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Intercessors Arise -
2019
13 May
“Praying the Bible helps our prayer lives because it brings an entirely new focus to what we are praying.” Wesley and Stacey Campbell
Did you know that God wants us to talk with Him as we read His Word? He loves it when we dialogue with Him over what we are reading. He wants us to actively talk with Him in our heart. We gain so much strength as we read His Word and engage in conversation with Him. It’s so simple but makes so much difference in our prayer lives.
The Bible gives us the conversation material for our prayer lives. Prayer becomes easier and more enjoyable as we do this. We speak and pray God’s Truth back to Him. We commune and abide with Him on a deep level. Over time we see great change in our lives and especially in our prayer life.
When the famous missionary, David Livingstone, started travelling across Africa he had 73 of his most valued books with him, weighing 180 pounds. After his party had gone 300 miles, he decided to throw away some of his books because he was totally exhausted from carrying them. As he continued, his library grew smaller and smaller. By the end of His journey He had one book left, his most important one — His Bible! Having our Bibles and pray-reading God’s Word should be our most precious possession as well.
When we pray-read the Bible, God teaches us in a way that is tailor-made for us personally. We say new things to Him and we pray with more creativity. It’s amazing. The Holy Spirit prays through us and gives us new insights as we pray, but how can we do this in the most effective way? How do we pray-read God’s Word?
How to Pray-Read the Word of God:
“If you abide in Me, and My words abide (live) in you, you will ask what you desire, and it shall be done for you” (John 15:7).
Here are 10 ways to pray-read the Bible:
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Pray the promises to believe — When we read a promise in the Bible, we turn it into a conversation with Jesus.
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Thank God and declare trust — With the promises in Scripture, we thank God for the promise and declare our trust in it.
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Ask for more understanding — We ask for more understanding of a particular truth.
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Pray the exhortations to obey while reading — These exhortations can relate to our speech, work, food, attitudes, service, relationships, and more.
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Commit to obey the truth — Make simple declarations of our resolve to obey it.
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Ask God for empowerment — We ask God to help us to obey by giving us wisdom, motivation, and power to obey.
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Pray slowly and softly — Short phrases are good. We don’t need to shout or preach to God.
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Take time to journal — Record your thoughts as you pray-read the Bible. Journaling helps us to capture the truths that God wants to give us.
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Pray-read the descriptions of Jesus — There are 30 descriptions of Jesus in Revelation 1-3 alone. We can worship God with these descriptions and ask Him for more insight into what they mean to our lives.
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Use the acronym A-R-K — Think of the Ark of the Covenant where God’s presence dwelt, and then do the following three things:
A — Agreement — Agree with who Jesus is in a specific way. Declare truth about who He is.
R — Revelation — Ask for revelation as to each of the 30 descriptions. Ask for more insight and a spirit of wisdom and revelation (Ephesians 1:17).
K — Keep the prophesy — Ask for help to apply the commands and plans of Jesus in the book of Revelation, and ask Him to give you faith and help you to obey.
I encourage you to start pray-reading the Word of God on a regular basis. You will be amazed at all that God has to say to you from His Word as you dialogue with Him. You will grow in your effectiveness in prayer, as God leads you into thrilling depths and greater heights in your relationship with Him.
This Intercessors Arise course will help you to develop a life that powerfully prays God’s Word. Pray-reading the Bible and a multitude of other dynamic teachings to help you grow in praying the Bible are included. It’s called «How to Powerfully Pray God’s Word for Breakthrough.»
“The Bible is actually a whole book of spiritual words! The Bible will teach you the language of God so that you can effectively communicate to Him. When you speak from the Bible in your prayers, you will be led to an entirely different place in prayer—one you might’ve not thought was humanly possible, simply because the language of the Bible is so absolutely different than our own.” Wesley and Stacey Campbell
Together in the Harvest,
Debbie Przybylski
Intercessors Arise International
International House of Prayer Kansas City (IHOPKC)
www.intercessorsarise.org
Photo Credit: ©Unsplash/AaronBurden
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«Those who love me I also love,
and those who seek me find me.
