Monday, January 13, 2025

A Warning and Challenge for Prayer by Paul Miller

"The American church is functionally prayerless when it comes to corporate prayer. Of course, a remnant does the hidden work of prayer, but in most churches corporate prayer doesn’t function in any meaningful way. How big is that remnant? In our prayer seminars, we ask several confidential questions about a participant’s prayer life. In hundreds of seminars, we’ve found that about 15 percent of Christians in a typical church have a rich prayer life. So when someone says, “I’ll keep you in my prayers,” 85 percent of the time it is just words. This isn’t a pastor problem; it’s a follower-of-Jesus problem.

The prayer meeting, which used to function at the heart of a praying church, is all but dead. Wednesday night prayer meeting used to be the core meeting, where the most dedicated, spiritual people attended; now for many, the prayer meeting itself is a distant memory. At a recent A Praying Church seminar, I asked participants what they don’t like about prayer meetings. One young man nailed it: “It’s boring.” Someone else added, “It’s depressing.” But the most poignant comment was “I don’t know where I’d go to attend a prayer meeting.” I asked the pastor of a three-thousand-attendee church if he knew of any prayer meetings in his church. He said, without a hint of concern, “No, I’m not aware of any.”

Which brings us to the unique challenges of praying together in much of our modern world. We are a busy, and often wealthy, people. We didn’t reach our career goals and attain the comforts we enjoy by sitting around, and yet praying together feels like we are sitting around. We can be so intent on building and producing that we don’t pause to reflect on what we are building."

Miller, Paul E., A Praying Church: Becoming a People of Hope in a Discouraging World (pp. 26-27). Crossway. Kindle Edition.

Friday, January 10, 2025

This Lord's Day (January 12, 2025) at Rainsville First Baptist Church

With snow on the ground and freezing temps, we are not sure that we will be able to gather in person this Lord's Day to worship.  If we can't, hopefully, we will be able to do a live stream service for all of the church to view at 10:15 at rfbc.sermon.net.  

Live or in person, the Lord willing I will be preaching part two from Luke 18 "The Faithful Prayerer."  In the context of the second coming of Jesus, Luke begins this chapter with "Then"....and then asks a question that haunts me.  In verse 8 he asked, "When the Son of Man comes, will He really find such faith on the earth?"  What kind of faith?  Faith that preserves in prayer.

So we will look at Luke 18 from the angle of prayer and see some truths here to help us be a faithful prayerer until the end.



Monday, January 6, 2025

"Prayer" by C.S. Lewis

 C.S. Lewis once said that the prayer preceding all prayers is “May it be the real I who speaks.  May it be the real Thou that I speak to.”  In the following poem, entitled “Prayer,” Lewis peeks into what prayer looks like.  

Master, they say that when I seem

To be in speech with you,

Since you make no replies, it’s all a dream —One talker aping two. 

They are half right, but not as they  

Imagine; rather, I

Seek in myself the things I meant to say,

And lo! The wells are dry.

Then, seeing me empty, you forsake 

The Listener’s role, and through

My dead lips breathe and into utterance wake

The thoughts I never knew. 

And thus you neither need reply

Nor can; thus, while we seem

Two talking, thou are One forever, and I 

No dreamer, but thy dream.

Saturday, January 4, 2025

This Lord's Day (1-5-25) at Rainsville First Baptist Church

Happy New Year!!  May I challenge you as God has challenged me?  Would you boldly ask God, "Teach me to pray?"  Oh, what a request.  

This Lord's Day we begin our 21 Days of Prayer and Fasting.  This is our tenth year as a Pastor-church to begin the new year with prayer and fasting. I have written the devotionals for us as a church on "Intercessory Praying:  The Greatest Ministry in Heaven and on Earth."  Oh, how it has challenged me.

I'm doing something I don't think I've done...I am preaching/teaching every Sunday morning and Wednesday night in January (and possibly some in February) on prayer.  When we left the Gospel of Luke at the end of October, we had finished chapter 17.  Well, chapter 18 is one of the greatest chapters filled with truths about prayer and that is where we will begin this Lord's Day.  

Oh, if we would learn to pray, then our lives and our church would never be the same.  I can't wait....

Friday, January 3, 2025

21 Days of Prayer and Fasting January 6-26, 2025

We will kick off our "21 Days of Prayer and Fasting" around the theme of a devotion that I have written "Intercessory Praying." The devotional guides are available in the foyer of our church. 

"Fasting is refraining from food for a spiritual purpose."


Your Level of Participation:

Enter into time of prayer and fasting at whatever level you can.  Prayerfully consider your limitations as you determine your level of participation. Some cannot participate in a food fast due to health reasons, pregnant, or other reasons.  However, even those limitations can find a way to participate in this time of fasting;  or a part of it.  

If your fast cannot be food-focused, then seek to fast from something else that is a regular part of your life:  social media, TV, internet, sports, hobby, etc. Whatever activity that you sense is exerting too much influence on your heart or time and we need to fast from it to regain a more biblical perspective. 

Abstaining from food is the most powerful, but fasting from other things can have powerful benefits.  
Remember, the details are not as important as the spirit in which you participate.

Primary Purpose of Fasting?

The fast is a spiritual discipline designed to better connect us with God.  As a church, we are fasting in order to deepen our relationship with God, to better hear His voice, and to walk with less distractions in obedience.  

Fasting is not some kind of hunger strike that is forcing the hand of God to move.   

You use the time you would normally eat to pursue God.  Fasting is a biblical practice and a spiritual process that God anoints powerfully.  Fasting is not a diet;  it's a spiritual discipline.  As you neglect yourself to pursue God, you are winning the war against the flesh.  The walls come down when you approach God with this kind of focus, intentionality, and passion.

There is no mandate in the Bible to fast except on the Day of Atonement.  But fasting is assumed just as is praying and giving (Matthew 6).  Biblical fasting takes a lot of discipline and strength.

Types of Fasts:

*  Absolute Fast (no food/drink)  Ezra 10: 6; Esther 4:16; Acts 9:9

*  Normal Fast (no food, drink only liquids such as water and juices).  This appears to be what the Lord did for 40 days.  This is the most common type of fast.

*  Partial Fast (certain foods are given up).  This is what Daniel did in Daniel 10:3.  One could give up a meal or a particular kind of food.  Daniel fasted for 21 days.

Online resources helpful for fasting:

Jentezen Franklin - great resources and a free e-book
Daniel Fast
Ronnie Floyd - Fasting and Prayer as Your Spiritual Worship - GREAT article - a MUST read
Donald Whitney article on Fasting