WHY PRAY?
1. We pray because we love God.
We spend time with God in prayer and
communion because we love Him. Just as a
man and woman in love desire to be
together and communicate, so we - if we
love God - will desire to be with Him
and to fellowship with Him in proportion
to our love for Him.
2. We pray because we depend on God.
God is our source. He is our life
(Colossians 3:4). Through prayer we
receive the comfort, the strength and
all the other resources that we need in
life - both naturally and spiritually.
Prayer - relationship to God - is as
necessary to the spiritual life as air
to the natural life.
3. We need to pray so that the Will
of God can prevail on the earth.
When the disciples asked Jesus to teach
them to pray, Jesus taught them this
very important principle. He said to
pray like this: "Thy kingdom come.
Thy will be done, as in heaven, so in
earth" (Luke 11:2). This implies that
the permissible will of God will only
prevail through permission in prayer. In
other words, when we pray, God can have
His way in our situation. Amazing how we
stop the will of God through neglect of
prayerlessness. 4. We need to pray in order to resist
temptation. "Watch and pray, lest
you enter into temptation." (Mt. 26:41).
Much sin is the result of the sin of
prayerlessness. Through lack of prayer,
we are weak, others are weaker and Satan
gains the advantage in our lives.
5. We need to pray because it is
necessary for men to invite God to act
in salvation. God gave the earth to
Adam and his descendants. We must invite
God to work here. If no-one invites God
to work here, Satan (the god of this
world through man's universal rebellion
- 2 Corinthians 4:4) will dominate the
affairs of men and eventually the
judgment of God will come. By inviting
God often and specifically, multitudes
can be saved that would otherwise be
lost.
6. We need to pray because God
commands us to pray and prayerlessness
is sin. "Continue earnestly in
prayer, being vigilant in it with
thanksgiving." (Colossians 4:2). "Then
he [Jesus] spoke a parable to them to
this end, that men ought always to pray
and not lose heart." (Luke 18:1). The
need to pray is as great as the
authority of God which commands us:
"Pray without ceasing." (1 Thessalonians
5:17). Prayer is so vital to all that
God wants to do on the earth, and so
essential to us, that God commands us to
do it all the time. We should even deny
ourselves sleep and food at times in
order to pray more and with greater
power. (Matthew 6:16; Luke 6:12; Luke
21:36; Colossians 4:2; 2 Corinthians
11:27).
HOW TO BEGIN
If you are not sure how to pray, don't
despair! Everyone had to begin sometime.
Just talk with God respectfully but
openly. Talk with Him as your Father.
Jesus taught us to pray, "Our Father
...". Recognise God as a loving Father.
Recognise Jesus as a Friend and a
Brother. Recognise the Holy Spirit as
your Comforter and Guide. Come to the
Father in Jesus' name (John 14:6;
Hebrews 10:19). Begin your prayer with
confession of your unconfessed sins. In
this way the blood of Jesus cleanses us
and prepares us to really relate to God.
"Enter his gates with thanksgiving..."
(Psalm 100:4). Thank God for forgiving
your sins, for coming into your life,
for making you His child. Then just talk
with God, asking Him for whatever you
need. Thank Him and praise Him for His
answer. Spend time also asking for His
Spirit to help you to pray. Talk to the
Holy Spirit. Tell Him you want to know
Him. "Likewise the Spirit also helps in
our weaknesses. For we do not know what
we should pray for as we ought, but the
Spirit Himself makes intercession for
us..." (Romans 8:26). The Holy Spirit
will guide you into all the truth (John
16:13) and He will teach you to pray.
PREPARING YOURSELF TO PRAY
1. Prepare your heart for fellowship
with God (Psalm 24:3-5)
- Confess known sin in your life (1 John
1:6-9; 1 John 3:21-22; Hebrews 10:19)
- Forgive all who have offended or hurt
you (Mark 11:25-26)
- See yourself then as dead to sin and
sinless in the eyes of God. (Romans
6:11; 2 Corinthians 5:21)
2. Have a purpose in prayer.
Know what you are going to pray about.