With me are riches and honor,
enduring wealth and prosperity.
My fruit is better than gold,
yes, than pure gold,
and my revenue than choice silver.»
[Proverbs 8:17-19]
«O children, listen to me;
instruction and wisdom do not reject!
Happy the man who obeys me,
and happy those who keep my ways.»
[Proverbs 8:32-33]
«We know that when the earthly tent
in which we dwell is destroyed
we have a dwelling provided for us by God,
a dwelling in the heavens,
not made by hands but to last forever.»
[2 Corinthians 5:1]
«All glorious is the King’s daughter as she enters;
her raiment is threaded with spun gold.»
[Psalm 45:14]
«She is the redulgence of eternal light,
the spotless mirror of the power of God,
the image of His goodness.»
[Wisdom 7:26]
«Can a mother forget her infant,
be without tenderness for the child of her womb?
Even should she forget,
I will never forget you.»
[Isaiah 49:15]
«The wine ran out,
and Jesus’ Mother… instructed those waiting on table,
«Do whatever he tells you.»
[John 2:3-5]
«Happy the man watching daily at my gates…
for he who finds me finds life,
and wins favor from the Lord.»
Printable Catholic Prayer PDFs
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Hi readers, it seems you use Catholic Online a lot; that’s great! It’s a little awkward to ask, but we need your help. If you have already donated, we sincerely thank you. We’re not salespeople, but we depend on donations averaging $14.76 and fewer than 1% of readers give. If you donate just $5.00, the price of your coffee, Catholic Online School could keep thriving. Thank you.
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More God Prayers (42)
A Prayer in Praise of God’s Greatness — Almighty, true and incomparable God,
You are …
A Prayer of Gratitude for God’s Blessings — O Lord and Vivifier,
Your grace has achieved …
A Prayer to My Lord — My Lord,
I offer you my thoughts:
to be fixed …
A Spirit to Know You — Gracious and Holy Father,
Please give …
Glory to God # 1 — Glory to God in the highest,
and peace to His …
Glory to God # 2 — Glory be to God on high,
and on earth peace to …
Holy Mother of God — Holy Mother of God,
Holy Virgin of …
O God — O God, Who dost deign mercifully to bestow upon …
O Godhead (adoro Te Devote) — O Godhead hid,
devoutly I adore Thee,
Who …
O Word of the Father — O Word of the Father,
that camest into this …
Pilgrim’s Prayer to God (our Lady of the Prairies) — O God,
your gifts of grace to Mary
lead us to …
Plea to the Everlasting Father, for the Preborn —
Lord God, our Eternal Father,
we come to Thy …
Praise to God (psalm 67) — O God, be gracious and bless us
and let Your …
PRAYER AT THE ELEVATION «My Lord and my God!» — Hail! most blessed Jesus,
eternal Son of the …
Prayer at the Elevation — «My Lord and My God» — Hail! most blessed Jesus,
eternal Son of the …
Prayer for God’s Blessing of One’s Daily Work — O Lord, my God,
Creator and Ruler of the …
Prayer for God’s Guidance — Father in Heaven,
You made me Your child
and …
Prayer for God’s Help in Daily Actions — Our Father, may everything I do begin with Your …
Prayer for Resignation to God’s Will —
Lord, if what I seek be according to our will, …
Prayer in Sorrow — God of all consolation,
in your unending love …
Prayer to God the Father — Almighty God, my Eternal Father,
from the …
Prayer to God the Father # 2 — O Father of mercies,
from whom cometh all that …
Prayer to God the Father # 3 (by Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque) — Eternal Father,
I offer unto Thee the infinite …
Prayer to God the Holy Spirit — O Divine Spirit,
Who have so often enlightened …
Prayer to God the Son — O Jesus, who for love of me consented to become …
Prayer to Live as a Child of God — Father in Heaven,
when the Spirit came down …
Prayer to Live in God’s Presence — God, my Father,
You have promised to remain …
Prayer to Love God Above All Things — God, my Father,
may I love You in all things …
Prayer to Mary, Mother of God # 2 — God our Father,
may we always profit by the …
Prayer to Mary, Mother of God # 3 — Father, source of light in every age,
the …
Prayer to Mary, Mother of God (crusade for the Family) — Mary, Mother of God, at your request,
Jesus …
Prayer to Seek God Continually — O Lord my God,
I believe in you,
Father, Son, …
Prayer to Seek God Continually — O Lord my God,
I believe in you,
Father, Son, …
Prayer to Serve God Well — Father of Mercy,
forgive my failings,
keep me …
Prayer to the Spirit of God — Breath in me, Spirit of God,
that I may think …
The Good Morning God Prayer — Good Morning God!
