RR: That’s this university. Turn to the person next to you and say, “ORU is ours.” Turn to them and say, “ORU is ours.” (Response) ORU is becoming the university of choice for the Christian charismatic community.
And I want to say something to you, you ministers, what I say to parents every year at the beginning of the school year. Send me your sons, your daughters, your grandchildren, your nieces, your nephews. I will send them back to you better than you sent them to me. That’s a promise that Lindsay and I make to parents every year.
Tonight is ORU night. The offering tonight is designated for Oral Roberts University. The Lord has been talking to me about what He wants to do tonight. I’m going to ask Pastor Charles Green to come back up because when I shared with him what the Lord laid on my heart, he said, “I have a word about that,” and so does Billye Brim. Billye, would you come back up for just a moment.
And as they’re coming, I want to remind you of Luke, chapter 10, verse 2. Everybody say, Luke 10, verse 2. The Bible says on that day, Jesus said, that “The harvest is plenteous, but the laborers are few. Pray ye therefore that the Lord of the harvest would send laborers into His harvest.”
I was having a conversation sometime ago with my father, and he and I were studying that scripture. And he said something to me that changed my life. He said, “Jesus said, ‘The harvest is plenteous, but the laborers are few.’” He said, “Richard, the church has learned how to sow.”
And it was my father many years ago who brought that principle of sowing like never before, so people did not give as a debt. But because Jesus paid the debt—we sang about it tonight. He paid the debt in full. It can never be paid again.
He brought that sowing principle, he called it “the principles of Seed-Faith,” of God is your source, plant your seed, expect a miracle. But he said, “Richard, many Christians have not understood that there is to be a harvest, and you have to labor for it.” Now labor in the sense that you have to use your faith to believe for the harvest.









