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RESEARCH-SERMON PREP



1. FAITH DEFINITIONS






AFRICAN PROVERBS ON FAITH










AFRICAN AMERICAN PROVERBS AND STORIES ON FAITH

Faith makes things possible, not easy.

Faith diminishes fear. This means that even though things aren’t simple, having faith in yourself and the process is possible.

You have as much laughter as you have faith. – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

The combination of both can yield great results.

Where there is no vision, there is no hope. – George Washington Carver

To make the change, you need to be able to see the change.

Lightning makes no sound until it strikes. – Martin Luther King, Jr.

Faith can be behind the scenes but it will make itself known.











THE STORIES

Paul, an early leader in the church, offered a simple solution for achieving a life of profound and impactful faith: imitate someone else who already has one (1 Corinthians 11:1). The men and women below are that for me. Their lives are amazing, not because their skin is black, but because of their long-term vision, their willingness to be first, their persistence to push through walls of prejudice, racism, and injustice, and most of all, their commitment to a faith whose adherents haven’t always been as committed to them.

In each of them, I trust you’ll also find something worth imitating.

THE GOOD DOCTOR - LOUISE CECILIA FLEMING

Born into slavery in the early years of the Civil War, Louise’s first pursuits included education. After a stint as a public educator, she became the first female black missionary appointed by the American Baptist Convention. In 1887, she sailed to the Congo, where she used education to improve the lives of the children she met there. As her own health deteriorated, she was forced back to the states in 1891. Realizing the importance of proper medical care for the people she loved in Congo, she enrolled that same year in the Women’s Medical College in Philadelphia. Four years later, she returned to Congo, the only known female medical doctor in the entire country. She worked for the health (physical and spiritual) of the Congolese people over the next four years before dying at the age of 37 from African sleeping sickness. Over a hundred years later, she continues to shine as an example of bending your life around scripture’s instruction to “consider others more important than yourself” (Phillippians 2:3).

RADICAL OBEDIENCE - JULIA A.J. FOOTE

Born to formerly enslaved parents, Julia grew up in New York in the early 1800s. But freedom from slavery didn’t mean equal rights. Her entire life, Julia faced discrimination due to her race, her gender, and her religious upbringing. In her early teenage years, she joined the African Methodist Episcopal church, and before her 20s, she felt called by God to preach and share her faith. The only problem? Julia lived in a time when public leadership, especially in religious circles, was not friendly to females. Many churches didn’t even permit women to speak, let alone preach. But Julia was unwavering in her determination. After seeking permission to preach in her church, she was excommunicated. But she powered on. She was part of revival movements that swept the midwest in the 1870s. On one occasion, in 1878, it’s estimated she spoke to 5,000 people at a meeting in Ohio. Before her death, Julia became the A.M.E. Zion church’s first female deacon and the second ordained female elder of the A.M.E. church. In her boundary-shattering life, one clearly hears the declaration of earlier followers of Jesus as they faced mounting pressure from the authorities to stop preaching: “We must obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29).

MAN ON FIRE - LEMUEL HAYNES

Less than a decade after the Revolutionary War, Lemuel Haynes became the first person of color ordained as a minister in America. It had been a long road for the newly appointed Reverend Haynes, and what lay ahead wouldn’t be any easier. Born in 1750, Lemuel was the child of an African American man and a white woman—although pinpointing which ones were a mystery. At five months of age, Lemuel was given to a white family as an indentured servant, bound to work for them until his 21st birthday. In 1774, as his servitude expired, he joined the Union army, a post he held until near the end of the war. Lemuel was given a license to preach in 1780 and was officially ordained—recognized as a minister—in 1785. But Lemuel didn’t last long at his first church. The all-white congregation made Lemuel’s job difficult, and due to the active prejudice of its members, he left after only two years. Lemuel’s next post would last thirty years, and yet he continued to face many of the same prejudices. Even so, he did not shy away from his role as a prophetic voice against slavery. I imagine Lemuel would have identified with the sentiments of Jeremiah the prophet, “[God’s] word is in my heart like fire, a fire shut up in my bones. I am weary of holding it in; indeed, I cannot” (Jeremiah 20:9). We are all beneficiaries of Lemuel’s fire and the foundation he laid for churches to not only preach but act for justice.

THE POWER OF PERSISTENCE - EFRAIM ALPHONSE

Efraim was born in Panama in 1896, his father a fisherman from the French-speaking tropical island of Martinque. Even as a child, Efraim showed a gift for languages and words, a sign of things to come. As a young man, he served as an escort for Methodist missionaries on their way to reach a native tribe known as the Valientes. The missionaries eventually offered Efraim a role as a teacher in the Valiente village. Despite the tribe’s reputation for being warlike and knowing not a single word of their language, Efraim agreed. He spent 12 years living among the Valientes, learning not just their language but their customs, legends, and history. He slowly began to develop a written form of Valiente tongue, with the express goal of translating the New Testament for them. The work of translation is difficult and slow, but Efraim’s love for the Valientes compelled him. He left the village for a number of years to attend seminary in Jamaica to improve his Greek but eventually returned to pick up his work. His persistence finally paid off, as Efraim succeeded in translating several books of the Bible into the Valiente language. The Smithsonian Institute would also publish his grammar of the language, and along with his wife of 50 years (who also lived in the village with him, along with their children), they published a hymnbook for the Valiente tongue. Efraim is widely recognized as the first Biblical translator of color. Even more inspiring, though, is his lifelong commitment to the Valiente people, which sings a beautiful response to the Biblical question: “How can they believe… if they have never heard?” (Romans 10:14).

