The Oil of a Pure Bride: Raising the Standard of Covenant Worship

The Oil of a Pure Bride: Raising the Standard of Covenant Worship


The Story Behind the “Bride of Christ” Flags
I created the “Bride of Christ” flags during a very tender, formative time in my life. At first, it was just a whisper—a gentle nudge from the Lord. I didn’t fully understand why He was leading me in this direction. I only knew He was drawing my heart into something deeper.
What began as a whisper soon revealed itself as a mandate—a calling to release a prophetic standard for the beloved children in the Body of Christ. These flags would not simply be beautiful pieces of silk; they would carry a message:
The Bride belongs to Yeshua in covenant love.
To behold the Bride of Christ is to recognize covenant relationship with beloved Yeshua. And these flags were designed to visually proclaim that truth.

Covenant: More Than a Concept
Covenant, if many do not understand, is not a casual agreement or a light promise. It is a binding commitment—a joining of lives, loyalty, and purpose between two parties.
In the Jewish community, we see this expressed through a covenant meal:
two people sitting at the same table, sharing food, sharing hearts, and sharing lives. It was never one-sided. Both poured into one another. The relationship was strengthened through communion—through being fully present, fully engaged, fully given.
This is what Yeshua revealed at the table with His disciples:
“This cup is the new covenant in My blood, which is poured out for you.”
(Luke 22:20)
Communion is more than a ritual; it is a covenant act. When we break the bread and drink the cup, we participate in His life:
“Is not the cup of blessing… a participation in the blood of Christ?
And is not the bread… a participation in the body of Christ?”
(1 Corinthians 10:16–17)
We don’t just observe Him from a distance—we share in Him. We are joined to Him and to one another in a holy exchange of life, love, and identity.
The Bride of Christ flags were birthed out of this revelation:
a visual reminder that our worship is not performance—it is covenant.

The Call to Oil: Keeping the Lamps Full
It was not until last year that the Lord began to speak to me more deeply about the oil of a pure Bride and what it means to keep her lamps full.
As He began to unfold this, I realized something powerful:
The lamps were not just to prepare for what’s coming in a negative sense.
They were meant to cultivate a place of indwelling—a heart so full of oil that the King has a place to rest and reveal Himself.
The wise virgins in Scripture were not praised because they saw darkness coming.
They were called wise because they had oil when the Bridegroom appeared.
The Lord showed me:
  • The oil is not about panic—it is about proximity.
  • It’s not mainly about fear of the times—it’s about fellowship with Him.
  • It’s not just for endurance—it’s for hosting His Presence.
“In Your presence there is fullness of joy;
at Your right hand are pleasures forevermore.”
(Psalm 16:11)
It is in the depths of His joy that true light breaks into the world. When the Bride is full of His oil, she shines with His joy. These flags are a prophetic picture of that reality—a Bride whose worship, movement, and life are saturated with the oil of intimacy.

Haggai 2:9 and the Greater Glory Bride
As time went on, He began to speak to me about glory and the preparation of His Bride through Haggai 2:9:
“The glory of this present house will be greater than the glory of the former house,”
declares the LORD Almighty. “And in this place I will grant peace,”
declares the LORD Almighty.
I began to understand that He is preparing His Bride to carry the greater glory. Not just buildings or ministries—but people. Worshipers whose hearts have become sanctuaries for His presence.
This is the true restoration of the covenant of worship:
  • Worship rooted in covenant, not convenience
  • Worship that flows from love, not obligation
  • Worship that carries glory, not just language
And this restoration will come through the true Bride of Christ—those who are willing to be:
  • Pure
  • Holy
  • Set apart
  • In complete covenant with Him
The Bride of Christ flags were designed as a prophetic standard for that very Bride—those who will carry the greater glory in the days ahead.

The Flags as a Standard: A Visual Call to Purity & Covenant
When I create and raise the Bride of Christ flags, I don’t see just silk, color, and motion. I see a standard being lifted in the spirit.
These flags are:
  • A symbol of who the Bride is called to be: pure, holy, and fully His
  • A summons to return to covenant worship
  • A visual decree that our love, loyalty, and worship belong to Yeshua alone
Every sweep, turn, and wave of these flags says:
“I am my Beloved’s, and my Beloved is mine.” (Song of Songs 6:3)
They are for the worshipers who keep their lamps full—
who choose intimacy over performance,
who seek His face more than His platform,
who hide themselves in the secret place of His indwelling.
These flags are especially for those who feel the tug of the Bridegroom and know:
“I am being called into deeper covenant. My worship is not casual—it’s bridal.”

For Those Who Feel the Call of the Bridegroom
If something in you stirs when you see or hear “Bride of Christ”…
If your spirit responds to the language of oil, lamps, glory, and covenant…
That’s not just emotion.
That is the Bridegroom calling His Bride.
He is inviting you:
  • To keep your lamp filled with fresh oil
  • To let His joy become your radiant light
  • To allow Him to prepare you to carry greater glory
  • To step into covenant worship, where every part of your life belongs to Him
The Bride of Christ flags were created as a visual companion to that call—
a prophetic reminder every time you worship:
🕊️ The Bride is making herself ready.
🕊️ Her lamp is full of oil.
🕊️ Her heart is a dwelling place for the King of Glory.