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Discover the attributes of Kingdom Faith — what it is, how it grows, and why looking to Jesus alone is the law that governs every supernatural breakthrough.
In this powerful opening message of a new series, the pastor of NTC Ministries introduces the foundational concept of Kingdom Faith — a supernatural, active trust in God that goes far beyond mere intellectual belief. Drawing from Luke 18:8, James 2:19, Hebrews 10:38, Romans 10:17, and Hosea 4:6, the message challenges believers to recognize that even demons believe in God, yet that belief alone produces no fruit. Using vivid illustrations from the lives of Joseph, Moses, and the Apostle Paul, the pastor demonstrates how God’s purposes prevail despite every satanic opposition. A central theme is that faith grows like a garden: whatever seeds of the Word you consistently plant and water will eventually produce a harvest. The message emphasizes that Kingdom Faith is not self-consciousness or circumstantial thinking, but a fixed gaze upon Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith. Hebrews 12:1-2 anchors the call to look to Jesus alone, because true faith magnifies God’s greatness rather than life’s problems. Practical, pastoral, and deeply encouraging, this sermon sets the stage for a life-changing series on how to grow, apply, and sustain genuine biblical faith.
Luke 18:8, James 2:19, Romans 12:3, Hosea 4:6, Hebrews 10:38, Romans 10:17, Hebrews 12:1-2, 2 Corinthians 4:18, Psalm 34:4-6, John 1:1-4, John 1:14, Isaiah 40:8, Hebrews 13:8
The sermon opens with a simple but piercing contrast: natural faith and Kingdom Faith. Every person exercises natural faith daily — sitting in a chair without questioning whether it will hold. But Kingdom Faith operates in an entirely different dimension. It is a God-given confidence that opens the believer’s eyes to the supernatural realm, to God’s promises, and to His active work in their life. Romans 12:3 confirms that God has already given every believer a measure of this faith. The critical issue is not whether you have faith, but whether you understand it and know how to use it effectively.
Through the stories of Joseph, Moses, and Jesus Himself, the pastor reveals a consistent satanic strategy: destroy the dream before it can be fulfilled. Satan came against Joseph through his brothers, tried to kill Moses as an infant, and sought to eliminate Jesus at birth. Yet in every case, God intervened and brought the dream to its appointed conclusion. This pattern applies directly to every believer. Satan will attempt to make your dreams lie dormant, to discourage you, or to convince you that your God-given purpose is too great. But what the enemy intends for harm, God turns for good.
One of the most practical and memorable illustrations in this message is the garden. Every believer is described as a garden, and the fruit that comes up in life is determined entirely by what seeds are planted. Reading the Bible even when it seems incomprehensible is still planting seeds. Over time, those seeds germinate, produce understanding, and change the entire landscape of a person’s life. This is why Hosea 4:6 warns that God’s people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. Without consistently sowing the Word, no lasting crop of faith, healing, or blessing can be sustained.
The doctrinal center of this message rests on Hebrews 12:1-2: looking unto Jesus, the author and the finisher of our faith. The pastor declares this is the governing law of faith. When a believer fixes their gaze on Jesus rather than on circumstances, success becomes inevitable. Paul serves as the supreme example — beaten, shipwrecked, stoned, and abandoned by most of his churches — yet he declared all things work together for good and finished his race with confidence. His secret was that he considered everything lost compared to the excellency of knowing Christ.
Psalm 34:4-6 introduces the Hebrew word nahar — to sparkle or gleam — as the outcome of looking to the Lord. Those who look to Him are radiant; their faces are never covered with shame or redness of embarrassment and defeat. This is the practical, visible result of Kingdom Faith: a face that reflects the light of God’s glory rather than the shadow of circumstances. The pastor calls believers to make this a daily practice — blessing the Lord, thanking Him, declaring who He is — not waiting for someone else to cheer them on, but cultivating that radiance from the inside through consistent communion with God.
The sermon closes with a pastoral exhortation to trust God radically, especially when life does not make sense. Closed doors, unraveling plans, and crooked paths are not signs of abandonment but invitations to deeper trust. God never asks believers to figure everything out; He asks them to acknowledge Him in all their ways and promises to direct their paths. Submission to God is reframed not as loss but as gain — receiving His perfect wisdom in exchange for our limited understanding. The closing prayer leads the congregation to surrender everything into the hands of Jesus, the one who has already gone before them.
Kingdom Faith is a supernatural, God-given confidence that goes beyond intellectual belief in God’s existence. It is an active trust rooted in the Word of God, as described in Romans 12:3, which states that God has given every believer a measure of faith. Unlike natural faith, Kingdom Faith operates in the supernatural realm, aligning believers with God’s promises and purposes.
Romans 10:17 teaches that faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God. This means that consistently reading, hearing, and meditating on Scripture is the primary way faith is built and sustained. Like planting seeds in a garden, the Word may not produce immediate visible results, but repeated exposure eventually brings understanding, transformation, and confident trust in God’s promises.
Hosea 4:6 warns that God’s people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. Many believers receive a miracle but fail to build themselves in the Word of God afterward. Without consistent Scripture reading, prayer, and fellowship with strong believers, the knowledge and faith needed to sustain that miracle are absent, and the enemy finds an opportunity to reclaim ground.
Hebrews 12:2 describes Jesus as the author and finisher of our faith. This means He is both the source from whom faith originates and the one who brings it to completion. When believers fix their eyes on Jesus rather than on their circumstances, He sustains, grows, and perfects their faith through every trial, guaranteeing a favorable outcome because He always leads believers in triumph.
Doubt comes by focusing on circumstances, problems, and the visible environment. Faith comes by looking to Jesus, who is greater than any circumstance, heredity, loss, or failure. As Psalm 34:5 declares, those who look to God are radiant and never covered in shame. The consistent practice of fixing your eyes on Jesus rather than your problems is what displaces doubt and builds enduring Kingdom Faith.
The law of faith, drawn from Hebrews 12:1-2, is the principle of continually looking to Jesus as the author and finisher of faith. Just as there is a natural law governing how doubt and unbelief grow when one focuses on problems, there is a spiritual law that governs how faith grows when one focuses on Jesus, His Word, His promises, and His unchanging character.
According to the pastor, yes — not because God takes it back, but because a believer who does not apply the knowledge of God’s Word cannot sustain what they have received. Oral Roberts observed that many who were visibly healed did not keep their miracle because they returned to old habits without building faith through Scripture and community. Ongoing engagement with God’s Word is essential to holding onto every blessing received.
The pastor uses the image of pregnancy to describe the God-given dreams, desires, and purposes already placed within every believer. These are not random wishes but God-ordained destinies. Just as Satan tried to destroy the destinies of Joseph, Moses, and Jesus in their earliest stages, he will attempt to discourage, silence, or abort the dreams God has given you. Kingdom Faith is the means by which those dreams are carried to full delivery and fulfillment.