BLACK LEONARDO - GEORGE WASHINGTON CARVER

Okay, you probably recognize this name, but there’s so much more to his story than just peanuts. George Washington Carver was born a slave in Missouri around 1864. Despite setbacks in his early education, Carver worked hard, eventually graduating from high school and becoming the first black student at Iowa State, earning two agricultural degrees. After graduation, he was invited by Booker T. Washington to be the director of agricultural research at the Tuskegee Institute—a post he held for 47 years. Under his leadership, the department developed into a strong research center. Seeking to help poor farmers improve soil depleted by years of cotton growth, Carver proposed peanuts and sweet potatoes as crops that improved soil and offered a food source. When farmers were reluctant to plant these crops due to poor marketability, Carver set out to discover economically viable products to be made from them. Carver was also an early leader in promoting environmentalism, understanding the connection between a healthy creation and the people living in and among it. Despite living in a time of high racial polarization, Carver was well respected worldwide, Time Magazine once dubbing him “the black Leonardo.” Powering such an impactful life was his faith in God, which he recognized as the mechanism for his scientific breakthroughs and the hope for overcoming prejudice and racism. Carver’s contributions to the world could fill volumes. Even to this day, he remains a shining example of the words of Colossians 3:23, “Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the LORD and not for men.

Honorable Mention :

 I didn’t have time to cover pastors like Richard Allen and Absalom Jones, missionaries like John Marrant and Amanda Smith, medical experts like Susan Steward and Daniel Hale Williams, or theologians and historians like Charles Tindley and George W. Williams.

Sojourner Truth, the amazing abolitionist and women’s rights activist, was once approached by a white man who told her that her speeches and life’s work were no more important than a flea bite. It’s said she replied, “Maybe not, but Lord willing, I’ll keep you scratching.”


CREDIT: CROSSROADS.NET


STORIES AROUND THE WORLD ABOUT FAITH



THE JOKE ABOUT THE LADY AND THE ATHEIST GUY





FAITH AS AN ACROYNM

FAITH, Food Always in the Home (Philippines program)

FAITH, Full Assurance in Trusting Him.

FAITH, Forsaking All I Take Him.











LINKS


When people try to hinder your crying out to Jesus, do what Bartimaeus did: Resist them. Don't let them intimidate you into silence.

Throw Your Cloak Aside

Contributed by Douglas Phillips on Apr 15, 2018
    
 | 8,973 views

IT'S TIME TO TRADE IN THE CLOAK OF BLINDNESS FOR THE BEAUTIFUL ROBE OF RIGHTEOUSNESS. YOU CAN FIND IT AT THE FOOT OF THE CROSS.


What The Blind Man Saw

Contributed by Gerald Roberts on Oct 22, 2021
    
 | 357 views

The blind man saw things that many of us don't or fail to see the truth of who Jesus is, the truth about oneself, and He saw hope.

The True Purpose Of Pentecost  Series

Contributed by W Pat Cunningham on May 20, 2021
    
 | 457 views

All of us need clear vision, and not just of material things.

Outcast But Not Outspoken (2009)

Contributed by John Williams Iii on Mar 6, 2021
    
 | 2,089 views

Bartimaeus was blind and outcast, but he refused not to be heard because he was eager and desperate to pursue Jesus who could heal him.

Thirtieth Sunday In Ordinary Time; 30th Sunday B--Bartimaeus.

Contributed by Paul Andrew on Oct 23, 2021
    
 | 132 views

We can all get stuck on the side of the road in different ways at different times in our lives.

Jesus, The Light Of Our Lives

Contributed by Craig Condon on Aug 1, 2015
    
 | 2,680 views

The light of Jesus gives us light and hope, just like Jesus gave sight and spiritual light to a blind beggar named Bartimaeus.

Take Off That Coat! Feel The Paradigm Shift That Is Coming?

Contributed by Wade Martin Hughes, Sr on Mar 27, 2015
     based on 1 rating
 | 4,709 views

The religious crowd tends to desire to feel comfort and safe with the status quo? Be quiet poor old blind man? No, I hear Jesus is coming this way. ( WOW-OUR OLD FRIENDS)

The Crying Bartimaeus!

Contributed by Tony Abram on Jan 27, 2016
    
 | 5,617 views

Of all the healings Jesus did, the opening of the eyes of blind Bartimaeus is one of the most exciting and one event where we can learn a lesson on how to receive from the Lord answer to our prayers. In this outline we list what he did to receive his sight.





