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Discover how being led by the Holy Spirit unlocks crazy faith, with powerful teaching from Proverbs 3:5-6 and a miraculous story from the Philippines.
In this powerful message from NTC Ministries, Senior Pastor Dr. William Roman brings the sixth and final installment of the Crazy Faith series, preached on Mother’s Day, May 11, 2020. The message centers on what it truly means to be led by the Holy Spirit of God, drawing its foundation from Proverbs 3:5-6: trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. Pastor Roman walks listeners through the five previous messages in the series, covering themes of thinking of others, not despising small beginnings, courage, desire, and progression, before arriving at this culminating teaching on Spirit-led living. He challenges believers to turn off the noise of the world and develop sensitivity to God’s voice through daily Bible reading and prayer. A remarkable missionary account from the Philippines illustrates the point vividly: when Pastor Roman stepped aside and allowed the Holy Spirit to move freely, two believers received the miraculous gift of the Chinese language and were sent as missionaries to China. Drawing from Psalms 23:3, John 8:12-18, and 2 Chronicles 16:9, this message calls every believer to stop leaning on human reasoning and start walking by faith, not by sight.
Proverbs 3:5-6, Philippians 2:4, Zechariah 4:10, Joshua 1:5-7, Proverbs 4:18, Psalm 23:3, Matthew 5:5, Ephesians 4:11-13, 2 Corinthians 5:7, James 2:19, 2 Chronicles 16:9, John 8:12-18
This message closes a six-part series on what Pastor Roman calls crazy faith, a term coined when a fellow minister observed Pastor’s bold, Spirit-led decisions and remarked they seemed unusual. Pastor’s response was that this is simply what faith is supposed to look like. The six pillars of the series are: thinking of others, not despising small beginnings, walking in courage, nurturing holy desire, embracing progression, and finally, being led by the Spirit of God. Each pillar builds on the last, and together they form a portrait of a believer who has moved from self-centered living to God-glorifying obedience.
Pastor draws from Proverbs 3:5-6 to make a foundational argument: our own understanding, shaped by secular education, media, and fear, creates static that drowns out the voice of the Holy Spirit. He points to the Pharisees in John 8 as the defining case study. Trained in the Law, steeped in religious tradition, they could not receive the very Son of God standing before them. Pastor applies this to modern believers who fill their minds with news cycles and worldly reasoning, then wonder why they cannot hear God clearly. The antidote is deliberate, daily immersion in Scripture.
The most compelling moment of the message is Pastor Roman’s account from a ministry trip in the Philippines. He had a structured teaching plan, but the Holy Spirit fell unexpectedly on the gathering. Rather than asserting his agenda, Pastor stepped back. A woman in the crowd, unable to speak English or Tagalog, was speaking fluently in Chinese, a language she had never learned. By the next morning she and her husband, both of whom had carried thirty years of guilt over a failed missionary calling to China, were speaking and writing perfect Chinese. Their church had already purchased their tickets to Beijing. The miracle was only possible because Pastor did not lean on his own understanding.
Second Chronicles 16:9 becomes a pivotal verse in this message. God’s eyes search the whole earth not for the most talented or most educated, but for those whose hearts are fully committed to Him. Pastor makes the sobering point that a believer can claim faith while simultaneously filling their soul with fear-driven media, politically charged narratives, and the leaven of unbelief. Loyalty to God means protecting what enters your heart and mind with the same intentionality you would use to keep something filthy out of your home.
Using the account of Jesus calming the storm in Mark 4, Pastor illustrates that God wants believers who are unshaken even in the middle of catastrophe. The disciples panicked while Jesus slept, and His question was not about the storm but about their faith. Pastor connects this to 2 Corinthians 5:7, we walk by faith and not by sight, and to the blindfold game illustration: the blindfolded person must trust the voice of their partner completely, and when the blindfold is removed, they see what God accomplished. Obedience comes first; understanding follows.
Pastor closes with actionable exhortation. Read your Bible every day and believe it above every other source of information. Reduce or eliminate media that feeds fear and unbelief. Spend time in prayer until God’s voice becomes more familiar than any other. When He speaks, act, even if the instruction seems small or unconventional. Do not despise the smallness of the first step. The path of the righteous grows brighter with each act of obedience, and the same God who sent missionaries to China through a miraculous gift of language is eager to show Himself strong in your life today.
Being led by the Spirit of God means making decisions based on what the Holy Spirit communicates through Scripture, prayer, and an inward witness rather than through human logic or worldly reasoning. Romans 8:14 says that as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God. It is a lifestyle of obedience that grows stronger as you spend daily time in God’s Word and learn to recognize His voice.
The anchor scripture for this message is Proverbs 3:5-6, which instructs believers to trust in the Lord with all their heart and to lean not on their own understanding, acknowledging Him in all their ways so that He will direct their paths. Pastor Roman teaches that leaning on human reasoning is the primary hindrance to Spirit-led living and genuine faith.
Pastor Roman uses the illustration of a child who instantly recognizes his mother’s voice in a crowd of a thousand children. That recognition comes from time spent together. In the same way, hearing God’s voice requires consistent, daily Bible reading, prayer, and a willingness to act on what He says. Jesus promises in John 10:27 that His sheep hear His voice, and this capacity deepens through faithful obedience over time.
Human reasoning filters what God says through personal fears, past experiences, cultural conditioning, and worldly education. The Pharisees in John 8 could not receive Jesus because their own theological framework blocked them. Pastor Roman warns that when believers saturate their minds with fear-based media or rely more on their own logic than on God’s Word, they create a barrier that prevents them from trusting and obeying what the Holy Spirit is saying.
Second Chronicles 16:9 states that the eyes of the Lord search the whole earth to strengthen those whose hearts are fully committed to Him. Pastor Roman uses this verse to establish that God is not looking for the most gifted or educated people but for those who are loyally devoted to Him. This loyal devotion is what positions a believer to receive supernatural intervention and to be used for God’s glory.
Pastor Roman answers this directly through a personal account from the Philippines where the Holy Spirit sovereignly granted two individuals fluency in Chinese, a language they had never studied, equipping them for missionary work in China. He points to both Old and New Testament examples of God giving or changing languages and argues that the same God who acted then is still acting today for those who do not lean on their own understanding.
The Crazy Faith series from NTC Ministries is a six-part teaching on what genuine, Spirit-led faith looks like in everyday life. The six themes are thinking of others, not despising small beginnings, walking in courage, pursuing holy desire, embracing spiritual progression, and being led by the Holy Spirit. Together they describe a believer who moves beyond self-centered living into a life that consistently glorifies God through bold, obedient action.
Psalm 23:3 declares that God leads His people in the paths of righteousness for His name’s sake. Pastor Roman uses this verse to show that God’s guidance is purposeful and directional, and that it is always oriented toward His glory rather than simply our personal comfort. Being led by the Spirit means following those paths even when they are unfamiliar, trusting that the Shepherd knows the way.
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