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And my message tonight is a question,
how much faith is faith? How much faith is faith? Father
God, you have burdened not only my heart tonight, but everyone
who stood in this pulpit sharing and praying together. Lord, we
have had one theme on our hearts this whole evening. God Almighty,
we're asking you to set free somebody tonight online who doesn't
see a way forward in life. who has been stuck in a place
and can't get out of there. God Almighty, you're still God
Almighty. Nothing has changed about you.
And I'm asking you not in strength, but in my own weakness, Lord,
I'm asking you for your power to be made known tonight. Stretch
out your hand, Lord Jesus Christ, through the internet tonight.
And God, begin to set people free, open prison doors, give
sight to blinded eyes, heal wounded hearts, let the poor have the
treasure of heaven spoken into their hearts. God, everything
you said you were here to do, let it be done tonight. Let it
be done for your namesake. Let it be done for your honor.
Let it be done for your glory. And Lord, let it be done because
we know that is what your heart is all about. We know that from
the scriptures. We know it from our own personal
experiences of mercy, that you are a God of power and a God
of mercy. So Lord Jesus Christ, show vengeance
on our enemies tonight, but let great grace come to those whose
hearts are crying out for you. And Father, we thank you for
it and we praise you in Jesus' name, amen. Luke chapter 18,
beginning at verse 35. It says, then it happened as
he was coming near Jericho that a certain blind man sat by the
road begging. Now let's just stop right there
for a moment. Jericho is significant. Now in the previous verses, Jesus
had just told his disciples that we're going up to Jerusalem,
I'm gonna be delivered to the Gentiles, I'll be mocked, insulted,
spit on, scourged, killed, and I will rise again on the third
day. So he's talking about this incredible victory that he's
about to win. For all of humanity, anybody in humanity that are
willing to trust in God, He's going to win this incredible
victory for all of us. He's going to open our prison
doors. He's going to give sight to our blinded eyes. He's going
to bring healing to our wounded hearts, and His blood will cleanse
us from everything we've done that has alienated or separated
us from God, and we'll become children of God. And thus the
scripture that says he took our captivity captive and gave gifts
unto men becomes our promise for the future. Giftings and
abilities that are given by God to do things that only God can
do through us. We're not capable of doing it
in ourselves. And that's in a measure what
this story is about. It's interesting that he's coming
near Jericho. Now, Jericho is a place with
an incredible history. This is where the people of God
who have been years in captivity and then years in the wilderness
on top of that, are now being brought by the mercy of God into
this place of promise. It's a promised land, but it's
a place of God's promise. It's a type to us of what becomes
ours through our Savior, Jesus Christ. Now, it was significant
because when Joshua and the children of that generation crossed over
the river of Jericho, of Jordan rather, and they came to a stronghold
in this place of promise. And when we start walking with
God, very often there'll be a stronghold there, some kind of a stronghold
in everyone's life that says you can go this far and you can
go no farther. You're in the land, so just be
thankful you're in the land, but you're not going to go into
the fullness of what God has for you, because you're going
to be, this stronghold is strong enough to keep you here and keep
you in bondage, even though you've crossed over the river and you're
now in this place called the land of promise. And now there
was a certain man, a blind man, who was sitting by the road begging,
and he's a perfect type. of somebody who knows the history.
Everybody there knew the history. The people of God were brought
in and for several days they had to circle the city. And then
God says, when I tell you to shout, shout. And when they shouted,
I don't know what the shout was. I think it was just a generic
shout. Everybody shouted something. Now, they couldn't have coordinated
it because they were told not to talk for the previous days
before. So I don't know what they shouted, but they shouted
something that sounded like victory. And when they shouted to God,
and according to God, the walls of that stronghold came tumbling
down. And it was God's showing, that
generation and subsequent generations that when you call out to me,
I'm going to hear you. when you call out to me even
the strongest of strongholds. Now these walls were thick enough
in Jericho that people actually lived inside the walls. That's
how thick those walls were. They were impenetrable in the
natural. Just like many of us are struggling with things in
our lives that are impenetrable apart from the mercy and the
power of God. And so here's this man in this
place of history. Now he knew the history and all
the people knew the history. of this place called Jericho,
but here he is out on the roadside begging every day in the land
of promise, come to a place, and it's almost like the devil
says, this far and no farther. Just be thankful you're part
of the heritage of the children of God, but you're not gonna
go any farther. You're not going into the fullness
of what God has for you. And you know, this man is an
inheritor in a sense, of what God had given them and what was
about, of course, to be given them through Jesus Christ. But
he's inherited these things, but he's begging, begging for
mercy, begging for just a little bit of hope every day. And some
of us have been there from time to time where you don't have
this grand vision of the future anymore. You're just, you're
begging God, get me through today. God, just have somebody speak
a kind word to me. If they can't give me a coin
or a loaf of bread, at least have them speak a kind word to
me. Or at least have somebody notice me in my pain, in the
place of bondage that I'm in. And so here he is in this place
that has a history of victory. It has a history of God's power
on display. But here he is in this place
and he can't go any farther. He can't see a way beyond because
he's blind. He can't see a future. He can't
see a way out of his predicament. He can't see any of the promise. Everybody probably passing him
by talking about, isn't a promised land a wonderful place? And you're
probably thinking it must be, but I've never seen it. And you
know, people go to church sometimes, and pastors are getting up, like
me, and they're talking about victory, and there's people always
sitting in the congregation saying, well, that must be nice, but
I've never seen it. My heart's not been healed. My
eyes don't see a future. I'm still inside a prison I can't
get out of. I don't have the strength to
walk. And as he goes, and he hears a multitude passing by,
and he asks them what it means, and they told him that Jesus
of Nazareth is passing by, and it speaks in type of the hearting
in this society today. They're all around us everywhere,
and they hear of us on our way to church, and there's an inquiring
in the hearts of many, many people. Personally speaking, I've never
seen such hunger as I'm seeing in this generation right now.
