Tyrese Gibson prepares for 2026 with a message rooted in faith, reflection, and spiritual intention.
On December 24, the R&B singer and actor shared a lengthy post on X, formerly Twitter, that read more like a prayer than a typical social media update. The message arrived just days after his emotional, widely circulated interview with famed pastor T.D. Jakes, offering deeper insight into where Gibson says his heart and spirit are headed.
“Dear Heavenly Father, as I stand at the doorway of 2026, I come before You in the name of Jesus Christ,” Gibson wrote, immediately framing the upcoming year as a moment of transition.
By placing himself at the “doorway” of 2026, he positioned the future as a reset rather than a continuation of past struggles. He went on to offer “my life, my family, my work, and my future” to God, signaling a desire for wholeness and alignment after years marked by public scrutiny and personal challenges.
Throughout the post, Gibson leaned into language of spiritual protection and release. He asked God to “destroy every plan of darkness set against my life” and declared that “every curse that tried to follow me from previous years is stopped here.”
He continued, “Every negative word, every repeated pattern, every hidden plan meant to delay my progress or steal my peace is cancelled now,” framing past pain as something he refuses to carry forward.
Tyrese Gibson Delivers A Prayer For His Enemies Before 2026
One of the most striking lines, “What was sent to weaken me will not enter 2026 with me,” reads as a clear boundary.
The sentiment echoes themes Gibson discussed with Jakes, including endurance, faith, and surviving judgment without losing oneself. Rather than naming specific people or moments, he used spiritual language to address what he later described as “the enemy.”
Gibson’s declarations for the year ahead carried that same clarity. “I declare that 2026 will not be marked by struggle, but by direction; not by heaviness, but by freedom; not by curses, but by the blessing of God,” he wrote, emphasizing intention over reaction.
He closed with an invitation: “Type ‘God is great’ to disappoint the enemy!” The call transformed the prayer into a shared moment, inviting followers into collective affirmation.
Gibson’s post reflected renewal, not retaliation. It was a statement of faith, peace, and resolve, offering a reminder that healing can be both personal and communal.


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