It is difficult to pray fervently
without knowing what you want or desire
from God. We should have a clear-cut,
well-defined idea about what we are
asking God for. If we do not have this,
we can wait on God until He reveals His
purpose for our prayer time. We do this
by sitting still, or by worshiping in
our hearts, waiting for God to place
desires there. We can also begin by
telling God our appreciation for Him.
Jesus told us to ask, seek and knock.
(Matthew 7:7). In asking, we must be
definite. In seeking, our goal is to
know God and commune with Him. In
knocking (intercession) we must
understand what the Lord wants to do and
pray the Word for that thing.
Sometimes we do not know what to pray
for, and so we can pray in the Spirit
(Romans 8:26). We can pray in tongues
without understanding, even for hours,
according to the will of God. However,
Paul stated that he prayed with the
spirit and with the understanding
(1Corinthians 14:15). Our whole being,
including our minds, should be involved
in praying. Our minds should understand
what we are asking God for. However, we
can pray with the spirit (in tongues)
when our minds need a rest (Isaiah
28:11,12)
The fact remains, however, that when we
set ourselves to pray, especially in a
group, we must be agreed about what we
will pray for (Matthew 18:19). The
issues that are important to the Lord
may become clear as we wait upon God and
begin to express ourselves to God,
opening our hearts to Him.
3. Know what the Word of God says
regarding the thing you are praying for.
We must renew our minds with the Word so
that we know God's will on the matter
without a doubt. God's will is to do
what He promises in the Word. By
meditating on the Word and letting it
transform our hearts as we renew our
mind in it, we prepare ourselves to pray
in faith. If we don't know what the Word
says, there is a good chance that doubt
will enter, and if we doubt we cannot
expect to receive from God (James 1:6,7)
PRINCIPLES IN PRAYER
1. Depend on the Holy Spirit.
In prayer, you should look to the Holy
Spirit to help you to pray effectively.
He can give you the right words with
which you can pray effectively. Its very
good to ask the Holy Spirit to help you
to pray. Talk to the Holy Spirit as a
person, and ask Him to help you to come
to the Father in Jesus' name.
Rather than rushing in to God's presence
and saying many things, it is good many
times to quieten your mind and wait in
God's presence so you can feel God's
heart and pray the things that the Holy
Spirit shows you to pray for. We should
realise that learning to listen to God
is an important part of prayer.
We are told to "pray always with all
prayer and supplication in the Spirit"
(Ephesians 6:18). It is the Spirit who
is to lead us in the kind of prayer we
offer to God. He gives us the power to
pray.
Spend at least part of your time seeking
to be filled with the Holy Spirit
(Ephesians 5:18). The more filled you
are with the Spirit, the more effective
will be your whole life with God.
2. Realise who you are in Christ, and
on what basis God will hear you.
We must pray to the Father in Jesus'
name, not our own name (John 16:24,26;
Colossians 3:17) This means that we are
basing our approach to God on Jesus'
righteousness and goodness, not on our
own. We receive His righteousness when
we repent, confess our sins and believe
that we receive His righteousness. We
should know then that "we are the
righteousness of God in Him" (2
Corinthians 5:21) and we can come
directly to have an audience with God
because of the sacrifice of Jesus in our
place. We come as children of God
(Galatians 3:26; John 1:12), as members
of the royal family of God (Revelation
1:6), and NOT AS BEGGARS or STRANGERS.
Therefore when we pray we should expect
that God will grant results in response
to our prayer. (1 Peter 3:12)
3. It is good to begin your prayer
with thanksgiving and praise. "Enter
into His gates with thanksgiving, and
into His courts with praise. Be thankful
to Him, and bless His name." (Psalm
100:4). Thank God for answers to prayer,
for your salvation. Tell Him how great
He is. It is good to use the Word of God
to praise God. This is not a form of
flattery in order to get God to give you
things, but it is only fitting to thank
Him and praise Him. Thanking God will
increase your faith. Praising God will
also increase your faith, since you will
begin to fix your eyes on God, His
goodness and faithfulness and greatness
and power, and not on your problem.