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And answering him, Jesus said, "What do you want Me to do for you?" And the blind man said to Him, "Rabboni, I want to regain my sight!"

Mark 10:51(NASB)





Verse Thoughts
Knowing that the hour of his His passion was fast approaching when the Son of Man would be lifted up on the Cross for the sin of the world, Jesus crossed the Jorden as He prepared to set his face as a flint to go to Jerusalem. On the way, He visited the ancient city of Jericho because there was a son of David, called Bartimaeus, who was a poor, miserable, blind beggar... who needed his eyes to be opened.

Thoughts fly back to the start of Israel's conquest of the promised land and of Rahab, the harlot of Jericho, whose spiritual eyes were opened to the truth of God's Word and her faith was reckoned to her as righteousness. And many thousands of years later, there is a blind beggar-man in that same city, who also needs to regain his sight - and Jesus takes compassion on him. 

The old city... destroyed in the days of Joshua, remained in ruins. However, a new Jericho had been built by Herod, and on His final journey before His sacrificial death, Jesus and His disciples, "went through Jericho. And as He was leaving Jericho with His disciples and a large crowd, a blind beggar named Bar-Timaeus, the son of Timaeus, was sitting by the road."
No doubt news of Christ's healing power and his Messianic claims, had reached the ears of this blind beggar in Jericho, and when he realised that among the bustling crowd leaving the city was Jesus, the famous Prophet about Whom everyone was speaking, he started to cry out, "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" And he kept shouting loudly, "HAVE MERCY ON ME, JESUS, SON OF DAVID!"

Jesus was on His way to Jerusalem for the Feast of Passover, where He would be sacrificed as the Lamb of God Who takes away the sin of the world, and this account of the healing of blind Bartimaeus is the last recorded healing miracle in Mark. Despite being sternly told by many in the crowd to be quiet, this desperate man was not prepared to allow this opportunity to pass him by and we read, "but he kept crying out all the more, 'Son of David, have mercy on me!'"
At the start of His ministry, Jesus had taught His disciples the importance of the prolonged persistent prayer of faith. He had taught them whoever asks and keeps on asking, seeks and keeps on seeking, and knocks and keeps on knocking, will be answered. They had witnessed the faith of the Centurion, whose servant was healed, and the Samaritan woman, whose demon-possessed daughter was delivered, and they had been taught that faith the size of a mustard seed could remove mountains.

Jesus instructed many people to, "go in peace, your faith has made you whole," and told others, "according to your faith be it unto you." But He also admonished others for their lack of faith. There were even towns in Judea where He did not do many miracles because of unbelief. But this blind Jewish man, chose to believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and was determined if at all possible, to meet with Him.

The crowds were unsympathetic about his desperate situation and told him to be quiet, and maybe the disciples had also become too accustomed to Christ's healing ministry, for they seemed unsympathetic to the plight of this poor blind beggar-man. What a joy it must have been for Bartimaeus when Jesus stopped His journey and told the crowd to, "Call him here." What anticipation must have rippled through the thronging crowd who were following Him and heard Jesus ask the beggar, "what do you want Me to do for you?" and heard the blind beggar's request "Lord, that I may receive my sight."
Jesus didn't need to ask the beggar about the desire of his heart - He knew. His question was not to get information but to encourage Bartimaeus to hold fast to his faith, to make his request known to God, and to trust in the Lord with all his heart and not to lean on his own understanding. And Bartimaeus not only received the dear desire of his heart - but was given so much more.

Bartimaeus made his faith in Christ very clear, for he addressed Him as "My Lord" - "My Master", Bartimaeus demonstrated that it was not only his physical sight that would be affected, but that his spiritual eyes of understanding had been opened, and he acknowledged Christ as the Captain of his soul.
When men and women approached Jesus for healing, we see much evidence that is not simply a need for physical healing that concerns the Lord, but a spiritual awakening - they need salvation. And this should be our concern as well when we are praying for healing, for ourselves or someone else... that not only bodily health is restored, but that the spiritual needs are also met and spiritual eyes are opened to see JESUS as Lord.
My Prayer
Dear Heavenly Father, thank You for the life and times of the Lord Jesus and the many lessons we can learn from the changed lives of many characters who crossed Christ's path during His earthly ministry and found grace in the eyes of the Lord. Thank You for the son of Timaeus and the courage and determination he demonstrated, as he cried out to meet the Lord and had his eyes opened. Thank You that You care for our daily needs and that our eyes have been opened to the beauty of Jesus as our Kinsman-Redeemer and Saviour of our soul. I pray for the many men and women who remain spiritually impoverished today, because they have not called out to Christ for salvation. Open their eyes to the truth I pray, and bring many into a right relationship with Yourself. This I pray in Jesus' name, AMEN. 




Source: https://dailyverse.knowing-jesus.com/mark-10-51


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