God, would somebody tell me, where do you go on Sunday morning? You tell me you're going to church.
What is that? What happens there? Why do you
go there? What do you hope to find there?
Is it interesting there? And there's a multitude passing
by. And I think of all the people
going to church in America every Sunday now. and passing by all
of the wounded, bruised, broken, bleeding, blind people of this
particular generation and hurriedly just scurrying by while those
that are relegated to begging are just sitting there saying,
where's everybody going? And what do they hope to find
when they get there? And so they told him that Jesus of Nazareth
was passing by. something beyond his normative
hope. He probably heard about this man who could do miracles.
Obviously he had. The stories, I think he just
heard it as people are passing by. Have you heard about Jesus?
Jesus set my daughter free. Jesus helped my family. Jesus
healed my marriage. Jesus, and he's hearing about
all this stuff that this man, Jesus, and he now hears that
Jesus is passing by and he starts crying out, Jesus, son of David,
have mercy on me. Jesus, son of David, have mercy
on me. And the scripture says in verse
39 that those who went before warned him to be quiet. Imagine,
those who went before the Lord, those who were supposed to be
witnesses of him, those who were walking with him actually at
this time, this particular moment in history, they're actually
walking with him, but they're telling this man to be quiet.
I think of all the church services that go on all throughout our
country in this particular generation where we would tell that poor
sinner, be quiet, be quiet. You see, that's not the way things
are done here. You see, we do things with dignity here. We
don't want people crying out. Matter of fact, if somebody like
this man cried out in most churches, they'd be ushered out by the
security. Just a man who wants to be free, just a man who's
tired of being blind. Just a man who's just says, God,
God, is there any hope for me? Is there a future? Folks, I'm
gonna tell you straight out. I prefer the cries over just a silent
half-dead church. I prefer, God, send them here.
If they can't go anywhere else, send them here. We're not gonna
throw them out if they start crying out, Jesus, Son of David,
have mercy on me. There's nobody here that's going
to say, I'll tell you what, I'll make you a promise. If you tell
that man to be quiet, we'll throw you out and we'll keep him in
the church. I'll tell you straight out. Those who went before warned
him to be quiet, but he cried out more, son of David, have
mercy on me. Oh God, I remember one day back
in Canada, church was over and we had church from 10 till 12
o'clock. And then at 12 o'clock, I would dismiss formally the
service. Then we would stay and pray and worship. Sometimes it
would last a few hours. We'd just sing and we'd just
pray. And I remember one day the church was particularly full.
And after about an hour of singing, this lady stands up in the middle
of the church. She goes, somebody help me, I'm
lost. I'm lost, somebody help me. Instead
of throwing her out of the church, people started gathering around
and led her to Christ and brought her into the place where she
could worship. And I remember thinking, God, we say we want
a spiritual awakening in our nation, but we want it all nice
and orderly and clean and without any disturbance. If we want a
spiritual awakening in this nation or any other nation, there are
going to be people crying out, oh God, give us the people crying
out one more time in your house. All of our niceties and all of
our formulas and the way we've learned to do things is gonna
go to the wind because people are not gonna care anymore. The
more they told him to be quiet, the more he started to cry out.
Have mercy on me, finally recognize somebody is passing by that can
help me. Somebody that can set me free.
Somebody that can give me a vision for the future. Jesus, son of
David. Have mercy on me. I'm not willing
to play a religious game. I'm not willing to live in the
past. I'm not willing to be part of all the religious niceties
that go along with this journey with Jesus. I want to see. I
want a future. I want this inheritance. It's supposed to be mine. It's
supposed to belong to the people of God in the promised land. And I've never seen it. I've
never seen it. I'm tired of hearing about it.
