It’s that time of the year again!
Beginning from Monday, 12th January, and for the next 20 weekdays, we will be spending every morning in prophetic prayers and meditation.
The testimonies from last year’s edition are still rolling in.
Don’t miss this for anything!
Time: 6am
YouTube channel: Triumph30 International Ministries
Are you ready to build capacityyyyyy?🔥🔥🔥
Joining us at Reboot Camp 2025 is minister @Simplysunmi 🥳🥳🥳
It's going to be a heaven on earth experience 💃🏽🕺🏽
It’s going to be a meeting of rejuvenation, indoctrination, celebration, and a harvest of souls — a divine reset for the year ahead! 🙌🏽
📍 Venue: Celebr8 Centre HQ, Vori Close, Acme Road, Ogba, Lagos
📅 Date: December 4–7, 2025
Don’t miss it! ❤️
#RebootCamp2025
#ComeGetRICH
#CCIGlobal
Gifts flourish in service.
The more of yourself you pour out, the more of Himself God refills.
In that pattern of giving and receiving, your gifts are sharpened, stretched, and multiplied. You discover capacities you never imagined, and hidden talents begin to surface.
Serve.
God took Adam and Eve out of the garden of Eden.
He told Lot to get out of Sodom.
Joseph left behind his garment with Potiphars wife.
The best way to deal with temptation is to deal with the proximity issue. Separate yourself!
I was wished death yesterday for reminding the people of God what the Bible says.
A former leader of our country passed away. During his tenure, many atrocities were committed; lives lost, futures shattered, and entire generations scarred by hardship and injustice. The pain is valid. The anger is understandable.
But what shocked me was seeing Christians rejoicing over his death. I got endless replies especially quoting verses like Proverbs 11:10: “When the wicked perish, there is rejoicing.”
Since yesterday, I’ve been insulted, mocked, and attacked by both Christians and non-Christians, some even wished me death, because I said believers ought not to rejoice when the wicked perish.
Not because we approve of their actions, but because we carry the heart of Jesus and understand the weight of eternity and the eternal fate of an unsaved soul.
Yes, Proverbs 11:10 exists. Psalm 58:10, and even Exodus 15, where the Israelites sang after Pharaoh’s army drowned.
But not everything recorded in the Bible is something we’re meant to imitate.
Some passages are descriptive: they show us what people did. Others are prescriptive: they show us what God commands us to do.
Just because the Bible says people rejoiced doesn’t always mean we are meant to do the same.
The real question is: what did Jesus teach us to do?
He taught us to pray for our enemies (Matthew 5:44),
-to bless those who curse us,
-to not repay evil for evil (Romans 12:17), and
-to not gloat when our enemy falls (Proverbs 24:17).
We forget: before we were saved, we too were the wicked. We were enemies of God, dead in sin, deserving of wrath (Ephesians 2:1–5). But God, in His mercy, reached out to us.
So no, don’t celebrate death, even of a wicked leader. Not because I approve of his actions, I don’t. I understand the impulse to rejoice. But this is about the state of our hearts. Do we want to look more like the world in our response, or more like Christ?
It always amazes me how quickly people question a Christian leader who owns something expensive. Suddenly, everyone puts on a robe of virtue and asks, “Why hasn’t he sold it and given the money to the poor?”
But let’s play that out: he sells everything: his house, car, even his Samsung Fold for a torchlight phone. What next? He makes sure to own nothing till he dies? Does that eradicate poverty? Do beggars stop appearing the next day? Of course not. So what’s the real issue here?
We need to realize that prosperity and generosity are not mutually exclusive. A man can be richly blessed and still give sacrificially to the poor. In fact, it’s often from wealth that true, sustainable help flows, just like the Good Samaritan who could afford to help.
So why does this make us uncomfortable?
1.Historical baggage – Many still associate holiness with visible lack, forgetting that the Bible celebrates both contentment and abundance.
2.Past abuses – Yes, some have misused Church funds. But we can’t let the few guilty ones make us suspicious of all who prosper.