You are ushering in another …
The Prayer God Alone Suffices! — I offer You, Lord, my thoughts: to be fixed on …
The Prayer I Adore Thee, O Jesus, True God and True Man — I adore Thee, O Jesus,
true God and true Man, …
The Prayer Thy Kingdom Come (by Father Stedman.) —
LORD, we ask for more than Thy Mercy!
We …
The Prayer, Merciful Father — Infinitely merciful Father,
I offer You by the …
The Prayer, the Word of God — «Those who love me I also love,
and those who …
To Perceive Animals as God’s Gifts — God Our Heavenly Father,
You created the world …
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Hi readers, it seems you use Catholic Online a lot; that’s great! It’s a little awkward to ask, but we need your help. If you have already donated, we sincerely thank you. We’re not salespeople, but we depend on donations averaging $14.76 and fewer than 1% of readers give. If you donate just $5.00, the price of your coffee, Catholic Online School could keep thriving. Thank you.
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We ask you, humbly: don’t scroll away.
Hi readers, it seems you use Catholic Online a lot; that’s great! It’s a little awkward to ask, but we need your help. If you have already donated, we sincerely thank you. We’re not salespeople, but we depend on donations averaging $14.76 and fewer than 1% of readers give. If you donate just $5.00, the price of your coffee, Catholic Online School could keep thriving. Thank you.
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We can all agree that praying God’s Word is essential to our spiritual growth–but what does it actually mean to pray God’s Word? To answer this question, let’s first take a look at the definition of prayer.
What is the Definition of Prayer?
The definition of prayer, according to Oxford Languages, is “a solemn request for help or expression of thanks addressed to God or an object of worship”. The Hebrew word for prayer is tᵊp̄illâ, which means prayer, intercession, and supplication (source). When we go before the Lord in prayer, we can call on him to help us in our times of need. I love the Scripture in Hebrews 4:16,
Let us then approach God’s throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.
Praise God that we can approach his throne of grace with boldness and confidence, knowing that he is there to help us in our times of need!
According to the Oxford definition of prayer, we can also use prayer as a powerful way to express our gratitude and praise to God. I love praying the Psalms as a way to express praise, thanksgiving, and adoration to the Lord. These are powerful ways to use prayer as a way to draw closer to God as we reflect on the truth that he is GOOD–and is worthy of our praise!
What does it mean to Pray to Scripture (or to Pray God’s Word)?
Now that we have a better understanding of the definition of prayer, we can dive into one of my favorite ways to pray: praying God’s Word. When people talk about praying Scripture, they often refer to using Bible verses to guide and formulate their prayers.
It’s the idea of “praying Scripture back to God”, by using his words to pray for his will to be done in our lives. God’s Word is living and active–sharper than any two edged sword (Hebrews 4:12). His Word is useful in our lives for teaching, correcting, rebuking, and training in righteousness (2 Timothy 3:16). God’s Word is also incredibly useful when we pray!
How do you Pray Scripture?
We can pray God’s Word by choosing a Scripture to read and focus on. In this example, let’s use Matthew 6:25-34.
“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?
