough to get forgiven, but not enough to see the Kingdom.

Beyond sorrow for sin. Repentance is more than just feeling sorry for sin or turning away from it; it fundamentally means changing your way of thinking. This mental transformation is essential to discover and grasp the focus of Jesus' ministry: the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand. It's about surrendering to grace to renew the mind.

Seeing the unseen. Changing our thinking allows us to perceive the Kingdom, which is here and now, though in the invisible realm. This awareness helps us resist the enemy's attempts to anchor us to the visible world. Being born again enables us to see from the heart, and true repentance envisions His Kingdom, making us co-laborers destroying the devil's works.

Living from superior reality. The unseen realm is superior to the natural, and faith is anchored there. Jesus' Beatitudes describe the attitudes of a repentant mind, the "lenses" through which the Kingdom is seen. These attitudes, empowered by grace, allow us to access His unseen world and experience His dominion, illustrating that the Kingdom comes in the presence of the Spirit.

4. Faith Anchors Us in the Superior Unseen Reality.

Unbelief is faith in the inferior.

Faith sees the unseen. Faith is the heart's mirror reflecting the realities of the unseen Kingdom, actualizing what it perceives. It lives from the invisible towards the visible, contrasting with the limitations of natural sight. Jesus expected everyone to see from the heart, judging those who couldn't discern spiritual times as hypocrites, implying this ability is given to all.

Superiority of the invisible. The invisible realm is superior to the natural, dominating it both positively and negatively. Faith is anchored in this unseen reality, while unbelief is anchored in the visible or reasonable apart from God, honoring the natural as superior. Materialism, beyond accumulating goods, is faith in the natural world as the superior reality.

Faith is active and violent. Faith is not the absence of doubt but the presence of belief, an active, aggressive force that grabs hold of Kingdom reality and brings it into collision with the natural world. This "violence" takes the Kingdom by force, whether through quiet pressing in or loud crying out. Faith empowers, connecting heaven's available power to earthly circumstances, making the impossible possible.

5. Prayer Brings Heaven's Reality to Earth.

If you want anything from God, you will have to pray into heaven.

Praying heaven down. The Lord's Model Prayer is the clearest instruction on bringing heaven's reality to earth. It has two priorities: intimacy with God expressed in worship ("Hallowed be Your name") and bringing His Kingdom to earth ("Your Kingdom come, Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven"). Biblical prayer is always linked with radical obedience.

Heaven sets the standard. Praying "Your Kingdom come" means asking God to superimpose the rules, order, and benefits of heaven onto earth until it looks like His world. This applies to all areas:

  • Daily bread: Abundant supply, as in heaven.
  • Forgiveness: Relationships modeled after heaven's forgiveness.
  • Deliverance from evil: Freedom from temptation and the evil one, as in heaven.
    When His rule collides with darkness (sin, sickness, demons), His world wins.

Prayer is the vehicle. God has chosen to act in human affairs in response to prayer. We are His delegated authority on earth, and prayer is the vehicle for His invasion. Those who don't pray allow darkness to continue ruling. The enemy's greatest deception targets the purpose and effect of prayer, trying to keep us from this powerful tool.

6. The Holy Spirit is the Agent of Kingdom Invasion.

The Holy Spirit is the agent of heaven who makes these kinds of encounters possible.

Surpassing the greatest. Jesus stated that the least in the Kingdom of Heaven is greater than John the Baptist, the greatest Old Testament prophet. This new standard is possible through the baptism in the Holy Spirit, which John himself needed. This baptism makes available a lifestyle of power and dominion that surpasses anything known under the Old Covenant.

Fullness for overflow. The baptism in the Holy Spirit is not just a one-time event but an entrance to a lifestyle of power, requiring many fillings because "we leak." God's ultimate goal is for believers to overflow with His fullness, not just speak in tongues. This overflow, released through faith and compassion, dispossesses hell's strongholds and takes possession for God's glory.

Presence terrifies hell. The Holy Spirit encompasses the Kingdom, enforcing Jesus' lordship and marking territory with liberty. Anointed ministry causes a collision between the world of darkness and the world of light, where light always triumphs immediately. The Holy Spirit has no battle wounds; Jesus is Lord. His presence terrifies hell because it brings the reality of His dominion.

