Many Christians know they’re the children of God, but so many of them live like they’re spiritually bankrupt—discouraged, overwhelmed, and not knowing how to access promises of the Bible. Why? The reality is, we don’t know the depth of our inheritance in Christ. Jennie Sierra’s book, “99 Inheritances in Christ,” is a wake-up call to the Body of Christ: all Jesus bought and procured for us is ours now. To receive it, however, we need to know what we have possession of. It’s not another Christian self-help book—it’s a Spirit-led, Scripture-soaked guide to walking into your genuine Kingdom identity and living from it every day.
We’re not working to get God’s favor; we’re working from it. We’re not pleading for crumbs when we’ve been given access to the whole table. Jennie calls us to stop striving and to just start abiding. In Christ, we already have access to His righteousness, peace, power, and love—not because we’ve worked for it, but because we’ve been adopted into it. When we fully accept that about ourselves, everything is different. We stop performing for God’s love and instead live from it.
Jennie’s journey into the richness of her inheritance didn’t start on a platform—it began in a game. While teaching church school, Jennie designed a Scripture memory game for the children, and to her surprise, it helped her remember the Word in a manner previously impossible for her. The playful, Holy Spirit-inspired strategy became a habit of daily routine: meditating each day on a single verse and allowing the Holy Spirit to underline what she most needed. This straightforward rhythm started to release amazing spiritual fruit—liberty, healing, and miracles. And it’s something each believer can implement. Jennie presents practical methods to live in your inheritance: choose one verse per day, say it out loud, write down what God shows you, arrange verses in categories, and pass it on. These aren’t rituals—they’re relational experiences with God that gradually restore your mind and strengthen your faith.
One of the most special things about Jennie’s teaching is her passion for the original languages of the Scripture. She takes students deep into the Hebrew and Greek roots of key verse after key verse, discovering meanings usually lost in modern translations. Take, for instance, the English word “peace.” This generally means the lack of conflict. Yet in Hebrew, the word shalom encompasses so much more: completeness, harmony, health, and wholeness. That’s the kind of peace Jesus offers us in John 14:27—and it’s ours now. Jennie’s examination of the original text isn’t merely theologically rich—it prepares believers to live spiritually astute and confidently. By understanding exactly what God said and meant, we can walk in His promises more fully and accurately.
But Jennie doesn’t just teach, she lives it. Her life is a demonstration of what it means to walk in your inheritance. From dramatic physical healings to deep spiritual transformation and reconciliation of broken relationships, Jennie has witnessed God move in amazing ways through faith and obedience. Her eyes often land on the little boy on the cover of her book—eyes lifted, heart open, in awe of the presence and truth of God. This is the position we’re all called to have. Jesus said the Kingdom lies with people who come with childlike faith (Matthew 18:3). When we have faith like children, we receive like children. In conclusion, Jennie’s message is straightforward: your inheritance isn’t just in the afterlife—it’s in the now. Healing, joy, wisdom, authority, peace, and the presence of God aren’t just promises for the future.
They’re current realities available in Jesus. You don’t have to work to acquire something that’s been given to you. You just need to believe it, receive it, and live it out. And the best news? You don’t have to wait to get started—a single verse at a time, a moment with the Spirit at a time. Allow God’s Word to disciple you, and watch your life be revolutionized. Because you’re not just a servant—you’re a loved son or daughter. And that makes all the difference.