4. Worship God. Many effective
prayer-warriors recognise the importance
of spending much time in worship, even
up to 80% of prayer time. This deepens
our fellowship with God, increases our
faith and pleases the Holy Spirit. We
are then more likely to really hear His
voice and thus pray effectively. Worship
is an attitude of bowing down, of
submission and adoration towards God,
based on a recognition of who He is.
5. Pray the Word.
God's will is to keep His promises to
us. In prayer the Word of God should be
in our hearts and in our mouths (Romans
10:8). In our prayers we should use the
Word of God and remind God of His
promises to us. This builds our faith
and it also pleases God because it is an
expression of our confidence in His Word
and His integrity.
For example, you can pray "Father, in
your Word you say that those who seek
you will not lack any good thing. I
thank you that you will not lack
........... . I ask you for this in
Jesus' name. Thank you for it. Amen. "
(Psalm 34:10).
6. Ask God for definite things that
you want (Psalm 37:4)
You should pray in such a way that you
will know afterwards what you prayed for
and you will recognise when the answer
to your prayer is manifested. Don't pray
like this, "Lord, give me what you think
is best. If you want this, then so be
it. If not, what pleases you. Your will
be done." These prayers may sound
spiritual but they really express
uncertainty and doubt and cannot be
answered by God in a concrete way. How
would you know if such a prayer was
answered?
Imagine the answer and speak the answer
to your prayer based on the Word. This
builds faith. Don't keep speaking the
problem. Constant speaking the problem
magnifies fear and doubt. It makes the
problem look big. Fill your mind with
the solution from God's Word, not the
problem.
7. Allow God to lead you to pray for
others in the church and their
needs, national and local situations,
the government, the advance of the
Kingdom of God, and the growth of the
church. God is looking for people who
will stand in the gap with Him in
intercession for situations that are
beyond their own personal interests.
Make God's interests your interests.
8. Thank God for the results of
prayer, both before and after you
see the results. (Philippians 4:6,7).
Pray with thanksgiving. Thanksgiving
expresses your confidence that God has
heard and answered your prayer even
before you see the result.
STEPS FOLLOWING PRAYER
Usually Satan will try to suggest to you
that your prayers were not heard. He
will encourage you to look to the
problems again and get your eyes off
God. He will try to get you to talk as
if you are not sure if your prayer is
answered. If he succeeds in getting you
to express doubt it is likely that your
mouth confession will cancel the effect
of your prayer. Therefore guard your
mind and heart, resist the temptation to
talk negatively about the situations
with others, especially with those with
whom you are praying.
Take firm control of your thought life.
Think on positive things (Philippians
4:6-9). By praising God and confessing
the relevant truths of the Word, cast
down every thought that is contrary to
your prayer. These thoughts many times
are nothing but the suggestions of the
devil, who is working to negate our
faith.
Keep speaking the what the Word says
on the issue at stake. "Let us hold fast
the confession of our hope without
wavering, for He who promised is
faithful." (Hebrews 10:23; 2 Corinthians
4:13).
With your imagination, see your
prayers as answered. Abraham was
encouraged by God to imagine his
descendants as the stars he saw in the
sky, before there were any descendants.
So God will often give us a picture for
us to hold onto and encourage our faith.
Speak nothing contrary to this vision.
Act in line with your faith and your
confession
(James 2:17). Prepare for the
answer to be manifested. Examples of
this can be found in Mark 6:39-40, where
Jesus organises the people, preparing
them to receive the blessing of the
multiplied loaves and fishes. Also in
John 11:39, Jesus told them to take away
the stone from the tomb of dead Lazarus,
a preparation for the answer to the
prayer for his being raised from the
dead.
TYPES OF PRAYER
As mentioned before, there are different
forms of prayer. The Holy Spirit wants
to lead us into a balance of all these
kinds of prayer.