7. The Anointing Equips Us to Destroy the Devil's Works.

The spirits of hell are at war against the anointing, for without the anointing mankind is no threat to their dominion.

Christ means Anointed One. "Christ" is not Jesus' last name but a title meaning "Anointed One," pointing to an experience. Jesus, as a man, received the Holy Spirit's anointing to live beyond human limits and destroy the devil's works. This anointing is the equipment necessary for supernatural ministry, linking Jesus the man to the divine power needed to reveal the Father and His realm.

Antichrist opposes the Anointing. The "antichrist" spirit is against the "Anointed One." It works to influence believers to reject the Holy Spirit's anointing, reducing the gospel to mere intellect without supernatural encounter. This spirit tolerates talk of past power but denies its present availability, working against faith by anchoring trust in human reason rather than God's empowering presence.

Anointing transforms. The anointing is the tangible presence of the Holy Spirit upon someone for supernatural endeavors. It not only equips for ministry but also transforms the vessel it flows through, as seen when the Spirit came upon Saul and "turned him into another man." This encounter with the anointing is key to personal growth and victory over character flaws.

8. Teaching Should Lead to Encounters with God.

Any revelation from God's Word that does not lead us to an encounter with God only serves to make us more religious.

Teaching and doing. Jesus, the model teacher, never separated teaching from doing. He combined proclaiming the gospel with signs and wonders, commanding His disciples to do the same. Teachers are to instruct to explain what they just did or are about to do, making room for God to move through action, not just words.

Experience validates truth. Simply knowing truth is insufficient; it must change circumstances for good. Teaching must be followed by action that allows God to move. Personal experience with God's power is crucial; without it, knowledge can lead to pride. Moving in the impossible through dependence on God short-circuits pride and builds true faith.

Power vs. words. The Kingdom of God is not in word (logos) but in power (dunamis). Paul warned the Corinthian church against teachers with many words but little power, contrasting them with spiritual fathers who demonstrate power. Christianity is a relationship, not a philosophy. God encounters make concepts powerful, and we must require this of ourselves by seeking until we find.

9. Our Identity is "As He Is, So Are We in This World".

While most of the Church is still trying to become as Jesus was, the Bible declares, 'As He is, so are we in this world.'

Beyond the suffering servant. The declaration "As He is, so are we in this world" refers to Jesus in His triumphantly resurrected, ascended, and glorified state, not just the suffering servant headed for the cross. The Holy Spirit was sent specifically to shape us into the image of the glorified Son, enabling us to attain "to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ."

Resurrection power. The Christian life is found because of the Cross, energized by His resurrection power. His blood forgave our debt, but His resurrection brought us into abundance. This changes our identity from merely "sinners saved by grace" to heirs of God, called to live a lifestyle empowered by resurrection, not just self-denial.

Embracing His nature. Being "as He is" involves embracing key characteristics of His glorified state:

  • Glory: His manifested presence resting upon us, making the Church glorious.
  • Power: Being clothed with the Holy Spirit's ability (dunamis) for supernatural ministry.
  • Triumph: Living from His secured victory over hell, sin, and the devil.
  • Holiness: Revealing the beauty of God's nature through a life separate from evil.
    This identity establishes security and boldness for engaging the world.

10. Spiritual Warfare is an Offensive Invasion.

The real Christian is a royal fighter.

Offense, not defense. The Church has been too focused on reacting to the devil's plans, playing defense. The Great Commission puts us on the offensive; we have the ball and are meant to carry it effectively, making the enemy's plans irrelevant. We must stop being distracted by his antics and discussing what's wrong because of him.

Biblical warfare principles. Effective spiritual warfare involves understanding key principles:

  • God leads us only into battles we are equipped to win; obedience is the safest place.
  • God prepares a table for us in the presence of our enemies, emphasizing intimacy over warfare intensity.
  • Refusing fear terrifies the enemy; confidence in God is a sign of his destruction.
  • Submission to God is key to personal triumph and enforcing Calvary's victory.
  • The Church is on the attack, and the gates of hell will not prevail against it.

