High Frequency Living Part 2
High Altitude Life: You Must Climb To It
Matthew 4:8 (NKJV)
“Again, the devil took Him up on an exceedingly high mountain and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory.”
“Again, the devil took Him up on an exceedingly high mountain and showed Him all the kingdoms of the world and their glory.”
In Part 2 of our High Frequency Living series, Pastor Warryn Campbell II challenged us to understand a powerful spiritual reality: you cannot catch a high frequency living a low-level life.
Using Jesus’ temptation on the exceedingly high mountain in Matthew 4:8, we discovered that elevation in God is never accidental. Valleys are easy because gravity does the work. Mountains require intention because every step upward demands effort, sacrifice, and faith.
Many believers mistake the resistance of the climb for a sign that something is wrong. But Pastor reminded us that difficulty is often evidence of elevation. The fatigue, stretching, and pressure many of us are experiencing may not be proof that we’re failing; it may be proof that we’re climbing.
The message centered around three realities every believer encounters on the journey to higher living.
1. THE PROBLEM OF THE PLATEAU
Every climb begins with a decision to leave where you are for where God is calling you.
One of the greatest obstacles to spiritual growth is trying to carry unnecessary weight into a higher season. Just as mountain climbers travel lighter as they ascend, believers must learn to release the habits, mindsets, relationships, and emotional baggage that hinder their progress.
Many people are not stuck because they lack potential. They are stuck because they refuse to let go.
Key Truth:
Altitude exposes excess weight.
Sometimes God is not asking us to do more. He is asking us to release more.
Reflection Questions:
2. THE PRESSURE OF THE PEAK
As believers ascend, the atmosphere changes.
What worked in previous seasons may no longer work in the season God is calling us into. At higher altitudes, self-sufficiency begins to fail, and dependence upon God becomes essential.
Pastor taught that God often leads us into opportunities, assignments, and responsibilities that exceed our own capabilities. Why? Because He desires to shift our trust from ourselves to Him.
The pressure is not punishment.
The pressure is preparation.
Key Truth:
God lives where your flesh becomes uncomfortable.
Sometimes the reason you feel stretched is that God is expanding your capacity for the next level of purpose.
Reflection Questions:
3. THE PERSPECTIVE OF THE PINNACLE
Height changes what you value.
From the mountain, Jesus saw all the kingdoms of the world. Yet because He was operating from a higher perspective, He saw beyond the temptation and recognized the truth.
Pastor reminded us that elevation doesn’t simply help us see more—it helps us understand what matters less.
The things that once seemed overwhelming begin to shrink when viewed from God’s perspective.
Petty arguments lose their power.
Human approval loses its attraction.
Temporary distractions lose their significance.
Key Truth:
You don’t need human validation when you have divine vision.
When God raises your perspective, He also raises your priorities.
Reflection Questions:
THE BIG IDEA
The climb is not evidence that God has abandoned you.
The climb is evidence that God is elevating you.
What feels like resistance may actually be growth.
What feels like pressure may actually be preparation.
What feels like exhaustion may actually be expansion.
You are not dying.
You are climbing.
And the same God who called you out of the valley is the same God waiting for you at the summit.
THIS WEEK’S DECLARATION
I will not mistake resistance for rejection.
I release every weight that hinders my climb.
I refuse to settle on the plateau.
I will trust God in the pressure of the peak.
I will embrace His perspective at the pinnacle.
I am climbing higher, growing stronger, and hearing heaven more clearly.
The climb is difficult, but it is worth it.
LOOKING AHEAD
Next Week:
HIGH FREQUENCY LIVING – PART 3
“High Voltage Life: You Must Stay Plugged In”
The climb gets you higher, but what keeps you powered once you get there?
Join us as we continue discovering how to live fully connected to the source of God’s power and purpose.
Keep Climbing.
To watch this sermon, click the play button below.
To watch this entire service, which includes Praise & Worship, Prayer, and the Word, follow the link here: https://youtu.be/u2UGV3bQqDI?si=pnaSr6aRK9LfUa06
Using Jesus’ temptation on the exceedingly high mountain in Matthew 4:8, we discovered that elevation in God is never accidental. Valleys are easy because gravity does the work. Mountains require intention because every step upward demands effort, sacrifice, and faith.
