Description
Building the Temple to Hold the Glory: Judgment Begins at the House of God by David S. Webb is a Scripture-rooted call for the Church to return to holiness, obedience, order, and the government of God.
This book is not about constructing a physical building. It is about becoming a spiritual house that can carry the weight of God’s presence. David S. Webb writes with urgency to ask a necessary question: Can what we are building carry the Glory God intends to place upon it?
A Call to Build According to God’s Pattern
Many believers long for revival, presence, power, and Kingdom authority. Yet God’s Glory does not rest on disorder, mixture, pride, or man-made platforms. The house must come into alignment with the Builder.
Building the Temple to Hold the Glory challenges readers to examine the foundation, structure, motives, and authority systems within the house of God. Webb points readers back to repentance, obedience, purity, trust, and spiritual government. He reminds the Church that God does not merely visit what man builds. He fills what agrees with His order.
Judgment Begins at the House of God
The subtitle, Judgment Begins at the House of God, frames the weight of the message. Before the Church can carry greater authority, she must allow the Lord to cleanse, correct, and restore what has become compromised. This is not a message of condemnation. Instead, it is a call to mercy, maturity, and preparation.
Through themes of vision, authority, obedience, leadership, trust, holiness, mixture, remnant faithfulness, and Kingdom order, Webb calls believers to build with reverence rather than ambition.
Who This Book Is For
This book is for pastors, leaders, intercessors, builders, and believers who desire more than religious activity. It is for those who want the Church to become a dwelling place for the presence of God. It is also for readers who sense that God is calling His people back to alignment before greater Glory can come.
Building the Temple to Hold the Glory invites the reader to step beyond platform-centered Christianity and return to the pattern of the King. The question is not simply whether we are building. The question is whether what we are building can hold the Glory.






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