God stirs up opposition. God sometimes increases His people and makes them stronger than their enemies, then stirs up the enemy's hatred. This isn't to create problems but because He delights in seeing the devil defeated by those made in His image, who choose a love relationship with Him. We are His delegated authority, executing written judgment.

11. Powerlessness is Costly; Miracles Reveal God's Nature.

Nevertheless, a powerless Church is far more costly in terms of human suffering and lost souls.

Revealing God's nature. Signs and wonders are essential because they reveal God's nature. Their absence steals precious revelation from mankind. We owe the world an encounter with God, which must include great power. Representing God without demonstrating His supernatural power is a major shortcoming, as the supernatural is His natural realm.

Power exposes and compels. Miracles expose sin and bring people to a decision, as seen when Peter, after the miraculous catch of fish, cried out, "I am a sinful man." Jesus stated that if He hadn't done mighty works, people would have no sin (meaning their sin wouldn't be exposed and require a decision). Power removes the middle ground and forces awareness of God.

Benefits of the miraculous. Beyond revealing God and exposing sin, signs and wonders:

  • Bring courage, reminding us of God's past works.
  • Are key to reaching "sin cities" that would repent if exposed to outpouring.
  • Release God's glory, displacing darkness with His presence.
  • Direct people to give glory to God and give Him glory themselves.
  • Unify generations by providing shared testimonies of God's activity.
  • Affirm Jesus' identity and validate the Church.
  • Help people hear and obey God's word.

12. Infiltrating Society with the Kingdom is Our Mandate.

Any gospel that doesn't work in the marketplace, doesn't work.

Leaven's influence. The Kingdom of God is like leaven, subtly but overpoweringly influencing its surroundings. This parable illustrates the Kingdom's ability to infiltrate and transform society, not the Church being corrupted by sin. God intends to place believers in the darkest situations to display His dominion, as the brilliance of a diamond is clearest against black velvet.

Old Testament examples. Daniel and Joseph serve as prophetic examples of leaven in dark, pagan systems (Babylon and Egypt). Despite personal injustices, they maintained absolute devotion and uncompromising purpose, demonstrating the power of holiness and using their spiritual gifts (prophecy, wisdom) to influence kings and save lives. Their loyalty and forgiveness, even towards those who wronged them, displayed the Kingdom's purity and power.

Taking it to the marketplace. Jesus invaded every realm of society, going where people gathered (villages, cities, marketplaces) and becoming their focus. We must take the gospel of power out of church walls and into the marketplace. This involves believers using spiritual gifts in their workplaces, schools, and communities, demonstrating God's love and power through service and miracles, proving that the gospel works everywhere.

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FAQ

1. What is "When Heaven Invades Earth" by Bill Johnson about?

  • Supernatural Christian Living: The book explores how ordinary Christians can live a life marked by miracles, signs, and wonders, making the supernatural a normal part of daily faith.
  • Kingdom of God on Earth: Bill Johnson teaches that believers are called to bring the reality of God’s Kingdom—heaven’s power, love, and authority—into the world now, not just wait for heaven after death.
  • Restoring Jesus’ Ministry: The author argues that Jesus modeled a lifestyle of dependence on the Holy Spirit, and that Christians are meant to continue His works, including healing and deliverance.
  • Renewing the Mind: A central theme is the need for believers to change their thinking (repentance) to see and access the unseen realm of God’s Kingdom.
  • Practical Guide: The book provides testimonies, biblical teaching, and practical steps for readers to pursue a life of faith that expects and experiences the miraculous.

2. Why should I read "When Heaven Invades Earth" by Bill Johnson?

  • Faith-Building Perspective: The book challenges and inspires readers to believe for more than a powerless or purely intellectual Christianity, encouraging a faith that expects God to act.
  • Practical Application: It offers actionable steps and real-life stories to help readers move from theory to practice in healing, prayer, and supernatural ministry.
  • Breaks Religious Mindsets: Johnson confronts common theological barriers (like cessationism and dispensationalism) that limit believers’ expectations of God’s power today.
  • Encourages Personal Encounter: The book emphasizes that every Christian can have a personal, ongoing encounter with God, not just knowledge about Him.
  • Equips for Impact: Readers are equipped to impact their communities and the world by carrying God’s presence and power into everyday situations.

