We've Got History
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概要
Psalm 145:4 (KJV)“One generation shall praise thy works to another and shall declare thy mighty acts.”
As we close out Black History Month, we are reminded that like David, we’ve got His history—and a responsibility to share it. Faith was never meant to stop with us. What God has done in one generation must be declared to the next. Gratitude is not meant to stay private; it must become public testimony. If God has been good to you, don’t let the story die with you. David teaches us that every generation must talk about God’s faithfulness, so the next generation doesn’t start from scratch. Tell them what He’s done before they need Him to do it again.
I. We Remember the Root
A. We didn’t start this—we stepped into it.
- Rooted in David’s praise
- Rooted in Peter and Pentecost
- Rooted in Apostolic Doctrine
- Rooted in the fire of Azusa Street under William J. Seymour
- Rooted in 29 years of God’s faithfulness in this church
We are not accidental—we are Apostolic. We’ve got history.
II. We Remember the Work
David said, “Praise thy works.”
For 29 years, this church has seen His works:
- Souls saved
- People filled, healed, restored
- Bills paid
- Lights on
- Doors open
Black History Month is not just cultural remembrance—it’s celebration of God’s works in His people. If God did it before, He can do it again.
David’s Perspective
- Who: A king, worshipper, warrior. Not perfect—but preserved.
- What: Psalm 145 is structured, generational praise—succession language.
- When: Late in his life. Not running David. Not fighting David. Seasoned David.
Looking back, he declared: God has been too faithful for me to be silent. When you get to the end—don’t slow down. Pass it down. We Remember the Responsibility. “One generation shall praise…” That means it’s our turn.
We don’t just inherit history—we pass it on.
- We are Black History in motion.
- We are Apostolic history in continuation.
- We are Kingdom history in real time.
If we don’t declare it, the next generation won’t know it.
History Has a PatternGod’s pattern repeats through Scripture and history:
I. Martin Luther King Jr. / Joseph
- “I have a dream” — Joseph had one first
- Vision misunderstood
- Rejected before respected
- Joseph saved a nation; Martin moved one
II. Rosa Parks / Esther
- Rosa sat down to stand up
- Esther stood up to save
- Courage carried consequences
III. Harriet Tubman / Moses
- Both led people out of bondage
- Deliverers for others
IV. Emmett Till / Abel
- Innocence
- Injustice
- Tragedy that awakened movements
- Blood that cried out
V. Frederick Douglass / Peter
- Bold voices
- Confronted systems
- Preached truth in hostile environments
VI. Charles Walker / Ezra
- Ezra rebuilt spiritual order after captivity
- Charles rebuilt spiritual order in cultural drift
- Focused on restoration, not applause
VII. True Holiness / The Church of Philadelphia
Revelation 3:8
“I have set before thee an open door…”
Philadelphia wasn’t the biggest or the wealthiest—but it was faithful.
Not the loudest. Not the most famous. But faithful.
True Holiness is the same:
- Kept the Word
- Endured pressure
- Remained Apostolic
Conclusion
We’ve got history.
History shows us:
- Vision before validation
- Rejection before respect
- Faithfulness before fruit
God has been too faithful for us to be silent. We don’t just celebrate history—we continue it. We’ve got history… and now it’s our turn to declare it.