I'm tired of hearing the testimonies of other people. I want to see. I want to be free. I want a song. I'm tired of hearing
everybody else's song. I want my own song. I want my
own story. I want life. Jesus, didn't you
say you came to give life and to give it more abundantly? God,
I want life. I'm tired of this. I'm tired
of living this way. I want life. Son of David, have
mercy on me. And so verse 40 says, Jesus stood
still. I love that. There's probably
1,000 or 2,000 people traveling with them and everybody's trying
to push them in their direction. You got the political crowd trying
to move them in that direction. You got the bread people that
just want them to keep baking and making bread for them. You
got all these people with all their agendas and somehow in
all these agendas, they forgot their history. They forgot that
the walls of Jericho came down with a cry. They forgot that
it was a cry that was the first sign that the promised land was
theirs. And suddenly he stands still. Suddenly Jesus says, I'm
not willing to be part of this religious parade anymore. I came
to be given for the blind and the poor and the maimed and the
lamed and the broken and the imprisoned in their bodies and
in their minds. I came to give life and I came
to give it abundantly. And he stood still, hallelujah.
And the scripture says he gave a commandment. Bring him to me. As a matter of fact, it says
he commanded him to be brought to him. Now, I don't think it
was a command. He didn't stand and say, I command
you to come to me. No, he said, come to me. As we
heard tonight, come to me. You who labor, you who are heavy
laden, you who don't see a future, come to me. I'll give you rest. Come learn of me. I'm meek and
lowly in heart and you shall find rest for your souls. And
so he stood still and everybody had to stop. Oh God, stop us
again on our parade. Stop again, Jesus Christ, I cry
out to you tonight. Do again what you've done in
days of old. Oh God, you hear the cries that we don't hear.
And when we become indifferent to struggles around us, you are
not indifferent. When we're telling people who
could be free to be quiet, God, would you help us to break out
of our box that we've built around all that we do in your name?
And so he commanded him to be brought to him. And when he'd
come near, he asked him, he said, what do you want me to do for
you? And he said, Lord, that I may receive my sight. God,
I want to see. God, I want to see. I think of
the people that I'm speaking to tonight. You want to see a
way out of your addiction. You want to see a way out of
your depression. You want to see a way out of your brokenness.
You want to see a way out of your hopelessness. You want to
see a way out of your weakness. and things that have surrounded
your life and every day is just like yesterday, except darker. It's almost like the blindness
is increasing. I don't see a way. Jesus Christ,
I know you can help me. So God, I'm asking you, I want
to see. I want to see. A real simple
prayer. And Jesus said to him, receive
your sight. Your faith has made you well. How much faith did he have? You
know, we preach faith as if you have to have faith in faith.
You have to build up this mountain of faith. You have to have it
all together. You have to have all your theological
ducks in a row, and you have to pray in such a way that is
pleasing to God. How much faith did he have? There's
no evidence he even knew scripture. Have mercy on me. That's all
he had, but it was enough. That's all the faith he needed.
Somebody was passing by that could help him, and he knew it,
and that's all the faith he needed. Have mercy on me. And Jesus looks
at this man and says, receive your sight, your faith has made
you well. Don't get trapped into thinking
you have to know a mountain of theology. It's a good thing to
study. It's a good thing to have knowledge. You're going to need
it one day. But right now, where you are in your struggle, you
don't need any more than a cry. A cry to the one who came to
set you free. A cry to the one who can set
you free. Your faith, your faith in coming
into this prayer meeting, whether it's tonight, tomorrow, the next
day, next week, or next year, your faith in coming into this
prayer meeting and the cry it will produce in your heart is
enough to make you whole. It's enough to give you sight.
It's enough to open your prison doors. It's enough to give healing
to your broken heart. It's enough to bring the presence
of God into your darkened mind and into your darkened life and
into your darkened home. It's enough to give you a vision
for the future and the strength of God to make that future in
your life a reality. Your faith in being here in this
meeting is enough to make you whole. And it says in verse 43, immediately
he received his sight, immediately and followed him. Glorifying
God. What do you think his testimony
was? I studied the book of Hebrews
for six months. It's a good thing to do, but that's not what set
him free. He followed and said, listen, I was blind. I was on
the side of the road. People were telling me to be
quiet. I heard he was passing by and I just started to cry
out, Jesus, I know there's somebody crying out tonight already. Jesus,
have mercy on me. You see, he hears your cry. Nobody
else may hear it. There might be nobody else in
your house, nobody in your room, nobody in your apartment, nobody
on your city block that even cares, but Jesus hears it. And even though he's got a universe
to look after, he'll stop what he's doing right now because
he heard your cry and he will say, bring him to me or bring
her to me. And the question for you tonight
is, Jesus says, what would you have me to do for you? What is
it you're looking for? In this case, he wanted to receive
his sight. I want to see my family whole. I want to see our family
gatherings to be joyful things and not painful things. I want
to see my children free. I want to see a future for my
life. I want to see a purpose for why
I was even created. I want to see my prison doors
opened. I want to see freedom that you
said you came to give me. And immediately he received his
sight. This is what I'm believing for
tonight for you who've come into this prayer meeting and you who
are online who are listening. I'm believing for the, I'm going
to call it the immediacy of God. There's no 17 steps to this.
