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Biblical Video Teachings Library 2

Welcome to the Biblical Video Teachings Library list #2 of House of Faith Ministries. Here you will find additional Spirit-filled teachings, prophetic insights, and verse-by-verse studies from Pastor Marcos Marrero and Minister Lisa Kane. Every video is curated to equip believers, strengthen faith, and proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ. Explore the teachings below and grow deeper in the Word of God.

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The message opens with a congregational prayer inviting Jesus’ lordship and freedom, then sets the theme from Psalm 106:34–39: Israel’s failure to purge idolatry led to mingling with the unclean and generational defilement. Applying this to today, the speaker explains that although believers are called out of “Egypt,” God must also remove Egypt from within us—fear, traditions, and compromises that tilt the church’s “wall” off-plumb. Citing Hosea 4:6 and Isaiah 1, the sermon warns that ignorance and inherited ritual can make worship empty and endanger future generations. From Revelation 17–18, it frames “Babylon” as a hidden religious system that spreads confusion and blood-guilt, urging God’s people to “come out of her” by rejecting contaminated practices and idols that gain access to families and communities. The church is exhorted to return to God’s order (1 Cor. 12:28)—apostles confronting strongholds, prophets declaring God’s word, teachers grounding believers—so that miracles and healings can follow. The service culminates in a corporate repentance and renunciation prayer: washing hands in Jesus’ blood, breaking agreements with demonic influences, closing spiritual doors, and submitting anew to the Holy Spirit to walk in purity, authority, and truth.

MINGLED WITH THE UNCLEAN

Pastor Marcos Marrero

May 27, 2005

This lesson explores the biblical principle found in Isaiah 10:27—“the yoke will be destroyed because of the anointing oil.” It teaches that Satan enslaves people through conditioning and programming, leading them to respond to situations in ways that keep them bound by fear, sin, and generational curses. Just as oxen are yoked together and unable to move independently, believers often find themselves spiritually yoked to destructive patterns, duplications of personality, and burdens of sin.

The anointing oil, symbolic of the Holy Spirit, breaks these bondages and brings freedom. Through examples such as David’s anointing in 1 Samuel 16 and the ministry of the disciples in Mark 6, the lesson highlights that when the Spirit comes upon a person, He empowers them to cast out demons, break yokes, and heal the sick.

Furthermore, the teaching outlines three progressive levels of receiving God’s anointing:

Asking – receiving personal provision and assurance that God meets our needs.

Seeking – pursuing identity, heritage, and ministry, breaking free from generational curses.

Knocking – pressing deeper into revelation and purpose, entering into God’s destiny.

Ultimately, this message emphasizes that the cross of Christ has already borne the ultimate yoke and burden for us. Through the anointing of the Holy Spirit, believers are empowered to break free from satanic conditioning, intercede for their families, and walk in the victory and authority that comes only through Jesus Christ.

HEALING FOR THE BROKENHEARTED part 2

Pastor Marcos Marrero

July 1, 2004

This teaching explores the authority of Jesus Christ and how it brings healing to the brokenhearted. From the beginning, humanity was given dominion by God, but that authority was stolen by Satan through disobedience in the Garden of Eden. Jesus came to restore what was lost, granting believers the power to overcome every work of the enemy.

The lesson highlights how religious leaders in Matthew 21 questioned Jesus’ authority, exposing a common tactic of Satan—causing people to doubt the authority of God’s Word. This same doubt weakens believers today, preventing them from walking in victory. Scripture makes clear that while Satan’s program is to steal, kill, and destroy, Jesus came to give abundant life. Yet many Christians remain bound because of Satan’s “programming” and “conditioning” in their hearts, whether through rejection, false teaching, generational patterns, or personal wounds. These hidden influences can produce double-mindedness, fear, and even self-destruction, blocking the flow of God’s blessings.

Biblical examples such as Balaam and Balak (Revelation 2:14) show how compromise with false doctrine removes spiritual authority, while Paul’s warnings in 2 Timothy 3 remind us that not all who appear godly truly walk in God’s power. Ultimately, this teaching calls believers to recognize and break free from the enemy’s conditioning, to anchor their faith in the unshakable authority of Christ, and to receive the wholeness and peace Jesus provides.

HEALING FOR THE BROKENHEARTED part 1

Pastor Marcos Marrero

July 1, 2004

Opening with Job 19:25–27, the message proclaims, “I know that my Redeemer lives,” highlighting Job’s startling, pre-Mosaic confession of a bodily Redeemer and a future bodily resurrection. Job’s losses, bodily affliction, and friends’ accusations become a backdrop for unshakable faith: hope endures because the Redeemer is alive.

The sermon unfolds the biblical theme of the kinsman redeemer: the right to buy back what was lost, seen in Israel’s jubilee laws and embodied in Christ. Jesus, truly our kin through the Incarnation, pays the ransom with His blood (Rev 5:9), restores our inheritance, and connects heaven’s life to us. Like Abraham rescuing Lot (Gen 14), redeemed people become conduits through whom God seeks the rescue of their families.

From Ruth and Boaz, the message models covenantal trust and covering. Ruth’s “Your God will be my God” demonstrates the severing of worldly dependencies to take refuge under God’s wings, where favor is found and protection assured.

Practical application confronts the enemy’s trio—guilt, shame, condemnation—all borne by Christ at the cross. Believers are urged to keep a clear connection to the Redeemer, endure refining sufferings (Rom 8:16–17), and let God heal deep soul-wounds that hinder faith. Psalm 91 reassures that those who dwell in God’s shelter rest under His wings, even amid storms.

The message closes with a call to repentance and a deliverance prayer, inviting hearers to lay down guilt, shame, bitterness, and unbelief, and to walk in the liberty and confidence of heirs whose Redeemer lives.

MY REDEEMER IS ALIVE

Pastor Marcos Marrero

October 21, 2001

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