Worship: [Heb. shachah
{shaw-khaw'} = bow down, prostrate
oneself]. The true worshipper God seeks
worships in spirit and in truth. (John
4:23). God wants truth in the inner
parts (Psalm 51:6). In true worship,
there is a total bowing down of the
heart to God. In worship we express love
and admiration to God which is a
response to the revelation of who God is
revealed to us by the Holy Spirit.
Worship is voluntary submission to the
love, the will and the law of God. Any
hypocrisy disqualifies us for true
worship. In worship we hear the voice of
God.
Confession: 1. In confession of
sin, we tell God with our mouth our sin.
We should specifically tell God what we
did, or acknowledge what we failed to do
that we should have done. This is
necessary to restore communion with God
and is a preparation for further
fellowship. 2. In confession of the
Word, we tell God with our mouths what
He has said in His Word. We express
faith and confidence in God and God's
Word verbally, and it releases the
blessing of God to us. Very rarely do we
rise above the level of our verbal
confession before God.
Thanksgiving: This is thanking
God for what He has done for us. We can
thank Him both for blessings seen and
those as yet unseen. It is a key to
faith and it is natural and right that
we give thanks always to the One from
whom all good things come. (1
Thessalonians 5:18)
Praise: This is declaring good
things about God, both about his
character (who he is) and also His
actions. To say "God is good" is to
praise God. There are many styles of
praise. Some are noisy and exuberant,
others are calm. Praise is
well-expressed through music, singing,
words, shouting, clapping, dancing,
shouting and giving to God.
Petition: This is asking God for
the things we desire. Jesus said, "Ask
and you shall receive." (Matthew 7:7).
We are commanded to ask.
Intercession: The ministry of
intercession involves all the other
types of prayer. However, the emphasis
of the prayer ministry in intercession
is the needs of others, and the
advancement of God's interests in the
world. It is not focused on praying for
things for oneself, but for others.
Waiting: (Habakkuk 2:1). This is
a form of prayer in which the soul is
silent and waits for God to move it or
speak something by His Spirit. God
promises to renew the strength of those
who wait on Him (Isaiah 40:31; Psalm
27:14). We are to wait patiently on God.
Through this we express to God in a
practical way - not my will but Yours be
done. If we are always talking in prayer
we will not be able to hear what God is
saying.
Warfare: (Psalm 149:6-9). This is
prayer directed against the powers of
darkness. Our praises to God are also a
weapon directed against the powers of
darkness (demons, fallen angels who are
at work in the affairs of the world and
the church). We pronounce against them
the written judgment by reading the
Scriptures of judgment against them
(Psalm 149:9), we command them to be
bound or to leave their positions of
influence or authority in the name of
Jesus. (Matthew 16:19; Mark 16:17). In
"praying for the sick" we should pray
prayers of command ordering the bodies
of people to be healed in Jesus' name.
This is a form of spiritual warfare
since it is part of destroying the works
of the devil. (1 John 3:8; Acts 10:38).
Praying in Tongues: (1
Corinthians 14: 2,15; Jude 20) This is a
method of prayer available to those
baptized in the Holy Spirit through
which they can pray the will of God
through words given by the Spirit. Since
the mind (the understanding) is not
directly involved the mind has a chance
to rest and wait on God and receive
revelation while this praying in tongues
is taking place.
PRAYING THE WORD
Since God's Word commands us to give
constant attention to the Word and to
meditate on it night and day, (Proverbs
4:20-22; Joshua 1:8), it is clear that
our praying should not be something
separate from the Word, but rather, that
God's Word should direct our praying.
For example, Daniel found the promise of
the time of deliverance for God's people
and prayed according to that. (Daniel
9:2). His prayer acknowledged openly the
truth of God's Word (Daniel 9:10-15).
Many other examples could be given.
Elijah's prayer for the heavens to be
shut was based on the promise of God to
do this if the people turned away to
idols.
