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- (The Sermon On The Mount And Prayer Session 1) - Part 11
(The Sermon on the Mount and Prayer - Session 1) - Part 11
Gerhard Du Toit

Gerhard Du Toit (birth year unknown–present). Born and raised in South Africa, Gerhard Du Toit grew up in the Dutch Reformed Church and converted to Christianity during his first year at theological school near Cape Town. He trained as an evangelist in South Africa and spent five years preaching there before serving eight years with The Faith Mission in the British Isles, leading Deeper Life Conferences. In 1988, he began ministering in Canada, later joining The Faith Mission (Canada) and, since 2011, Life Action Canada with his wife, Janice. A sought-after global conference speaker, Du Toit is known for his intense preaching style, focusing on prayer, revival, and the Holy Spirit, urging believers to seek God’s presence and burden for souls. He has trained thousands of pastors in spiritual renewal, emphasizing a vibrant prayer life and deep scriptural knowledge. Du Toit and Janice have a daughter, Monica, who is also in ministry. Based in Canada, he continues to preach internationally, inspiring godliness and revival. He said, “Revival begins when the leadership is ablaze with God’s presence.”
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Sermon Summary
In this sermon, the speaker reflects on the end of the year and asks if we are finishing it well, filled with the Spirit of God. He emphasizes the importance of being poor in spirit and recognizing our need for God's intervention in our lives. The speaker also discusses the concept of blessedness, explaining that it is related to our standing in Christ and our salvation. He highlights the imputed righteousness of God and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit as crucial aspects of our relationship with God.
Sermon Transcription
And when that aspect of Christian character becomes part of your life, it needs to reveal and to manifest itself. That's why I said, blessed are those that mourn. And you look upon the brokenness in the life of Christ, and you discover the submissiveness to the life of His Father, and it becomes part of your life. And the rest of the sermon and amount, it works itself out into the smallest, minutest details of our relationship. You say, what is it? It's Christian character that leads to Christian conduct. Ah, you say, is that all that it is? Ah, no. You say, what is it? It's the imputed righteousness of God that brings us to the imparted righteousness of God. You say, what is the imputed righteousness of God? It's very, very simple. All our sin was put upon His account. He bore our sin on the cross, so that we might receive the righteousness of God. Now, let me tell you something this Thursday night, brother and sister. You will never be able to understand the imputed righteousness of God if you can't come to grips with the price that He has paid. That's why the Apostle John said, here in his love, not that we love God, but that He loved us. Why did He love us? He gave His Son as a propitiation for our sins. That's why the Apostle Paul said, I'm crucified with Christ, never will this I live. Yet not I, but Christ liveth in me. And he said, the life which I now live in the flesh, I live it by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me. You see, my love for God is the response of my understanding of what He has done for me. Ah, you say, what happened? It's the imputed righteousness of God. And now the imputed righteousness of God becomes the imparted righteousness of God. And it flows in my relationship. Let me bring this little first session to a close, and let me ask you a number of questions. Blessed are the poor in spirit. Do we know poverty of spirit? I don't know if I should say this to you this evening. You know, the longer I'm a Christian, the more difficult it becomes. You say, isn't it sweet to be a Christian? Absolutely, it's wonderful. Isn't it great to serve God? Oh, it's precious. Why is it so difficult? Because you realize that if God is not going to do it, nothing is going to happen, you see. Poverty in spirit. Poverty in spirit. Poor in spirit. Brother and sister, you know the word blessed? This word blessedness is the Greek word makarios. It speaks of that blessed island. The apostle Paul takes this statement and he speaks of the blessed God. And so when you study the word blessed, it has to do with our standing Christ. In other words, our salvation. And we talk about a clear-cut conversion. The reality that I know Christ as my personal Savior. But now it goes further. It speaks of the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. It speaks of the witness of the Spirit of God. And when it is speaking to us about the witness of the Spirit of God, it takes us a little step further. And it's saying unto us, the Holy Spirit of God, who's in your life as a person, not as an experience or an influence or a manifestation, but He's in your life as a person. The Holy Spirit of God, He just don't want to be resident there. The Holy Spirit of God wants to become present in your relationship with God. And so I said, Brother Gerard, what happens? When the Lord Jesus said, blessed, you know what He was speaking about? He was speaking about the Spirit-filled life. That's what He was speaking about. May I ask you this evening, I want to ask myself this question. Now you're coming to the end of the year, and my precious family asked me this afternoon because they were praying for me and said, how are you? And I said, you know, I'm really tired. Been to many different countries this year, 40 conferences, spent about 8,200 days on these simple things called planes all over the world. And you get to the place, but oh, can I ask you, brother and sister, are we finishing the year well? Filled with the Spirit of God? Duncan Campbell used to say, if you're filled with the Holy Ghost, you can't be filled with anything else. And so Jesus said, blessed, blessed. And I wonder these young people tonight with us, ah, the sons of our fathers, the leaders of the future, these precious young women among us, my dear young friends, can I ask you tonight, is your life at God's disposal?
(The Sermon on the Mount and Prayer - Session 1) - Part 11
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Gerhard Du Toit (birth year unknown–present). Born and raised in South Africa, Gerhard Du Toit grew up in the Dutch Reformed Church and converted to Christianity during his first year at theological school near Cape Town. He trained as an evangelist in South Africa and spent five years preaching there before serving eight years with The Faith Mission in the British Isles, leading Deeper Life Conferences. In 1988, he began ministering in Canada, later joining The Faith Mission (Canada) and, since 2011, Life Action Canada with his wife, Janice. A sought-after global conference speaker, Du Toit is known for his intense preaching style, focusing on prayer, revival, and the Holy Spirit, urging believers to seek God’s presence and burden for souls. He has trained thousands of pastors in spiritual renewal, emphasizing a vibrant prayer life and deep scriptural knowledge. Du Toit and Janice have a daughter, Monica, who is also in ministry. Based in Canada, he continues to preach internationally, inspiring godliness and revival. He said, “Revival begins when the leadership is ablaze with God’s presence.”