Locust & Honey Publications has narrated 3 audiobooks on Listento.it by 2 authors. The most-rated is The Everlasting Covenant of the Kingdom: Psalm 105:8 - Remembering His Covenant.

"And when He had said this, He breathed on them and said to them, 'Receive the Holy Spirit.'" John 20:22 NASB Holy Spirit is the essence and reality of the person of Yahweh. He is the Spirit of Yahweh and Yahshua come again to those who receive him. Holy Spirit is not "Casper, the friendly ghost" part of God. He is not a holy ghost, a spirit-guide, mantra, or angel. He is the most important person we will ever know, and he is looking forward to connecting, communicating, and collaborating with his sons in the eternal now! This book is about the importance of receiving him for who he is and having a better understanding of the way of the Father’s Heart by Holy Spirit. “It is every son’s responsibility to catch and embrace the Father’s Heart and Spirit in their lifetime.” “As Mary was with child by Holy Spirit, the seed of the word without Holy Spirit is incapable of immaculate conception.” “The difference between religious persuasion and a Spirit-led life is when Holy Spirit allows us to experience freedom in the harness of restraint.” “Ever learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth and ever dying and never able to live free in Him have a lot in common.”
©2017 Blake Higginbotham (P)2019 Blake Higginbotham

Ekklesia: "a called-out and gathered-together people". The audiobook speaks of a people who have been called out of the religious systems of this world. They have been gathered together by the Holy Spirit for the greater purpose of the Kingdom of Yahweh. They represent the judicial branch and legislative arm of the Kingdom of Yahweh. They have been strategically repositioned and synergistically placed in order to advance the Kingdom of Yahweh. They have been divinely commissioned and empowered to represent Yahshua the Messiah in every area of life and ministry.
©2014 Blake Higginbotham (P)2019 Blake Higginbotham

The term covenant is normally used when referring to the older and newer testaments of the Bible (the Scripture). It is most commonly used when referring to a legal contract or binding agreement between two or more people. That being said, it is more about Yahweh’s promise of blessing and favor to those who remember his covenant and keep his commandments to do them. Remembering that Yahweh is and has always been a covenant making and keeping Elohim, and his covenant and kingdom are both everlasting and eternal. Keeping his commandments is about loving him and his ways and obeying the universal law (or word) that governs our lives. It is not about you and me making some carnal agreement with him, or attempting to fulfill the righteous requirements of the law apart from Holy Spirit. It is not about some soulish vow or religious commitment. Remembering His Covenant is about living and walking in and by Holy Spirit and being ever mindful of the blessing and his favor and way. If grace and peace is the stabilizing force of all we say and do, then when grace and peace are not working, it should be an indicator that we are no longer resting in him. Leaving his rest and operating outside of his grace and peace facilitates carnal judgments and fleshly works. Both of which will result in failure to remember his covenant of love and grace. He is remembering forever his covenant, his word to 1,000 generations. He commanded us to remember his covenant, but he did not suggest that we could do anything to save or redeem ourselves from the curse of not obeying the law. The Scripture does not teach that the law of Yahweh is a curse, nor does it teach that the righteous requirement of the law does not have to be fulfilled. It is a mistake to assume that love and grace did away with the consequences of breaking the universal law or word of Yahweh. Simply put, the curse of the law is the consequences that we suffer because of sin and disobedience. The blood of the everlasting covenant of the kingdom accomplished in that moment what human effort never could.
©2018 Blake L. Higginbotham (P)2019 Blake L. Higginbotham