MY STORY

It feels as though it was yesterday. My story remains deeply etched in my mind and continues to serve as the motivation behind all that I do today. I was diagnosed with a tumor in the pituitary area of my brain, and at the time, the doctor ordered several X-rays along with constant eye examinations to monitor how the tumor might affect my vision. That season was incredibly debilitating—filled with anxiety, fear, and the weight of the unknown. It felt as though my world was falling apart.

At that point in my life, I had achieved much in my policing career. My pastoral ministry was beginning to take shape, and I carried aspirations of serving my country, even in the sphere of national politics. And then, suddenly, everything changed. A profound darkness came over my life—what I can only describe as gross darkness.

Yet in the midst of that season, there was a moment I will never forget. During one of my visits to the eye doctor, as they monitored my vision, my head was placed into a bowl-like instrument, with my chin resting on a support. The caregiver began giving instructions. She said, “Glen, the space you are about to look into will be dark. But within that darkness, you will see several images, and among them will be the symbol of a red lighted cross.” Then she said something that would forever mark my life: “That is the most important object to look at. Keep your eyes on the cross—no matter what. If you remove your eyes from the cross, the readings from this eye exam will come out wrong.”

In that moment, I was no longer simply in an eye examination. Those words felt as though they had been divinely sent—etched deeply into my spirit: “Do not remove your eyes from the cross, or the reading will come out wrong.” They became my guiding force, my Paul-like moment, my heavenly message—the lens through which I would now begin to see humanity and the world itself. To see the world through the lens of the Cross.

That encounter awakened something profound within me—the redemptive and reconciling power of the Cross, which I had always believed in, but now experienced in a deeply transformative way. My perspective began to shift. While I had always valued missionary work and the purity of the Gospel message, this moment challenged me to rethink a version of the gospel that sometimes seemed to speak of a world without the Cross at its center—a message that, at times, condemned rather than redeemed.

And so, while The Global Reset speaks about nations—yes, even my beloved Bahamas—its deeper truth is this: the Reset is ultimately about lifting the Cross. For as Scripture declares, “If the Son of Man be lifted up, He will draw all men unto Him.” The Bahamas, as a Nation of Light, shines brightest when it embraces the message of grace and lives out the ministry of reconciliation.

Our story itself reflects this truth. We are a people once enslaved, now set free—not merely through political systems or governmental change, but through the recognition that the Lord is the true Governor of our nation. And whom the Son sets free is free indeed. This is the message to which I, and so many others, are called—to be ambassadors, messengers of grace, and ministers of reconciliation.

The purpose is both simple and profound: to bridge divides, to reconcile worlds, and to extend grace without counting humanity’s trespasses against them. For within this lies true Jubilee and true freedom. This is my resolve—the resolve that fuels The Global Reset Mandate: to lift high the Cross, the symbol of redemption, and the declaration of a God who loves unconditionally.

To see the world through that lens is to see humanity through the eyes of redemption. This good news embraces all people—every individual across the earth. From that perspective, no one is unclean, and no one is beyond redemption. For truly, He came to set the captives free.

Welcome to The Global Reset—The Dawn of a New Day.