Praying Precisely
Praying Precisely
By: tomvermillion.com, Categories: boldness,hearing God,prayer, Comments Off on Praying Precisely

One of the great promises in the Word is that whatever we ask, according to God’s will, it shall be done ( 1 Jn.5:14-15). Knowing God’s will then is essential. Part of our prayer life must  involve not only speaking to God but hearing him as well. There are times we will have a burden on our heart and know that it reflects the heart and purposes of God as revealed in scripture. We should pray. But there are other times when we should ask what the Father wants us to pray about a given situation. As his representatives on the earth, we want to pray as he would pray.  To do so, we may need some more information which will come to us by his Spirit if we ask and listen. There is tremendous value in hearing God and praying according to his specific will about a situation. Let me share an illustration about this principle from Graham Cooke.

 

“My friend John had been diagnosed with a brain tumor, which had grown from the size of a pea to almost the size of a tennis ball…When I heard about the situation, I drove a hundred miles to see him. That night there was prayer meeting for him at his church. I walked in and slammed in to a wall of unbelief. There were more than 200 people in this prayer meeting, but no unity. Some were binding and casting this thing out, others were cursing it, and some were praying. ‘If it be Your will, do something.’ There was every shade of prayer that one could imagine. ‘Father, what on earth is going on here?’ I asked God. ‘They don’t know what I want to do,’ He answered. “Well,’ I said, ‘What do you want me to do?’ ‘I want you to walk around and just find out right now, just in your spirit, just discern those who are waiting and listening, by faith,’ He said.

 

I walked around the room and found thirty-five people who were just being still. I called John and told him that we needed to have a prayer meeting , with these people, in his house the next evening…The group gathered the next evening and I explained that we needed to do nothing but worship God in order to change the atmosphere in John’s house. ‘We’re going to come to a place where God will tell us what he wants to do for John and his tumor.’ We worshipped for more than two hours that night, starting with thanking God, moving into praising Him, and eventually stepping into a place of ministering to God. ‘Let’s meet again tomorrow night,’ I said.

 

Again, we met and began worshipping God. After an hour, I stood up and handed everyone a piece of paper and a pen. ‘Find yourself a quiet place in the house or the gardens and so on, and just sit still before the Lord and ask him what he wants to do for John,’ I said, givng everyone half an hour. ‘When you’re learning how to hear the Lord, He doesn’t speak to you in whole sentences but in key words and phrases. Just be still before the Lord and let God breathe on you. Whatever comes into your conscious mind, write it down.

 

When everyone came back, we went around the room and wrote the key words and phrases on a flip chart. As words were repeated, I put a checkmark beside them. By the end of it, some of them had as many as twenty-five ticks. Taking those oft-repeated words and writing them down again, I asked the intercessors to go back to their quiet place, meditate on the words, and form them into a prayer. An hour later, the group came back together, full of excitement and confidence. They marched in like an army, eyes bright, with faces smiling broadly…we wrote out a prayer and came to an agreement that this is what we would pray. This is very important: there is one thing to pray – and one thing only. What happens with most of us is that we start off praying in our fear and panic and we give God so many choices that the situation overwhelms us. We end up losing heart and quit praying at all. That night at John’s house we prayed the prayer once – just to keep people from exploding – and set another prayer meeting for the next evening” (Graham Cooke, Crafted Prayer. Brilliant Book House, p.49-52).

 

As Cooke continues the story, the group met and prayed the same prayer with faith throughout the evening. As they prayed, the atmosphere in the home continued to grow in peace and expectation. Faith arose because they knew they were praying God’s specific will for John. Their faith grew and John’s did as well. The day that his surgery was scheduled, he insisted on another CAT scan. The doctors reluctantly allowed it, but no tumor appeared on the screen. Believing that their CAT scan was faulty or that the machine was broken, they sent him across town to another hospital for another scan. It, too, indicated no tumor at all. John was healed.

 

This account illustrates the power and the need to hear from God about specific circumstances so that we can more precisely pray his will. So why didn’t God just heal John when everyone was crying out for it the first night since he was willing to heal him all along? Because he has appointed his people to release his will on the earth.

 

Your words have great authority whether you know it or not or whether you want the responsibility or not. God honors your authority for good or for bad. He is not a micromanager. Once he has given you the responsibility he does not keep taking it from you. He leaves it in your hands to release his will or not. He is anxious to run the race and, if he runs, he will win. But he waits on you to fire the starting pistol with your prayers. I believe if we understood our position of authority and influence in the kingdom of God, we would see prayer as a privilege and an adventure in which we get to partner with the Creator of the Universe (our dad) to change history and eternity. We need to see prayer as a pivotal ingredient in moments that have changed history and lives and will continue to do so.