
This message opens with a powerful question: Which well are you drinking from? In other words, what is feeding your life right now? Many people draw strength from human wisdom, relationships, routines, social media, church activity, or “formulas” taught by men. But the Apostle Tose Ndebele challenges us to recognize that there is water in the realm of the Spirit—and God is inviting His people into a deeper place of hunger and thirst for Him.
The central theme is clear: 2026 is being declared as a season of seeking God. It is not a passive season; it is an exciting season, but it will require action. God is calling a generation to return to the original order: seek God first, before seeking anything else.
A Divine Hunger: God Is Calling Us to Thirst for Him
The message is anchored in Matthew 5:6:
“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”
This is not ordinary desire. It is a spiritual hunger that only God can create—and only God can satisfy. Apostle Tose Ndebele emphasizes that when God creates this hunger in us, it is because He intends to fill us. God does not stir thirst without providing water.
The message ties this hunger to Jesus’ words that He is the true source of satisfaction, echoing the truth that in Christ, the believer does not remain empty.
Seek First: God’s Order Unlocks God’s Additions
One of the strongest foundations of the teaching comes from Matthew 6:33:
“Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you.”
Apostle Tose Ndebele explains that many believers spend their lives chasing “things”—money, success, marriage outcomes, opportunities, stability—yet remain anxious and dry spiritually. The Kingdom principle is that God’s order comes first. When we put the “first pattern” of God in place, the rest begins to align.
This includes the “law of first fruits”: giving God the first place—first in time, first in priority, first in affection—so that everything after becomes aligned and blessed.
Key point: When you seek God first, you become satisfied, and God begins to add what you were striving for.
A Call to Action: This Season Demands Movement
Apostle Tose Ndebele repeatedly declares: This is an exciting season, but it will call for action.
Seeking is not a mindset only—it is a pursuit.
Apostle Tose Ndebele asked deeply practical questions:
- “How does God want me to run my marriage?”
- “How does God want me to run my business?”
- “How does God want me to raise my children?”
The point is that God has a way of doing things, and His ways are perfect. Human methods may look intelligent and structured, but they can still lead to destruction when God is not the foundation. The message warns that the ways of men may be convincing, but the outcomes can be disastrous, while God’s ways are flawless.
Why Seeking Matters: God Seekers Are Spared and Preserved
The message teaches that seekers of God experience protection and preservation, even in seasons of judgment and global shaking.
From Zephaniah 2:3, Apostle Tose Ndebele explains that seeking God is connected to being hidden or spared in difficult times. Examples are used:
- Noah survived judgment because he was aligned with God.
- Lot survived destruction because of covenant covering and connection to God’s purposes.
The teaching is clear: God seekers are not judged with the world—they are preserved.
Seek God and Live: The Promise of Abundant Life (Amos 5)
A central portion of the teaching comes from Amos 5:4–8, especially the command:
“Seek Me and live.”
Apostle Tose Ndebele explains that living is not the same as existing. God is not calling us merely to survive the year—He is calling us into life in fullness, the abundance Jesus describes (referencing John 10:10).
The message declares that seeking God leads to:
- healing
- deliverance
- increase
- upward movement in life
- strength during global instability
“When others are going down, you shall go up.”
Apostle Tose Ndebele emphasizes that seekers experience a different reality—not because of luck, but because of alignment with God.
A Warning: Don’t Seek “Church” Instead of Seeking God
One of the sharpest corrections in the sermon is aimed at believers who mistake activity for intimacy.
The message warns: Do not seek “Bethel” (the house of God) instead of seeking God.
In other words, church attendance, church identity, and religious activity cannot replace personal pursuit of God.
Apostle Tose Ndebele explains that some people are in church yet spiritually empty because their focus is on the institution instead of God Himself. Church is good, but God is first. When God is first, church becomes meaningful, not mechanical.
Another Warning: God Is Not a “Sanitizer”
A major point of instruction is this statement:
God is not a sanitizer.
Apostle Tose Ndebele warns against starting relationships, decisions, and lifestyles outside God—and then later asking God to bless them. The message teaches that what begins outside God often remains outside God, producing painful outcomes.
This warning becomes especially strong around marriage and relationships. The teaching stresses that marriage is God’s institution and requires God-centered people.
The progression described is:
- male → man
- female → woman
- man → father
- woman → mother
In other words, maturity is required, and seeking God is part of growing into the roles God has assigned.
Supernatural Confidence: Seeking the God Who Changes Darkness Into Light
From Amos 5:8, God is described as the One who:
- turns deep darkness into morning
- calls waters and pours them on the earth
- rules creation and seasons
Apostle Tose Ndebele teaches that when you seek the God of transformation, you gain confidence even in dark seasons: light is coming because the One you seek is the One who changes seasons.
Biblical illustrations reinforce this:
- The fire could not consume the three Hebrew boys because they were “watered” spiritually.
- Joseph’s circumstances could not destroy him because “God was with Joseph.”
Key point: God seekers cannot be burned by the enemy’s circumstances when God is with them.
Prophecy Requires Pursuit: Jeremiah 29:11–13
The message closes with a powerful reminder: God’s promises must be met with seeking.
Many people quote Jeremiah 29:11 (“I know the plans I have for you…”) but forget the following verses:
“Then you will seek me… and you will find me when you search for me with all your heart.”
Apostle Tose Ndebele teaches that prophecy is not meant to make believers passive. Prophetic words are activated by seeking God. If we do not seek, we may carry promises without ever walking into them.
Conclusion: Welcome to Season 2026 — The Season of Seeking God
The message of this season is clear and unmistakable: 2026 is a season of seeking God. It is a divine call to return to the true source of life, direction, and fulfillment. God is inviting His people to examine which well they are drawing from and to make a deliberate decision to seek Him above all else.
Seeking God is not a religious activity—it is a posture of the heart and a daily pursuit. When we seek God first, we align ourselves with His order, His ways, and His righteousness. In that alignment, we experience what He promised: life, preservation, transformation, provision, and abundance. The Scriptures assure us that those who seek God are not forgotten, not destroyed, and not left empty. They live.
As we step fully into this season, the call is not to seek things, people, or systems, but to seek God Himself—early, diligently, and wholeheartedly. When God becomes our primary pursuit, everything else finds its proper place. This is the season to move beyond routine faith into intentional intimacy, beyond survival into true living.
Welcome to the season of seeking God. When you seek Him, you shall live.