“And why do you worry about clothes? See how the flowers of the field grow. They do not labor or spin. Yet I tell you that not even Solomon in all his splendor was dressed like one of these. If that is how God clothes the grass of the field, which is here today and tomorrow is thrown into the fire, will he not much more clothe you—you of little faith? So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’
For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.”
When we read this passage of Scripture, the main theme we gather is not to worry. This is a great passage to pray back to God when we find ourselves worried and anxious about our lives. There are many principles in this passage that we can pray back to God.
We can pray and ask God to…
- Help us to not worry about our lives
- Help us to trust him to take care of our needs
- Help us to seek his Kingdom and his righteousness
Here is an example of a prayer you could pray using Matthew 6:25-34,
Prayer: Lord, thank you so much for the comfort and power of your Word. You say that I don’t have to worry about my life. If you care for the birds of the air, help me to trust that you will certainly take care of me and my family. I am much more valuable than many sparrows. Glory to your name!
Help me to not worry about the daily necessities of life–about what I will wear, eat, or drink. You will provide food, clothing, and shelter for me–for you are Jehovah Jireh–my God who provides. Help me to seek your kingdom, and your righteousness. I desire to seek you with all my heart. Lead me on the path of your righteousness, and help me to trust that you will provide everything else that I need. In Jesus’ name, Amen.
Praise God that we can go before him and pray for his will to be done in our lives!
How do you Pray Scripture Over Someone?
You can also pray God’s Word over your loved ones. This simply means that you can pray specific Scriptures for friends and family members. I like to choose Scriptures that I want to pray for loved ones, and I either write those Scriptures and prayers down in a prayer journal, or there are times when I speak those prayers aloud over my family.
Related:
Take a look at this post on 35 Scriptures you can pray over your children, or this post on 35 Scriptures you can pray for your husband.
Want to pray powerful Scriptures over yourself? Check out this post on 40 Armor of God Scriptures that you can pray over yourself!
What did Jesus say about Praying?
Jesus had much to say about prayer! Many people look to the words of Jesus in the Lord’s Prayer to guide their own prayers. Not only do we pray God’s Word when we pray the Lord’s Prayer, but we are praying the very words of Jesus when we pray!
After Jesus finished praying, one of the disciples asked him in Luke 11:1 to teach them to pray. Jesus taught them to pray using what is now known as the Lord’s Prayer:
He said to them, “When you pray, say:
“‘Father, hallowed be your name,
your kingdom come.
Give us each day our daily bread.
Forgive us our sins,
for we also forgive everyone who sins against us.
And lead us not into temptation.”
When Jesus taught the disciples to pray, he was instructing them to:
- Honor the Lord and praise his name (hallowed be your name)
- Pray for the Lord’s provision in their lives (give us today our daily bread)
- Pray for the forgiveness of their sins (forgive us our sins)
- Pray for protection from temptation and from the evil one (lead us not into temptation)
When we pray the Lord’s Prayer as Jesus taught his disciples, we are praying the very words of God, and proclaiming that his will be done in our lives!
Prayer Lessons from a Toad
A few years ago, I learned a valuable lesson in the power of prayer from a toad. Have you ever discovered that God sometimes speaks to us in the most unlikely ways?
In the particular story I read with my kids from Frog and Toad, Toad was very impressed by his friend Frog’s garden. “I wish I had a garden.” Toad lamented.
Frog gave him some seeds and told him that with a bit of hard work, he too would have a bountiful garden.
After Toad planted his seeds, the rest of the story describes the comical way Toad waited for his seeds to grow. He tried to “help” his seeds grow by performing various activities.
He talked to his seeds. Nothing happened. He impatiently yelled at them. Still nothing. He read stories, poems and played music to his seeds–all to no avail. Finally, frustrated and forlorn, he fell asleep.
A little while later, Frog excitedly woke Toad to show him the budding sprouts in his garden.
“Toad!” exclaims Frog, “Now you will have a nice garden!” “Yes,” Toad remarked. “But you were right, Frog. It was very hard work!”
