Are we more like a motorboat or a sailboat? We tend to think and act like motorboats, containing our power within ourselves. Spiritually, we must function like sailboats whose power is outside themselves. Fill the motorboat with gasoline, and it can go where it likes, as fast as it likes, whenever it likes until it needs refilling. Doesn't that sound like Christians who want to attend a service to get "filled" and then use that power for their own purposes? The Christian life is more analogous to a sailboat that must adjust its sails to the wind when it blows, in the direction it blows, as strong as it blows. We have no control over the Spirit; we can only adjust our lives to Him.
Appropriating His power can only come after aligning with His purposes. The power is not ours to use. We are His instruments, running on His power.
The need for power is undeniable. Without Him we can do nothing (John 15:5). The promise of power is readily available. It comes with the Spirit (Acts 1:8). When we move in the power of the Spirit, things happen that cannot be explained by our own resources, abilities, hard work, personalities, or leadership. The 3,000 saved on the Day of Pentecost had nothing to do with Peter's eloquence nor with the fledgling church's marketing strategy. The place, time, and results all were due to the Spirit. Power is the ability to produce a result. We must have power.
More than likely, we will not feel this power. We may or may not feel a euphoria, a sense of well-being, or a state of confidence. Most often we feel a sense of inadequacy that keeps us dependent on the Lord. Paul said his preaching to the Corinthians was "in weakness and fear and with much trembling" but also "with a demonstration of the Spirit's power" (1 Corinthians 2:3-5). Paul later told them that he had learned that when he was weak, then he was strong because the Lord's strength is "made perfect in weakness." He even boasted about his weakness "so that Christ's power may rest on me," going so far as to state a principle: "When I am weak, then I am strong [i.e., Christ's power flows through me] (2 Corinthians 12:9-10). So the power we appropriate in prayer is not for our use nor for our state of being. It is solely for the advancing of His purposes, His kingdom.
But we must have it. His work cannot be done without His power. When the winds of revival blew through Wales, the taverns closed and the jails were empty. In the awakening of 1858 (the revival whose chief characteristic was widespread prayer meetings), one million new believers, more than 3% of the states' population, were baptized into the churches in one year. An equivalent impact today would add nine million to the churches in the US alone. When I was 16, I was a failure as a witness for Christ, but after a camp experience of complete surrender to His will and renewal of my walk with Him, I influenced people to commit their lives to Christ without knowing that I was doing it.
We should pray for power. We should pray that others would receive power. Ten days of praying followed by an hour of preaching is better than an hour of praying followed by ten days of preaching. Just ask the apostles.
Pray today that we may approach His presence, align ourselves with His purposes, and appropriate His power.
The Purpose of This Blog
In response to the challenge by the Southern Baptist Convention that churches take on the task to share the gospel with unengaged unreached people groups, the missions team of Harmony Pittsburg Baptist Association felt the need for a way to focus prayer on the task. This blog is intended to facilitate prayer for those contemplating their role in fulfilling the Great Commission. This on-line prayer guide may prove useful to those exploring a call to missions involvement as well as to those who have sensed a call to pray for those who will go to the front lines.
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