Hadar Creations

Author name: Oluwatosin Arodudu

Oluwatosin Olajumoke Arodudu also known as OOA is a writer, author, seasoned publisher, and coach with a divine mandate to awaken purpose and identity in believers. As the visionary behind Hadar Creations, a Publishing and Coaching Outfit, she has authored 17 impactful books on identity, leadership, and faith while helping over 100 authors publish works on personal development and Christian devotion. A prophetic writer and teacher with a heart for Kingdom leaders, Oluwatosin is the founder and lead coach at Divine Identity Visionaries Academy (DIVA), a prophetic teaching ministry equipping leaders in identity development and leadership excellence. Through her work, she has mentored and empowered thousands of individuals and leaders to thrive in their God-given callings.

Kingdom Writing, Scribes, The Annointed Pen

Preparing for a New Season of Divine Authorship

Preparation begins in the mind.
Old narratives must be dismantled, limiting beliefs, fear of scale, insecurity around visibility, and familiar patterns of distraction. God expands writers who are willing to think differently about time, focus, and obedience. Your schedule must reflect your calling. Your calendar should honor what God is emphasizing, not what merely fills space.

Kingdom Writing, My Blog, Publishing Quotes, Scribes, The Annointed Pen

Writing That Heals Nations

In a broken world, where nations are wounded by narcissism, gaslighting, corruption, violence, trauma, and injustice, God is once again calling for anointed writers, scribes who carry balm in their words and light in their sentences. Writing that heals nations is not political writing, or casual reflection. It is writing birthed from the secret place. Writing drenched in revelation. Writing that speaks to the soul of a people.

Kingdom Writing, My Blog, Publishing Quotes, Scribes, The Annointed Pen

Writing from Your Scars, Not Your Wounds

God never wastes pain, but He also never rushes healing. He allows us to walk through seasons of breaking so that, in due time, our stories become vessels of comfort to others. Some writers rush to share their pain before it has met His presence. But true healing writing happens after divine surgery when the Holy Spirit has touched the wound, and what remains is testimony, not trauma.

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