3. What are the key takeaways from "When Heaven Invades Earth" by Bill Johnson?

  • Miracles Are Normal: The supernatural should be the normal Christian life, not the exception, and every believer is called to participate.
  • Identity and Authority: Understanding our restored identity in Christ empowers us to exercise authority over darkness and bring heaven to earth.
  • Repentance Means Mind Renewal: True repentance is changing the way we think so we can see and access God’s Kingdom now.
  • Faith Anchored in the Unseen: Faith is rooted in the unseen realm; it brings the realities of heaven into the visible world.
  • Prayer as Partnership: Prayer is not just asking God for things, but partnering with Him to release His will and power on earth.

4. How does Bill Johnson define the "normal Christian life" in "When Heaven Invades Earth"?

  • Appetite for the Impossible: Johnson asserts it is abnormal for Christians not to hunger for the impossible to bow at the name of Jesus.
  • Miracles as Everyday Occurrence: The normal Christian life involves expecting and experiencing miracles, healings, and supernatural interventions regularly.
  • Living by Faith and Risk: Believers are called to live with continual risk, stepping out in faith to see God move.
  • No Excuse for Powerlessness: Powerlessness is seen as inexcusable; Christians are mandated to display God’s power openly.
  • Love and Service: The normal Christian life is also marked by love for God and people, serving others with the resources of heaven.

5. What does "When Heaven Invades Earth" teach about the Kingdom of God and its relevance today?

  • Kingdom Is Now: The Kingdom of God is not just a future hope but a present reality that is within reach for every believer.
  • Heaven on Earth: Christians are to pray and act so that God’s will is done on earth as it is in heaven, making earth look more like heaven.
  • Ambassadors of Heaven: Believers are described as ambassadors, representing heaven’s culture, power, and resources in the world.
  • Infiltrating Society: The Kingdom is meant to infiltrate every sphere of society, not just the church, through service, excellence, and supernatural ministry.
  • Victory Over Darkness: The Kingdom’s advance means exposing and undoing the works of the devil—sickness, poverty, and oppression.

6. How does Bill Johnson explain faith and its role in the miraculous in "When Heaven Invades Earth"?

  • Faith as Substance: Faith is described as the substance and evidence of things not seen, a spiritual reality that brings heaven’s answers to earth.
  • Anchored in the Unseen: True faith is anchored in the invisible realm, not limited by what is visible or reasonable.
  • Faith vs. Unbelief: Unbelief is seen as faith in the inferior (the natural), while faith honors the superior reality of God’s world.
  • Active and Aggressive: Faith is not passive; it is aggressive, taking hold of God’s promises and expecting the impossible.
  • Hearing God Now: Faith comes by hearing God in the present, not just by having heard in the past; ongoing relationship is key.

7. What is the role of the Holy Spirit and the anointing in "When Heaven Invades Earth" by Bill Johnson?

  • Empowerment for Ministry: The Holy Spirit is the agent who empowers believers to do the works of Jesus—healing, deliverance, miracles.
  • Baptism of the Spirit: Johnson teaches that the baptism in the Holy Spirit is essential for living a supernatural life and is available to all believers.
  • Anointing as God’s Presence: The anointing is God’s tangible presence upon a person, enabling them to go beyond human limitations.
  • Partnership with the Spirit: Believers are to learn to recognize, value, and follow the Holy Spirit’s leading in every area of life.
  • Antichrist Spirit Defined: The book warns against the antichrist spirit, which opposes the anointing and seeks to reduce Christianity to mere intellect or form without power.

