The Embryo Must Attach to Survive
- Dr. Lisa Hill
- Jan 2
- 2 min read
Conception alone is not enough to sustain life. In the earliest stage of pregnancy, the embryo can exist—and still be lost. Survival depends entirely on attachment. If the embryo does not embed itself into the uterine wall, it will pass without resistance, often unnoticed. Life was real, but it was not yet secured.
This natural reality exposes a sobering spiritual truth: not every God-given conception survives simply because it was genuine. Calling must attach. It must take hold within the carrier’s inner life, not merely ignite imagination, emotion, or hope. Until it is anchored, it remains vulnerable—to fatigue, fear, distraction, and the quiet pull of returning to what is familiar.
Attachment is not emotional agreement.
It is structural alignment.
In the natural, the womb must be made ready. Hormones stabilize. The environment becomes receptive. Space is prepared to receive and nourish life. Spiritually, the carrier’s life must also become hospitable to the assignment. This requires surrender of control, adjustment of rhythms, and willingness to be reordered. A calling that does not require change has not yet attached—it is still being admired rather than carried.
This is why early spiritual loss often happens without drama. There is no public failure, no obvious collapse. Instead, there is a slow disengagement. Conviction fades. The sense of urgency dissipates. Old patterns quietly resume. The calling does not disappear because God withdrew it; it fails because attachment never completed.
Rest plays a decisive role here. Implantation in the natural can be disrupted by shock, stress, or excessive movement. Spiritually, striving, urgency, and premature action create the same instability. God often leads carriers into stillness at this stage—not as delay, but as preservation. Silence is not absence. It is the condition that allows life to take hold.
Until a calling is embedded into obedience, it cannot withstand pressure.
Until it is anchored in trust, it cannot endure weight.
Survival depends on attachment.
Everything else—growth, clarity, fruit—comes later.

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