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Discover how the Fatherhood of God transforms the orphan mentality and unlocks the full inheritance of every believer through a powerful Father’s Day message.
In this powerful message delivered on Father’s Day, the pastor opens a series on the Fatherhood of God, framing it within the broader theme of redemption — not only what believers are redeemed from, but what they are redeemed to. Drawing from Ephesians 3:14-19, John 14:6-7, John 17, and Acts 16:29-31, the message establishes that the Bible is ultimately the story of a King, a Kingdom, and a royal family. The pastor argues that nothing in Scripture is more foundational than the revelation of fatherhood, and that without it, believers drift into an orphan mentality — marked by insecurity, lack, and spiritual isolation. Using personal testimony, the writings of David Blankenhorn, and the life of Job as a model of priestly, prophetic, and kingly fatherhood in the home, the pastor calls fathers and believers alike to embrace their God-given roles. He also highlights Solomon’s wisdom as a direct fruit of honoring his father David, connecting the commandment to honor parents with lasting blessings of long life, riches, and favor. The message closes with a practical charge to acknowledge responsibility, humble oneself before God, and diligently declare the promises of God over family.
Ephesians 3:13-15, Ephesians 3:14-19, Ephesians 2:18-19, John 14:6-7, John 17:1, John 17:6, John 17:26, John 20:17, 2 Corinthians 13:14, Acts 16:29-31, Job 1:5, Job 19:25-27, Job 42:12-15, Revelation 14:1, Revelation 22:3-4, 1 Kings 3:6-14, 2 Chronicles 1, Ephesians 6:1-3, Hebrews 6
One of the most penetrating concepts in this message is the distinction between the orphan mentality and the identity of a true son or daughter of God. Derek Prince is quoted: you can be a child of God and yet live like an orphan. This orphan spirit manifests as a constant sense of lack, spiritual loneliness, and the exhausting belief that everything depends on personal effort. The pastor argues that embracing the Fatherhood of God dismantles this lie and replaces it with confidence, security, and the assurance of divine provision — the natural fruit of knowing you belong to a loving Father.
The Book of Job is used not merely as a story of suffering and restoration but as a practical blueprint for godly fatherhood. Job interceded every morning for his children as a priest, offered burnt offerings on their behalf, and refused to leave their spiritual welfare to chance. As a prophet, he declared his trust in a living Redeemer even in the midst of loss. As a king, he distributed his inheritance equally to his daughters — a radical act of generosity in his cultural context. These three dimensions of fatherhood, the pastor teaches, are meant to be replicated in every Christian home.
Many believers know that Solomon asked God for wisdom, but the pastor draws attention to what is often overlooked: Solomon’s request was deeply rooted in honoring his father David. In both 1 Kings 3 and 2 Chronicles 1, Solomon explicitly references David’s faithfulness before framing his own petition. He asked God to establish the promises made to his father and sought wisdom to fulfill the role David had prepared him for. God responded not only with wisdom but with riches, honor, and long life — fulfilling the very promise of Ephesians 6 that honoring one’s father brings blessing and length of days.
A central theological point the pastor drives home is that Jesus is not the destination — He is the way to the destination. The Father is the destination. Citing John 14:6-7 and John 17, the pastor shows that Jesus’s entire mission was to manifest the Father’s name, reveal His love, and open the path for every believer to access the Father through the Spirit. Ephesians 2:18 confirms this: through Christ, both Jew and Gentile have access by one Spirit unto the Father. Everything — the cross, the resurrection, the sending of the Holy Spirit — flows toward this single purpose of bringing humanity home to the Father.
The pastor ends the sermon with a direct and pastoral charge to fathers and believers. First, acknowledge the responsibility you carry — do not be passive in the spiritual lives of your children. Second, humble yourself before God and ask Him to show you how to lead your family. Third, declare God’s promises diligently and consistently over every member of your household — not as a one-time confession but as a sustained lifestyle of faith. Fourth, give honor: to your heavenly Father in worship, to your natural father in relationship, and to your spiritual fathers in the church. This fourfold practice, the pastor teaches, opens the door to generational blessing.
Drawing from the JB Phillips translation of Ephesians 3:15 — every fatherhood in Heaven and Earth is named after the Father — the pastor establishes that God’s fatherhood is not one model among many but the original pattern from which all other forms of loving authority derive their meaning. Whether in the home, the church, or society, the role of a father is to reflect and reproduce the character of the Heavenly Father: loving, providing, disciplining with wisdom, and blessing without partiality. The pastor expresses confident expectation that as the church embraces this revelation, it will become a witness of God’s glory to a watching world.
The Fatherhood of God means that every person who comes to Christ through faith is adopted into God’s family and given access to a loving, caring, and providing Father. Ephesians 3:14-15 reveals that all fatherhood in Heaven and Earth takes its name from God the Father, making His fatherhood the ultimate source of identity, security, and inheritance for every believer.
The orphan mentality refers to a mindset where believers, though truly children of God, live as though they have no father — marked by insecurity, fear of lack, and the feeling of being alone in their struggles. As Derek Prince noted, you can be a child of God and still live like an orphan. The remedy is a personal revelation of the Fatherhood of God that replaces fear with confidence and isolation with a sense of belonging.
In John 14:6-7, Jesus declares that He is the way, the truth, and the life, and that no one comes to the Father except through Him. He also states that knowing Him means knowing the Father. Throughout John 17, Jesus describes His mission as manifesting the Father’s name and love to His disciples, confirming that bringing humanity into relationship with the Father was the central purpose of His ministry.
According to this teaching drawn from the life of Job, a godly father functions as a priest by interceding and praying sacrificially for his children, as a prophet by declaring God’s promises and goodness over his family, and as a king by providing for and distributing inheritance and blessing to every member of the household without favoritism. These three roles reflect the character of God the Father and are meant to be modeled in every Christian home.
While Solomon did ask God for wisdom to govern justly, the deeper reason for his blessing is found in the honor he gave to his father David. In both 1 Kings 3 and 2 Chronicles 1, Solomon openly credits David’s faithfulness before making his request and asks God to establish the promises made to his father. God responded by granting not only wisdom but also riches, honor, and long life — blessings directly tied to the commandment in Ephesians 6:1-3 to honor one’s father and mother.
Yes. Acts 16:31 records the promise: believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved, and your house. The story of Rahab in Joshua further illustrates this pattern — her household was spared because of her faith and the scarlet thread she hung in her window. This teaching encourages believers to pray with bold expectation for every family member, trusting that God’s covenant promise extends saving grace beyond the individual to the whole household.
Ephesians 6:1-3 calls honoring one’s father and mother the first commandment with a promise — that it will go well with you and you will live long on the earth. Solomon’s life is a prime example: his deep honor for his father David was a key factor in God’s decision to bless him with wisdom, riches, and longevity beyond any king of his era. Honoring natural, spiritual, and heavenly fathers opens the door to an inheritance that cannot be received any other way.
This message draws a vital distinction: Jesus is not the final destination of the Christian life — He is the way to the destination, which is the Father. John 14:6 makes this explicit, and Ephesians 2:18 confirms that through Christ, believers have access by one Spirit to the Father. This does not diminish the role of Jesus but elevates the relational goal of salvation, which is that every believer would come to know, experience, and be loved by God as Father.