Ekballo
Ekballo
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The harvest is not coming.
The harvest is here.
And the laborers are still too few.
Ekballo is not merely a book—it is a summons. A trumpet call. A holy disruption aimed at comfortable Christianity and passive faith. Rooted in the powerful words of Jesus in Luke 10:2 — “The harvest truly is great, but the laborers are few…” — this book confronts a question many believers avoid:
What if God must ekballo us—drive us, thrust us, propel us—into the fields because we would never go willingly?
The Greek word ekballo does not suggest a gentle invitation. It means to cast out, to send forth with force, to push into purpose. It implies urgency. Movement. Divine insistence.
In an era marked by global unrest, spiritual confusion, moral decline, and unprecedented shaking, the world does not need more spectators—it needs laborers. More hands. More surrendered hearts. More bold obedience. More grace on the field.
Ekballo is a piercing yet hopeful reflection on the end-time revival and the heartbeat of God for souls. It explores the tension between comfort and calling, safety and surrender, preparation and obedience. Why are the fields still white with harvest? Why are so many believers still standing at the edge? And what happens when God decides it is time to move us—whether we feel ready or not?
This book challenges believers to examine their lives in light of eternity. It calls pastors, intercessors, missionaries, marketplace leaders, students, and everyday disciples to recognize that the harvest field is not limited to foreign nations—it includes neighborhoods, workplaces, campuses, cities, and digital spaces.
Through scriptural insight and prophetic urgency, Ekballo awakens a holy restlessness. It stirs courage where fear has settled. It confronts apathy with purpose. And it reminds every reader that revival is not an event to attend—but a commission to answer.
If you sense that there is more—
If you feel the weight of God’s heartbeat for souls—
If you know comfort can no longer compete with calling—
Then Ekballo is for you.
Because the Lord of the harvest is still speaking.
And this time, He may not be whispering.