8. How does "When Heaven Invades Earth" address the relationship between character and power in the Christian life?

  • Both Are Essential: Johnson insists that character and power are not mutually exclusive; both are necessary for effective Christian living.
  • Obedience Over Perfection: Waiting for perfect character before stepping out in power is seen as a religious mindset; obedience to Jesus’ commands is the priority.
  • Anointing Transforms Character: Serving under the anointing actually helps develop Christlike character through encounters with God’s power.
  • Powerlessness Is Costly: The absence of power is more costly than the risks associated with pursuing the supernatural; it leaves the world without answers.
  • Accountability and Growth: The book encourages accountability and ongoing growth in both character and the use of spiritual gifts.

9. What practical steps and methods does Bill Johnson recommend for living a supernatural life in "When Heaven Invades Earth"?

  • Pursue the Presence: Cultivate intimacy with God and value His presence above all else.
  • Renew Your Mind: Continually renew your thinking to align with God’s Word and the realities of His Kingdom.
  • Pray for the Impossible: Be specific and relentless in praying for miracles and breakthroughs in every area of life.
  • Take Risks: Step out in faith to pray for the sick, share prophetic words, and serve others, even at the risk of failure.
  • Learn from Others: Seek impartation and mentorship from those who walk in the miraculous, and read testimonies to stir your faith.

10. What are the most important concepts and definitions in "When Heaven Invades Earth" by Bill Johnson?

  • Kingdom of God: The realm of God’s rule, meant to be manifest on earth through believers.
  • Repentance: Not just turning from sin, but changing the way you think to see and access God’s world.
  • Faith: The substance and evidence of the unseen, bringing heaven’s reality into the visible world.
  • Anointing: The tangible presence and power of the Holy Spirit upon a believer for supernatural ministry.
  • Power Evangelism: Sharing the gospel with demonstrations of God’s power—healing, deliverance, and miracles—as modeled by Jesus.

11. What are the best quotes from "When Heaven Invades Earth" by Bill Johnson and what do they mean?

  • “It is abnormal for a Christian not to have an appetite for the impossible.” – Christians are designed to expect and pursue the miraculous as part of their spiritual DNA.
  • “Unbelief is anchored in what is visible or reasonable apart from God. It honors the natural realm as superior to the invisible… Unbelief is faith in the inferior.” – True faith looks beyond what is seen; unbelief is simply misplaced faith.
  • “Faith comes by hearing… It does not say that it comes from having heard. It is the listening heart, in the present tense, that is ready for heaven’s deposit of faith.” – Ongoing relationship and present-tense hearing from God are essential for living by faith.
  • “We only get to keep what we give away.” – The anointing and God’s blessings are meant to be shared, not hoarded.
  • “The kingdom of God is not a matter of talk but of power.” – Christianity is meant to be demonstrated, not just discussed.

12. How does "When Heaven Invades Earth" by Bill Johnson challenge traditional church beliefs and practices?

  • Confronts Cessationism: The book directly challenges the belief that miracles and spiritual gifts ceased with the early church, calling for a return to biblical normalcy.
  • Rejects Powerless Christianity: Johnson critiques traditions that settle for a powerless, intellectual faith, urging believers to expect and pursue

Review Summary

4.39 out of 5
Average of 4.2K ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

When Heaven Invades Earth receives mixed reviews. Many praise it as life-changing, inspiring greater faith and expectation of miracles. They appreciate Johnson's emphasis on God's power and bringing heaven to earth. However, critics argue it misinterprets Scripture, promotes dangerous theology, and elevates personal experience over biblical truth. Some find Johnson's writing style confusing and his concepts hard to follow. The book's teachings on Christ's divinity and the role of miracles in Christianity are particularly contentious. Overall, readers either view it as transformative or deeply problematic, with little middle ground.

Your rating:
4.63
63 ratings

About the Author

Bill Johnson is the Senior Pastor of Bethel Church in Redding, California. Born in 1951, he became a Christian as a child and was significantly influenced by books on prayer. Johnson and his wife began as singles pastors under his father at Bethel before becoming senior pastors in Weaverville. After attending conferences led by John Wimber and experiencing the Toronto Blessing, Johnson committed to pursuing revival. In 1996, he became senior pastor of Bethel, leading it to become a nondenominational charismatic church known for supernatural encounters and miracles. Johnson is a prolific author and conference speaker, leading a network of churches dedicated to global revival.

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