Praying the Word in a strict sense
includes quoting it and using it in our
prayers. God responds to his own Word.
It will not return to Him void (Isaiah
55:11). We can take general promises
from the Bible and using the words of
Scripture pray as if we expect God will
fulfill them for us personally. This is
a powerful form of prayer.
DEDICATION TO PRAYER
God says, "Continue earnestly in prayer,
being vigilant in it with thanksgiving."
(Colossians 4:2). "Men ought always to
pray and not lose heart." (Luke 18:1).
"Pray without ceasing" (1 Thessalonians
5:17). "Watch therefore and pray always"
(Luke 21:36).
Prayer is where our dedication to God is
tested. This is where our destiny is
really determined. This is a command
with constant application. Either we
maintain communion with God or we don't.
Either we depend on God and wait on Him
or we don't. Either we allow ourselves
to be led by Him or we don't.
Prayer, to be effective, often requires
fasting. This means denying ourselves
food. A normal fast is where we do not
eat (although we may drink water). This
intensifies our focus on God, puts down
the power of our flesh and enables us to
pray more easily, with less mental
effort. The only way to pray without
ceasing and to have maximum results in
prayer is to be willing to practise
self-denial where necessary. This
includes Spirit-led fasting. Fasting for
a day is normal and often very necessary
where we are not aware of the reason for
which our communion with God is weak.
The other kind of self-denial needed in
the life of a person serious about
prayer is "watching" or denying yourself
sleep. This could mean late nights of
prayer or getting up early in the
morning to pray. Jesus practised both of
these in His busy ministry (Mark 1:35;
Luke 6:12)
The people who make a difference for
God are those who are people of prayer.
Now that you know these things, you will
be blessed if you do them. God is
looking for people who willingly, out of
gratitude, love and devotion, will
devote themselves and their free time to
this vital ministry.
Measure your love for God by your
desire to spend time with Him in His
presence, and the priority you put on
this.
Assignment: Meditate much and
often on 1 Thessalonians 5:17 "Pray
without ceasing".
KEY BIBLE TEACHING REGARDING PRAYER AND
HOW IT IS TO BE
PRAYER CONTENT : GOOD GOVERNMENT
1Tim 2.1 2.2; GOSPEL WORKERS Mt 9.38;
THE LORD'S PRAYER Mt 6.9-6.13; ALL
CONCERNS Php 4.6 Eph 6.18; THE WAY PAUL
PRAYED Col 1.9 Eph 1.17 1.18; WITH
PRAISE AND THANKSGIVING Heb 13.15 Php
4.6; WITH TONGUES AND INTERPRETATION
Jude 20 1Cor 14.13
ACCORDING TO GOD'S WILL 1Jo 5.14
5.15. WITH NO LOVE FOR INIQUITY Ps 66.18
Jas 5.16. BY REMAINING IN CHRIST AND IN
THE WORD John 15.7. IN FAITH Mt 21.22 Jn
14.13 Mk 11.24. WITH FORGIVENESS Mk
11.25. WITH ASKING Mt 7.7. WITH
EARNESTNESS Jas 5.16. FOR GOD'S GLORY
1Cor 10.31 Mt 6.13 Jas 4.3. IN THE
SPIRIT Jud 1.20. IN HUMILITY Mt 6.5 2Chr
7.14. IN LOVE 1Cor 16.14. IN JESUS' NAME
Jn 14.13. WITH DETERMINATION Lk 18.2.
PRAYING IN THE SPIRIT 1Cor 14.2
14.15 Eph 6.18; Jud 1.20 1.21; Rom 8.26
8.27
PRAYER COMMITMENT: WITHOUT
CEASING 1The 5.17 5.18 ; WAITING ON GOD
Hos 10.12; WITH WATCHFULNESS Col 3.2 Eph
6.18 Lk 21.36; WITH ENDURANCE Lk 18.1;
ABOUT EVERYTHING Php 4.6 4.7; FOR OTHERS
1Sam 12.23.