The Power of Praying God’s Word
I love this story because it reminds me of a powerful spiritual truth: We are called to sow seeds of prayer.
But when we don’t see immediate answers to our prayers, we try to “help God out” by making things happen on our own. We yell. We shout. We try to manipulate people and situations.
We attempt to speak our prayers into fruition with our own feeble words; but ultimately God is the One who causes the seeds of our prayers grow.
God is the only One who can speak things into existence.
In the beginning when the world was formless and empty, God spoke–and things happened. Take a look at the pattern in Genesis 1.
And God said, “Let there be an expanse between the waters…”and it was so.
And God said, “Let the water under the sky be gathered to one place, and let dry ground appear…”and it was so.
And God said, “Let the land produce vegetation: seed-bearing plants and trees…” and it was so.
God spoke… and it was so.
He is the only One with omnipotent power to speak things into life. But sometimes we act like Toad and work ourselves into a frenzy, taking matters into our own hands.
But there is a better way to pray.
God has graciously given us His words to speak, as He did through the prophet Jeremiah:
“I have put my words in your mouth. See, today I appoint you over nations and kingdoms to uproot and tear down, to destroy and overthrow, to build and to plant.” Jeremiah 1:9b-10
We don’t have to use our words to make the seeds of our prayers come to life. When we pray the Word of God, we always pray the will of God.
God’s Word is like a fire and hammer; a sword and a mighty shield. His Word snuffs out the enemy’s schemes against us and obliterates strongholds.
His Word breaks through chains of bondage and releases us from captivity. His Word rebuilds our teetering faith and revives our withered souls.
His Word is faithful, steady and true–and never returns void.
As the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and do not return to it without watering the earth and making it bud and flourish, so that it yields seed for the sower and bread for the eater, so is my word that goes out from my mouth: It will not return to me empty, but will accomplish what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it. Isaiah 55:10-11
Praying God’s Word with Confidence
So instead of using our own words when we pray, why not try using His? There is great power in praying God’s promises.
Are you in need of peace? Ask that God’s peace, which transcends all understanding will guard your heart and mind (Philippians 4:6).
Are you lacking in strength? Pray that God will be your refuge and strength, an ever-present help in times of trouble (Psalm 46:1).
Are you battling fear? Praise God that He has not given you a spirit of fear, but of love, power and self-discipline (2 Timothy 1:7).
Sow seeds of prayer today, and speak His Word over every situation in your life. He will give you an unspeakable joy, and in His perfect timing, you will reap an abundant harvest!
Download these free prayer printables to deepen your prayer life and powerfully pray the Word of God!
Download these free printables HERE.
Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.
Galatians 6:9
Feel free to download this prayer printable for your personal prayer time. Click HERE to download this printable!
Here are other printables you can use to pray the power of God’s Word. Just click on the link and select the printable you want to download!
Click HERE to download the prayer printables you want to print!
Looking for even more ways to deepen your prayer life? Check out the BOLD Prayers of Jesus Prayer Challenge! You will receive tons of prayer printables to deepen your prayer time with Jesus!
Sign up for the Prayer Challenge HERE!
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Nine Healing Scriptures to pray and Declare
100 Promises from God’s Word
By E.M. Bounds
“How constantly, in the Scriptures, do we encounter such words as ‘field,’ ‘seed,’ ‘sower,’ ‘reaper,’ ‘seed-time,’ ‘harvest’! Employing such metaphors interprets a fact of nature by a parable of grace. The field is the world and the good seed is the Word of God .Whether the Word be spoken or written, it is the power of God unto salvation. In our work of evangelism, the whole world is our field, every creature the object of effort and every book and tract, a seed of God.” — DAVID FANT, JR.
GOD’S Word is a record of prayer — of praying men and their achievements, of the Divine warrant of prayer and of the encouragement given to those who pray. No one can read the instances, commands, examples, multiform statements which concern themselves with prayer, without realizing that the cause of God, and the success of His work in this world is committed to prayer; that praying men have been God’s vicegerents on earth; that prayerless men have never been used of Him.
