Reclaiming Our Sovereignty — From Rage to Reverence Is Live

Blog Number: 18
Author: Kelly L. Call

My dearest friends, fellow travelers, and architects of your own magnificent souls,

Today I get to place something holy into your hands. After years of apprenticeship to the Lord’s timing—and months of refining every sentence in prayer—my new book, Reclaiming Our Sovereignty: From Rage to Reverence, is now live on Amazon. This is not a book about performing holiness; it is a field guide for living it in the rooms that test us most: homes, councils, classrooms, and teams. It was born from the ache so many of us carry when power is misused, truth is muted, and our spirits burn hot with the sense that heaven has been trespassed.

In these pages I make a promise: we will not confuse what the soul is saying. Anger and rage are not the same. Anger arises when we are invalidated—when what is true, felt, or needed is dismissed. Rage rises when agency is constrained and acknowledgment is refused—when compulsion, silencing, or betrayal replace the Lord’s pattern of persuasion, gentleness, and love unfeigned. If you have ever wondered why some heat subsides with a sincere apology and others do not quiet until truth is named in the open and freedom is restored, this book will give you language, doctrine, and practice you can trust.

Reclaiming Our Sovereignty is anchored in the Seven Governing Dynamics of Christlike emotional intelligence: Responsibility, Sociability, Engageability, Charitability, Sovereignability, Discernibility, and Teachability. Together they form a covenantal way of governing power so it blesses rather than controls. You will learn how to speak truth without violence, to hold boundaries without hardness, and to welcome correction without shame. You will see how reverence steadies strength, how acknowledgment cools fever, and how public truth-telling and the renunciation of compulsion heal what private assurances cannot.

Some chapters are tender because they are honest. We look at marriages that want to be Zion but are carrying Babylon’s blueprints. We honor the fatigue of parents and leaders who feel unseen even as they serve. We examine councils that confuse unanimity with control and rediscover the Lord’s way of influence that keeps souls free. And we practice, over and over, the daily craft of reverential assertiveness—backbone and blessing in the same breath.

If your heart has been asking for a clean map—from heat into light, from grievance into stewardship, from self-protection into holy authorship before God—this is that map. It is rigorous and it is kind. It listens to scripture and it listens to the body. It speaks to the wounded and to those who wield stewardship, asking each of us to become the kind of people God can trust with influence.

Many of you have walked with me through earlier chapters of this ministry—through the fiction of the Alchemy Series and the hard-won insights of my first canon book. This new work gathers those threads into a single, clarifying fabric. Where the Alchemy stories dramatize the journey, Reclaiming Our Sovereignty hands you the instruments: practices you can pick up today, scriptures that hold their shape under pressure, and a way of naming experience that protects freedom while it tells the truth.

If the book serves you, I would be deeply grateful for your honest review on Amazon. Early reviews help the right readers find the work and signal that Christ-centered emotional craftsmanship matters in this age of noise. Share it with someone who is carrying heat and trying to carry it cleanly—a spouse, a friend at a crossroads, a leader who wants to govern without compulsion. Your recommendation will place this work in rooms I cannot enter alone.

We will continue, as always, to build out the living archive of this ministry—responding to ideas and events in real time, testing every tool against the Lord’s pattern. But tonight is for gratitude. Thank you for standing with me in this sacred labor. Thank you for the prayers, the patient corrections, and the covenant kindness that kept me writing when the way felt steep. May the Lord make of this little offering a lamp for your path and a quiet strength for your voice.

With reverence and joyful hope,
Kelly L. Call