3.Envy in disguise – Sometimes our outrage is just jealousy wrapped in righteous anger.
4.Misunderstanding the gospel – Poverty isn’t the proof of righteousness, and prosperity isn’t sin. It’s stewardship that matters.
Truth is, if you think that pastor should sell his car for the poor, maybe you should sell your iPhone, your Samsung, your laptop too. There’s no difference—just scale.
Let’s stop confusing wealth with wickedness. The real question isn’t “Why does he have so much?” but “What is he doing with what he has?”
As a Church, we would like to specially congratulate our Lead Pastor and Apostle, @pst_iren on this landmark role as the President of the National Youth Wing of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria. ❤️🎉
We are indeed proud of you sir for achieving this feat, and we know that this new role prospers in your hand.
We see your sheer dedication to the vision of our church and how you lead us, and that's proof to show how remarkable you are as a leader.
Congratulations Apostle. We your children are proud of you.🥹🥹❤️
Family, let us congratulate our Apostle in the comments!❤️❤️
#cciglobal
#pfn
Congratulations Apostle!!!!!! @pst_iren . We love you and we pray that you are strengthened for this new dimension in Jesus name. God bless you immensely Sir🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
As a Church, we would like to specially congratulate our Lead Pastor and Apostle, @pst_iren on this landmark role as the President of the National Youth Wing of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria. ❤️🎉
We are indeed proud of you sir for achieving this feat, and we know that this new role prospers in your hand.
We see your sheer dedication to the vision of our church and how you lead us, and that's proof to show how remarkable you are as a leader.
Congratulations Apostle. We your children are proud of you.🥹🥹❤️
Family, let us congratulate our Apostle in the comments!❤️❤️
#cciglobal
#pfn
After a few years of being a Christian,
There should be other Christians that can say they got saved, planted in church, began to love & serve God more, because they met you.
If there’s none, you’re living for yourself and that’s not the pattern Jesus gave us.
Be fruitful!
It’s a shallow argument to berate a Christian song simply because it’s also played in clubs or because it’s danceable. That mindset reflects more about one’s limited exposure than it does about the song itself. The comparison to someone like Don Moen, asking why his songs aren’t played in clubs, is fundamentally flawed. How do you know what hasn’t been played in clubs? How many clubs have you actually been to? Slap a danceable beat to Don Moen’s lyrics first and see.
The belief that a song must be slow and solemn to be “godly” reveals a very skewed definition of spirituality. It’s not about tempo, it’s about truth. It’s called genre. Christian songs meant for celebration, thanksgiving, and joy fall under a different category from those crafted for solemn worship or personal devotion. We don’t eat every meal with the same cutlery, so why expect every song to fit one sound?
No Turning Back trended heavily among the body of Christ; in churches, homes and on social media. Everyone was declaring to follow Jesus forever but your focus is that it spilled to the clubs too or you don’t like the way the singer looked etc. That’s missing the point entirely.
Let’s not forget—many of the hymns we now revere were, in their day, controversial. Why? Because their melodies were adapted from bars, taverns, and folk tunes. And yet, God used them to touch lives across generations. The sanctity of a song is in its message and the heart behind it.
A song can sound “spiritual” and still be full of biblical error. On the other hand, a groovy, joyful track can carry deep scriptural truth. Remember David’s dance when the Ark of the Covenant returned to Israel? It wasn’t slow. Miriam’s song after the Red Sea miracle wasn’t a hymn in a minor key. These were joyful, expressive, energetic celebrations of God’s power. Hannah’s song in 1 Samuel 2 was a prayerful, prophetic outpouring after years of sorrow. Different moments call for different expressions.
In the end, let’s not gatekeep the sound of worship. Let’s discern the spirit and the truth behind it.
People are more likely to believe in you when you believe in yourself enough to not care if they do.
Your obsession with the validation of men is counterproductive.
People are more likely to believe in you when you believe in yourself enough to not care if they do.
Your obsession with the validation of men is counterproductive.