Many believers mistake the resistance of the climb for a sign that something is wrong. But Pastor reminded us that difficulty is often evidence of elevation. The fatigue, stretching, and pressure many of us are experiencing may not be proof that we’re failing; it may be proof that we’re climbing.
The message centered around three realities every believer encounters on the journey to higher living.
1. THE PROBLEM OF THE PLATEAU
Every climb begins with a decision to leave where you are for where God is calling you.
One of the greatest obstacles to spiritual growth is trying to carry unnecessary weight into a higher season. Just as mountain climbers travel lighter as they ascend, believers must learn to release the habits, mindsets, relationships, and emotional baggage that hinder their progress.
Many people are not stuck because they lack potential. They are stuck because they refuse to let go.
Key Truth:
Altitude exposes excess weight.
Sometimes God is not asking us to do more. He is asking us to release more.
Reflection Questions:
- What emotional weight am I carrying that God has asked me to release?
- What relationship, habit, or mindset is slowing my climb?
- What would spiritual “traveling lighter” look like for me this week?
2. THE PRESSURE OF THE PEAK
As believers ascend, the atmosphere changes.
What worked in previous seasons may no longer work in the season God is calling us into. At higher altitudes, self-sufficiency begins to fail, and dependence upon God becomes essential.
Pastor taught that God often leads us into opportunities, assignments, and responsibilities that exceed our own capabilities. Why? Because He desires to shift our trust from ourselves to Him.
The pressure is not punishment.
The pressure is preparation.
Key Truth:
God lives where your flesh becomes uncomfortable.
Sometimes the reason you feel stretched is that God is expanding your capacity for the next level of purpose.
Reflection Questions:
- Where is God calling me beyond my comfort zone?
- What area of my life still depends more on my ability than God’s power?
- How can I practice greater dependence on God this week?
3. THE PERSPECTIVE OF THE PINNACLE
Height changes what you value.
From the mountain, Jesus saw all the kingdoms of the world. Yet because He was operating from a higher perspective, He saw beyond the temptation and recognized the truth.
Pastor reminded us that elevation doesn’t simply help us see more—it helps us understand what matters less.
The things that once seemed overwhelming begin to shrink when viewed from God’s perspective.
Petty arguments lose their power.
Human approval loses its attraction.
Temporary distractions lose their significance.
Key Truth:
You don’t need human validation when you have divine vision.
When God raises your perspective, He also raises your priorities.
Reflection Questions:
- What issue has been consuming my attention that may not matter from God’s perspective?
- Am I pursuing applause or assignment?
- What would it look like to view my current challenge from the summit rather than the valley?
THE BIG IDEA
The climb is not evidence that God has abandoned you.
The climb is evidence that God is elevating you.
What feels like resistance may actually be growth.
What feels like pressure may actually be preparation.
What feels like exhaustion may actually be expansion.
You are not dying.
You are climbing.
And the same God who called you out of the valley is the same God waiting for you at the summit.
THIS WEEK’S DECLARATION
I will not mistake resistance for rejection.
I release every weight that hinders my climb.
I refuse to settle on the plateau.
I will trust God in the pressure of the peak.
I will embrace His perspective at the pinnacle.
I am climbing higher, growing stronger, and hearing heaven more clearly.
The climb is difficult, but it is worth it.
LOOKING AHEAD
Next Week:
HIGH FREQUENCY LIVING – PART 3
“High Voltage Life: You Must Stay Plugged In”
The climb gets you higher, but what keeps you powered once you get there?
Join us as we continue discovering how to live fully connected to the source of God’s power and purpose.
Keep Climbing.
To watch this sermon, click the play button below.
To watch this entire service, which includes Praise & Worship, Prayer, and the Word, follow the link here: https://youtu.be/u2UGV3bQqDI?si=pnaSr6aRK9LfUa06

Posted in Sermon Recap
