Cornelius

[The Glory Unveiled] 

And they said, “Cornelius, a centurion, an upright and God-fearing man, who is well spoken of by the whole Jewish nation, was directed by a holy angel to send for you to come to his house and to hear what you have to say.” [ Acts 10:22 NIV ]

Cornelius is one of the most compelling figures in the New Testament, not because of a single dramatic moment, but because of a long, quiet history of faithfulness. What we often miss is that what he is remembered for did not happen overnight. It was the fruit of days—perhaps years—of consistent almsgiving and reverent living. He did not give to win applause or earn a reputation. He did not give to provoke a response or secure a reward. He did not even give because he was a Christian trying to fulfill a religious obligation. In fact, when his alms ascended to heaven as a memorial before God, Cornelius was not a Christian at all. He was a Gentile—outside the covenant, beyond the promises, with no claim to privilege. Yet his faithfulness moved heaven.

Those quiet, unseen acts triggered what we might call divine protocol. Angels were dispatched to his house. Men were repositioned on the earth in his favor. What Cornelius did in secret, God honored openly. He received VIP treatment from heaven, not because of a title he carried, but because of the purity of the conscience from which he lived. This is the power of integrity before God. When we act from the sincere conscience God has placed within us—without manipulation, without ulterior motive—we attract the help of God. And once His help comes, His Spirit leads us forward, empowering our actions and expanding our influence. What begins as simple obedience becomes a doorway into divine intervention.

Prayer_Bead: Father, thank you for the privilege to walk in step with the nudging of the Holy Spirit. 

Wisdom_Quote: Faithfulness opens doors without keys

#GNews: Unveiling the glory of God.

God’s righteousness 

[The Glory Unveiled]

“Lay aside your simple thoughts and leave your paths behind. Agree with my ways, live in my truth, and you will find righteousness.”” [ Proverbs‬ ‭9‬:‭6‬ ‭TPT‬‬ ]

In this life, whenever we want to find something more clearly and more easily, there is always one simple principle: we must leave behind whatever hinders our ability to recognize that thing. Once the obstacle is removed, clarity comes. What we seek becomes visible. For the believer, righteousness is that pursuit. It is our destination, the priceless jewel we are searching for, and ultimately the identity we are meant to discover. Yet throughout history, many have tried countless methods to attain righteousness—through effort, through striving, through their own understanding. But here, God shows us a different way. He reveals that the issue is not the absence of righteousness, but the presence of limitations—our old ways of thinking, our former paths, our own definitions of truth. The thoughts we cling to can quietly block our ability to align with God and recognize His righteousness when it stands before us. To find the righteousness of God, we must first agree with God. We must accept His ways and live within His truth. Because unless we agree with His ways, we cannot recognize His truth—and it is His truth that opens the door to righteousness. This is why we are called to leave our own ways behind. Not to improve them, but to surrender them. To follow God’s ways is to step into His truth. And once we are living in His truth, righteousness is no longer something we chase. It is no longer something we strive to attain. It becomes our natural life.

Prayer_Bead: Father, thank you for the privilege to live as the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus. 

Wisdom_Quote: Unless we release what we hold on to, we cannot receive what God has released. 

#GNews: Unveiling the glory of God.

A time to sow

[The Glory Unveiled]

Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. [ Galatians 6:7 KJV ]

We must be careful about the kind of seeds we sow, especially at the beginning of a new year or as we step into a new season. Seedtime and harvest are inseparably connected—what we sow is exactly what we will reap. Because of this, we cannot afford to sow carelessly. In due time, a harvest will come, and it will reveal the nature of the seeds we planted, whether or not we considered the outcome. What is planted will grow, and what grows will be reaped. So let us not be deceived: whatever a person sows, that is what they will reap in due season. No one sows weeds and expects wheat. No one plants rice and anticipates grass. This is a principle God embedded into His creation, and because it comes from Him, it cannot be mocked or bypassed. What God put in place is what we experience. No one can truthfully say they sowed one thing and reaped another. This is why the man with one talent, who refused to invest it, received nothing more in return. He harvested exactly what he sowed. After many years, all he had to show was what he originally buried. The harvest simply revealed the seed. So choose your seeds carefully, because the ground is faithful, time is relentless, and the harvest is inevitable.

Prayer_Bead: Incredible God, thank you for your order. As I sow faithfully, I appreciate you for the bountiful harvest. 

Wisdom_Quote: What a man sows is what they reap.  

#GNews: Unveiling the glory of God.

New year or new life?

[The Glory Unveiled]

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come. [ 2 Corinthians 5:17 NIV ]

New years are often marked by celebrations, declarations, and resolutions. We cross over at midnight and assume that because the calendar has changed, life has changed too. But the truth is this: life does not become new simply because we entered a new year and wished the old one away.Newness does not work like that. The kind of newness that unlocks every other new beginning is not seasonal—it is positional. It does not come by wishes, affirmations, or desire alone. It comes by conscious choice. When a person chooses Jesus—when they believe in His finished work and stand in the provision secured by that work—then, and only then, the old truly passes away and the new comes to stay. Scripture declares that if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. This new creation is not a metaphor; it is a spiritual reality. In Christ, we are recreated after His image, and the very life of Jesus is expressed through the man or woman who comes into Him. The old does not pass away because we crossed into a new year. It passes away because we are positioned in Christ. Without Christ, a new year is only a new date—not a new life. You may enter January 1st, but if you are not in Christ, you have not entered newness. Jesus is the mechanic of newness. He alone has the power to replace the old with the new. Welcome Him into your life, stand in what He has finished, and you will experience a newness that no calendar change can produce—and no season can take away.

Prayer_Bead: Lord Jesus, thank you for your life in me that has made me a new creation and 

Wisdom_Quote: Newness does not happen because you entered a new year but because you entered Christ. 

#GNews: Unveiling the glory of God.