In Days of the Fathers, Alan follows Elijah's journey from the mountain of victory, to the tree of exhaustion, to the cave of encounter. Speaking on Father's Day, he names both the pain of fatherlessness and the loneliness carried by many fathers, inviting us to receive the restoring blessing of the Father.
This message calls Dwelling Place to become a mature, fathering house: a people no longer driven by proving, striving, or chasing signs, but formed by God to raise sons and daughters. As the Spirit of Elijah turns hearts again, we are invited to come out of weariness and confusion into fresh anointing, fresh assignment, and a generational vision for what God is building.