Greetings, beloved nation.
IN this life we are living, God desires to demonstrate miracles in the lives of believers, miracles so evident that no one will ever claim they are stage-managed. This is the work of the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of Truth. One of the key things
God wants to manifest in the Church is that the power of God must be seen at work in the Church of the Living God.
The Bible says we are a city on a hill, meaning the Church must reveal the power of God and the living presence of Jesus Christ working within us.
Many times, the Church has gone unnoticed by the world because we have not yet fully demonstrated the dimension of power outlined in Scripture and intended in God’s divine plan.
Every Sunday, we witness thousands of born-again believers carrying their Bibles to church. The roads leading to our churches are filled with cars; others walk or cycle to attend services. Yet from Monday to Saturday, the power of God is often absent across the spheres of our society. In offices, reception areas and other influential spaces, we encounter managers and workers who are bitter, frustrated, angry and unhappy. One begins to ask: where are the Christians, who were speaking in tongues on Sunday, those giving powerful testimonies? In most environments, there is no believer carrying an atmosphere of God’s presence into the workplace or the marketplace.
So, my question is this: did God release His power only to be seen on Sundays during services? Or is His power meant to be visible both inside the Church and out in our communities?
There is a dimension we have yet to enter, the undeniable dimension, where the believer witnesses such evident workings of God that even unbelievers will confess, “There is a God in Heaven.” If we fail to walk in this realm, the Church will operate in mediocrity, powerless and uninspiring. But because God seeks glory, His glory must be revealed in our lives so that He may be glorified. In Galatians 1:24, Paul writes, “And they glorified God in me.” This means there was something visible in Paul’s life that caused others to glorify God. A particular dimension of power was at work in him.
In John 9, we read the account of a man born blind. After Jesus anointed his eyes with clay, He told him to go and wash in the Pool of Siloam. In verses 8–10, we are told that the man’s neighbours said, “Is this not the same man who used to sit and beg?” Others said, “It is he,” while some said, “He only looks like him.” But the man declared, “I am he.” They recognised a miracle in his life—undeniable and visible.
The question we must ask is: what do people see in us, in our workplaces, schools, and neighbourhoods? Do they witness a transformative power working in believers—something undeniable?
Surely, we must pray for God to release a grace so visible that when people look at us, they are drawn to God. In verse 11, the man gives his testimony, saying, “A man called Jesus made clay and anointed my eyes and said to me, ‘Go to the Pool of Siloam and wash.’ So I went and washed, and I received sight.” He had a personal testimony — an experience so real that it could not be denied.
God is releasing a dimension of glory upon individuals that will cause others to question, wonder and even debate, not because of scandals or controversies, but because of the evident presence of God in our lives. This glory will be so loud and so clear that both believers and non-believers will take notice. There must be two dimensions: the visible presence of God inside the Church, and a tangible impact outside in the community.
No matter what you’re going through, whether it’s gossip, slander, sickness, unemployment, or failure — I want to encourage you to seek the One who can confound your enemies. When He acts, no one can deny it, for it is all for His glory.
It is time for the Church to position itself for miracles through prayer. The blessing of God comes to those who know how to seek Him earnestly. The reason we have not yet seen this dimension of undeniable miracles, where the power of God is active and transforming, is because the Church has not truly pursued God. We’ve become too comfortable with failure and disappointment.
The Bible says in Jeremiah 29:13–14,
“You will seek Me and find Me when you search for Me with all your heart. I will be found by you, declares the Lord, and I will bring you back from captivity…”
This is the promise: when we seek Him wholeheartedly, these noticeable dimensions will be made manifest.
In Acts 4:14–16, the Bible tells us:
“Seeing the man who had been healed standing with them, they could say nothing against it. But when they had commanded them to go aside out of the council, they conferred among themselves, saying, ‘What shall we do to these men? For, indeed, a notable miracle has been done through them, and we cannot deny it.’”
Let us pursue God until the miracles we walk in are undeniable, visible, powerful and transformative, both inside the
Church and out in the world.
God bless you all.



