Dag Heward-Mills and the Anointing That Draws Multitudes

There is something unmistakable about the atmosphere that follows Bishop Dag Heward-Mills. It is not hype. It is not showmanship. It is not manufactured emotion. It is the anointing. The weight of God’s presence that rests upon his life and ministry draws multitudes—not just to hear a man, but to encounter Jesus.

This anointing is not built overnight. It is cultivated in the secret place. It is birthed through prayer, sacrifice, and obedience. The crowds may come, but what they receive is not entertainment—they receive truth, healing, conviction, and grace. That is the power of the anointing.

Bishop Dag has never relied on charisma to build ministry. He has relied on the Holy Spirit. That reliance has made his voice carry further than microphones ever could. His words reach hearts, not just ears. And wherever he goes, people gather—not because of him, but because of the One he carries.

A Life That Hosts the Presence of God

There is no anointing without intimacy. Bishop Dag spends hours in the presence of God—not for preaching preparation, but because he knows he cannot function without it. His relationship with the Lord is not a public performance. It is a private fire that fuels every public expression.

He fasts, he prays, and he worships—not for show, but for sustenance. That spiritual discipline has created a vessel that God can trust. And when he speaks, it is not just human knowledge—it is a divine release. That is why the multitudes come.

They are drawn to the presence of God that rests upon his life. Some come for healing. Some come with questions. Others come without knowing why. But all of them come because the anointing draws.

Miracles That Follow the Word

Bishop Dag does not chase miracles. He preaches the Word. And the miracles follow. The anointing confirms the gospel. The sick are healed, the oppressed are delivered, and souls are saved—all because the presence of God is manifest when truth is boldly declared.

He teaches that the anointing is not for show—it is for service. It is not to glorify the vessel, but to glorify Jesus. And the greatest miracle of all is not physical—it is salvation. That is the miracle he longs to see most in every meeting, every campaign, every gathering.

The crowds do not come for spectacle. They come because something real happens when Jesus is lifted up. They come because they can feel the weight of heaven in the air. That is the anointing at work.

A Ministry That Points to Jesus

Bishop Dag never lets the attention stay on himself. He is constantly pointing people to Jesus. The anointing may draw the crowd, but it is the gospel that keeps them. His preaching is Christ-centered, cross-centered, and Spirit-filled. It is simple, clear, and full of power.

That’s why his meetings leave people changed. Because they didn’t just attend an event—they met a Person. And they encountered the presence of the Holy Spirit through the life of a man who has chosen to live yielded.

Through his ministry, Bishop Dag Heward-Mills reminds the Church that the anointing is not outdated. It still draws. It still heals. It still convicts. And when we live lives that are surrendered, the same presence that draws multitudes will rest on us too.

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