HHM Letters

We pray that each letter uplifts your spirit and reminds you of God’s unfailing love.

Dwane Robinson Dwane Robinson

Letter 23: Ground Zero Worship

If everything was stripped away, would your worship still stand?

Worship from Ground Zero is worship that rises from one foundation: who God is. Not His gifts, not circumstances—just Him. It’s a pure posture where His sovereignty, power, and love become the only focus.

The Bible shows this kind of worship: Habakkuk rejoicing with no fruit on the vine, Job blessing the Lord in loss, and David praising at all times. These were Ground Zero worshipers—steady, anchored, and unshaken.

Ground Zero is where worship flows freely, the heart endures, and joy returns. Because worship built on God alone reaches His presence—and in His presence is fullness of joy (Psalm 16:11).

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Dwane Robinson Dwane Robinson

Letter 24: Helping Others Through Prayer

Are you the only person on your prayer list?

Prayer is more than a routine, it is a powerful partnership with God. When you pray, you acknowledge His ability to move where human strength fails. But God invites us to widen our focus. Our prayers aren’t meant to stop with our own needs, they’re meant to reach others.

When you pray for someone else, you stand in the gap for those who may not have the strength or clarity to pray for themselves. Something shifts in your heart: compassion grows, and you begin seeing people through God’s eyes.

Jesus modeled this for us. He prayed for His disciples, the hurting, the lost—even His enemies. As we imitate Him, the Holy Spirit will place people on our hearts who need covering.

Intercession expands the reach of God’s love. When you lift others in prayer, grace multiplies in every direction—including your own.

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Dwane Robinson Dwane Robinson

Letter 25: Assigned for Your Elevation

Have you ever felt forgotten by people—but clearly remembered by God?

Joseph knew that feeling. He went from favored son to pit, from slavery to prison, and still Scripture repeats one truth: God was with him. Even in the lowest places, Joseph’s God-given gift kept working. His ability to interpret dreams didn’t disappear in hardship—it showed up in every season.

In prison, Joseph interpreted the butler’s dream and simply asked to be remembered. But the butler forgot…for two long years. Yet God had not forgotten. At the right moment, Pharaoh needed an interpretation no one else could give—and suddenly the butler remembered Joseph. Not coincidence. Divine timing.

Joseph’s story reminds us: being overlooked by people is not the same as being overlooked by God. Your gift still works. Your obedience still matters. And when the time is right, God knows how to bring your name back up.

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Dwane Robinson Dwane Robinson

O My God: A Cry That God Understands

Before “OMG” became slang for surprise, O My God was Heaven’s emergency call—a cry that shakes darkness and summons divine help. In Scripture, this phrase isn’t casual or trendy. It is a desperate, sincere cry from the heart of someone who needs God to move. Sometimes it’s loud. Sometimes whispered through tears. Sometimes it’s the only prayer you can form.

And God understands it every time.

He does not need long explanations or perfect words. O My God reaches Him instantly because He already knows your situation, your pain, and your need. Throughout the Bible, this cry appears as a call for help, a plea for mercy, a declaration of trust, and an expression of worship. It is the believer’s SOS—Save Our Souls—and Heaven always responds.

Let us reclaim the meaning of O My God as a sacred, heartfelt cry that God hears, honors, and moves upon.

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