It was immediate. His eyes were opened. Can you
imagine? Can you imagine that moment? Imagine if he'd never
seen, and every day he had to sit in this place that had a
history of victory, not realizing that his cry was what God was
waiting for the whole time. It was a cry that brought those
walls down many, many years before, and it was a cry now that was
gonna bring his walls down, and Jericho was going to be repeated
all over again. Oh God, would you help your people
to cry out to you? Would you help the moms and dads
to cry out for their children? Would you help us to cry out,
God, that you would make us into the people that we're supposed
to be? Would you give us vision for the future? Would you give
us the strength, oh God, that we need to make a difference
in our generation? Would you open our prison doors?
Would you give us those giftings that you told us belong to us
because of your victory on the cross? Immediately he received
his sight and followed him. That's the call. Come to me,
you who labor and are heavy laden, and I'll give you rest. And he
glorified God, glorified God. I used to be blind, but now I
see. I mean, you don't need any more of a testimony than that.
That's a phenomenal testimony. Except for Lazarus, he could
say, I used to be dead, but now I live. I'm taught that testimony.
That'd be a great contest, a great game in the church. Taught that
testimony. It's like everybody goes silent
after Lazarus. Like, what do you say after that? Or Elijah
could stand up and say, well, my bones were in a grave and
they threw a man into my grave and he came back to life again.
There's no limit to what God can do. But immediately he received
his sight and followed him, glorifying God. And when the people saw
it, they gave praise to God. It's funny. They could see, but
they couldn't see. And when they saw that he saw,
then they saw what God could do. A lot of seesawing in that
particular. And they gave praise to God.
Father, in Jesus' name, in Jesus' name, in Jesus' name, and for
the sake of Jesus Christ, and for the sake of the victory of
Jesus Christ, God Almighty, we're asking you tonight to answer
the cry of every heart that's on this line tonight. Every person
sitting alone in their apartment, in their car, at work, on a park
bench, wherever it is that they are, God, hear the cry. Jesus,
Son of David, Son of God, have mercy on me. And you haven't
changed, Lord. You're still the same yesterday,
today, and forever. Your word tells us that, and
God, we believe that with all of our heart. Oh, God, You heard
that cry. You called him and you gave him
sight to see things he'd never seen before, to go places he'd
never gone, to sing a song he could never sing, to share a
testimony he'd never had, just because he heard that you were
passing by. Oh God, oh God, oh God. Don't let anybody online Remain
quiet as you are passing by. Jesus, Son of David, have mercy
on this generation. Have mercy on the addicted. Have
mercy on the afflicted. Have mercy, God, on the brokenhearted.
Have mercy on the imprisoned. Have mercy on the rebellious.
Have mercy, oh God, on those who don't even know that mercy's
available. Father, I thank you. I thank
you, God, that you hear this tonight. You hear the sighs right
now. You hear the cries right now.
God, we don't have to shout it. We can whisper it. Jesus, have
mercy on me. God, you will. That's who you
are. It's what you do. For those online
tonight, I'm going to ask you to just pray this simple prayer
with me. Lord Jesus Christ, don't pass me by. I'm calling
out to you. And I acknowledge I can't change
my condition, but you can because you died on a cross and you broke
the chains that want to bind me and the blindness that wants
to keep me in bondage. I open my heart to you tonight.
And as that man did, I come to you and I come willingly. I declare you to be the son of
God who loves me, who died for me and wants to bring me home. I open my heart to you and I
invite you into my life to be my Lord and my Savior. I believe
tonight that you've heard my cry. And I'm now a child of God. In Jesus' name. Amen. And amen. We're gonna come to
the communion table in just a moment. If you prayed that prayer tonight
and you really meant it and you made it your own, just text the
word decided to 51,000. Just go ahead and do that. Decided,
51,000. And we'll help you get started
in your walk with God.
How Much Faith Is Faith
Series Faith
Website: http://www.carterconlon.com
Living in faith is where God wants to be, but how much faith is faith?
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The Worldwide Prayer Meeting is held at Summit International School of Ministry the Bible School of Times Square Church each week. If you'd like to learn more about Summit, visit: https://www.summitpa.org
| Sermon ID | 528241431255609 |
| Duration | 25:50 |
| Date | |
| Category | Prayer Meeting |
| Language | English |
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