Honour & Transformation:
- Cotm Neath
- 20 hours ago
- 4 min read
Seeing It Already Done
Sunday Round‑Up - Sarah Heather | 15 March 2026
This Sunday felt like standing on holy ground—one of those rare moments where God pulls back the veil just enough for us to glimpse what He’s doing in the Holy Place. It was a day of revelation, conviction, and deep encouragement, woven together through personal encounter and powerful teaching.
A Personal Insight: Liquid Silver, Lightning Glass & A Call to Honour
During the service, God showed me a vivid picture. I saw Him pour liquid silver into an ants’ nest on a beach. When He pulled it out, the hardened silver revealed the hidden tunnels beneath the sand—the unseen persistence, the digging, the path carved out over time.
Then lightning struck the sand, turning it into glass. In an instant, something tiny and fragile was transformed at a molecular level into something beautiful and tangible.
And God whispered:
“I take what is small and make it new. My work is beyond your understanding but all I ask is for you to believe—see what I have done, what I am doing, and what I will do.”
He promised a physical, tangible example of His power and faithfulness.
I didn’t expect that example to come so quickly.

Sunday Evening: A Nudge Toward Honour
That night, my cousin messaged our family WhatsApp group asking us all to call my 90‑year‑old grandfather more often. He’s been really low since the doctor officially registered him blind. And I knew—I haven’t been making enough of an effort to visit him.
With everything Sarah had taught about honour still stirring in me, I felt the conviction. So, I went down to see him. As I walked through his front door… there were ants. A whole trail of them.
After the vision God had shown me on Sunday—the ants’ nest, the hidden tunnels, the silver poured into the unseen places—it felt like God was saying: “Here is the tangible example. Here is the place to honour. Here is where the unseen work matters.”
Honouring my grandfather wasn’t abstract anymore. It was physical, immediate, right in front of me. God had already prepared the picture; now He was showing me the application.
A Move of God in Wales
We were asked how many in the room had been saved in the last year—and hands went up everywhere. A visible testimony of revival already unfolding.
Representatives from different areas of Wales stood at the front as we prayed. The challenge was simple but profound:
“Don’t ask God to move—see it already done. Believe it.”
And then the declaration that stirred the room:
“If you possess Wales, you possess Britain.”
We prayed for those who don’t yet know Jesus, not from desperation but from faith—seeing them already found, already transformed.
HONOUR - Kavod
Sarah unpacked the biblical meaning of honour—kavod, the same root as glory, meaning weight, value, significance.

Hebrew meaning:
• Kaph – open hand, power, strength
• Beth – inside
• Daleth – door
Honour = the strength and power that opens the door.
Who Are We Called to Honour?
• God first – all honour belongs to Him
• Parents – even when relationships are painful
• The elderly – wisdom that has been walked out
• Widows – grace and understanding
• Spouses – honour that protects fruitfulness
• Authorities – even when trust is difficult
• Church leaders – those who carry weight and responsibility
• Each other – because every person bears God’s image
Honour isn’t about liking someone. It’s a heart posture expressed through action, rooted in seeing people the way heaven sees them.
Honour, Holiness & the Body
We are temples of the Holy Spirit (Eph 2:22). Honouring God means paying attention to:
• What we allow into our eyes, ears, mind
• What we speak
• What we dwell on
• What we consume
His mercies are new every morning, giving us space to cleanse the heart daily—our “laver moment”—and walk in repentance, trust, and honour.
When we honour God, He honours us (1 Sam 2:30).
Sowing Honour, Reaping Honour
Honour is a seed. When we sow it, God multiplies it.
Biblical examples Sarah shared:
• Shadrach, Meshach & Abednego – honoured God, and He honoured them with deliverance and promotion
• Deborah – honoured God and brought freedom to a nation
• Job – honoured God in suffering and received restoration
• Ruth – honoured Naomi and stepped into destiny
• Mary (mother of Jesus) – honoured to carry the Messiah
• Mary of Bethany – honoured Jesus with costly worship
She also shared a powerful story of seeing an angel named Honour at the Navajo Reserve—because the people had honoured God.
Honour, Trauma & Humility
Trauma can make honour difficult. Pride often grows from pain—a survival instinct. But God invites us to let Him fight for us.
“Pride prevents honour; humility attracts it.”
The Tabernacle pattern is an honour walk:
• Altar of sacrifice – Jesus took our place
• Laver – cleansing by grace
• Altar of incense – our praise rising to Him
• Table of the Lord – His provision, not our performance
We don’t earn a seat at the table. We come with open hearts, ready to be transformed.
Honour, Perspective & Eternity
Pettiness and opinions lose their power when we look through the lens of eternity.
The 24 elders in heaven cast their crowns before Him—forever honouring the One who is worthy.
Honour on earth shapes honour in heaven.
To love is to see as Jesus sees.
To honour is to walk as He walked.
To shift perspective is to shift behaviour.
Final Reflection
This Sunday reminded me that honour isn’t a rule—it’s a rhythm. A way of living that aligns us with heaven’s heartbeat. God is already moving in Wales. He is already transforming hearts. He is already doing the impossible.
Our part is simple:
See it already done.
Honour Him first.
Walk humbly.
Believe boldly.
And trust that the One who turns sand to glass and silver to sculpture is shaping something beautiful in us too—sometimes through visions, sometimes through conviction, and sometimes through a quiet visit to a grandfather’s home… where even the ants are speaking.
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