Prophetic voice Chuck Pierce is urging the Body of Christ to lift its eyes, take courage and expect something far greater on the horizon: the revealing of God’s glory within His people.
Pierce opened his message by reminding listeners that God’s desire has always been to restore the glory of His sons and daughters. “God is longing to restore the glory He knit into you,” he said.
Quoting Romans 3, he added, “We have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.” That universal fallenness, Pierce noted, is not the end of the story, but the very reason Jesus came.
“What Moses and the prophets witnessed to all those years has happened,” Pierce declared. “The God setting things right that we read about has become Jesus setting things right for us… When you’ve done something wrong, Jesus came to set it right.”
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Pierce explained that many believers live under the weight of their failures, replaying every mistake and setback. “All they do is go back and rehearse all their sorry record and the messes they made,” he said.
But grace requires a shift in posture. “There ain’t nothing you can do to get it,” he emphasized. It is only received when we come honestly before God, acknowledging our weakness. “He has to look down at you when you look up at him and say, ‘I am the biggest mess on earth.’ And He says, ‘This is what I say about your mess.’ And He pours grace all over you.”
According to Pierce, that outpouring is not merely for the sake of comfort but for transformation — a restoration to God’s original intent. “He got us out of the mess we’re in and restored us to where he always wanted us to be,” he said. “His Son paid the price for you to shine. See, that’s glory.”
A Prophetic Window for Rebuilding
Around the midpoint of his message, Pierce pointed to the book of Haggai and a prophetic pattern that occurs when God leads His people out of captivity. “There comes a time where you enter in to the greater glory,” he said, noting that Israel experienced such a moment after 70 years of Babylonian captivity.
Echoing Ezra’s instruction to the returning exiles, Pierce emphasized that three spiritual dynamics converge when God calls His people to rebuild:
1. Break Discouragement to Experience Revival
“There’s going to be this small window where you can be totally revived,” Pierce taught, describing a moment of divine opportunity not to be missed.
2. Break Disinterest to Lay a New Foundation
“It’s going to be this window that causes a new foundation to be laid,” he said — a foundation that aligns God’s people for what comes next.
3. Break Disillusionment to Usher in Joy and Weeping
Pierce said this rebuilding produces a sound “so great nobody will be able to distinguish which is which.” He described it as “a sound that mingles… your mistakes from the past and the future that you know that I have for you,” culminating in a decree that “a new glory is coming.”
In a time when many feel weary, uncertain or delayed in their promises, Pierce’s message reframes the moment. Grace is not only covering the mess. It is rebuilding the house. And for those who have endured captivity, delay or discipline, the next window may be the one in which glory finally breaks through.
Abby Trivett is a writer and editor for Charisma Media and has a passion for sharing the gospel through the written word. She holds two degrees from Regent University, a B.A. in Communication with a concentration in Journalism and a Master of Arts in Journalism. She is the author of the upcoming book, The Power of Suddenly: Discover How God Can Change Everything in a Moment.