A reverence for God’s holy Name is closely related to a high regard for His Word. This hallowing of God’s Name; the ability to do His will on earth, as it is done in heaven; the establishment and glory of God’s kingdom, are as much involved in prayer, as when Jesus taught men the Universal Prayer. That “men ought always to pray and not to faint,” is as fundamental to God’s cause, today, as when Jesus Christ enshrined that great truth in the immortal settings of the Parable of the Importunate Widow.
As God’s house is called “the house of prayer,” because prayer is the most important of its holy offices; so by the same token, the Bible may be called the Book of Prayer. Prayer is the great theme and content of its message to mankind.
God’s Word is the basis, as it is the directory of the prayer of faith. “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom,” says St. Paul, “teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord.”
As this word of Christ dwelling in us richly is transmuted and assimilated, it issues in praying. Faith is constructed of the Word and the Spirit, and faith is the body and substance of prayer.
In many of its aspects, prayer is dependent upon the Word of God. Jesus says:
“If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.”
The Word of God is the fulcrum upon which the lever of prayer is placed, and by which things are mightily moved. God has committed Himself, His purpose and His promise to prayer. His Word becomes the basis, the inspiration of our praying, and there are circumstances under which, by importunate prayer, we may obtain an addition, or an enlargement of His promises. It is said of the old saints that they, “through faith obtained promises.” There would seem to be in prayer the capacity for going even beyond the Word, of getting even beyond His promise, into the very presence of God, Himself.
Jacob wrestled, not so much with a promise, as with the Promiser. We must take hold of the Promiser, lest the promise prove nugatory. Prayer may well be defined as that force which vitalizes and energizes the Word of God, by taking hold of God, Himself. By taking hold of the Promiser, prayer reissues, and makes personal the promise. “There is none that stirreth up himself to take hold of Me,” is God’s sad lament. “Let him take hold of My strength, that he may make peace with Me,” is God’s recipe for prayer.
By Scriptural warrant, prayer may be divided into the petition of faith and that of submission. The prayer of faith is based on the written Word, for “faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.” It receives its answer, inevitably — the very thing for which it prays.
The prayer of submission is without a definite word of promise, so to speak, but takes hold of God with a lowly and contrite spirit, and asks and pleads with Him, for that which the soul desires. Abraham had no definite promise that God would spare Sodom. Moses had no definite promise that God would spare Israel; on the contrary, there was the declaration of His wrath, and of His purpose to destroy. But the devoted leader gained his plea with God, when he interceded for the Israelites with incessant prayers and many tears. Daniel had no definite promise that God would reveal to him the meaning of the king’s dream, but he prayed specifically, and God answered definitely.
The Word of God is made effectual and operative, by the process and practice of prayer. The Word of the Lord came to Elijah, “Go show thyself to Ahab, and I will send rain on the earth.” Elijah showed himself to Ahab; but the answer to his prayer did not come, until he had pressed his fiery prayer upon the Lord seven times.
Paul had the definite promise from Christ, that he “would be delivered from the people and the Gentiles,” but we find him exhorting the Romans in the urgent and solemn manner concerning this very matter:
“Now I beseech you, brethren, for the Lord Jesus Christ’s sake, and for the love of the Spirit, that ye strive together with me in your prayers to God for me; that I may be delivered from them that do not believe in Judaea, and that my service which I have for Jerusalem may be accepted of the saints.”
The Word of God is a great help in prayer. If it be lodged and written in our hearts, it will form an outflowing current of prayer, full and irresistible. Promises, stored in the heart, are to be the fuel from which prayer receives life and warmth, just as the coal, stored in the earth, ministers to our comfort on stormy days and wintry nights. The Word of God is the food, by which prayer is nourished and made strong. Prayer, like man, cannot live by bread alone, “but by every word which proceedeth out of the mouth of the Lord.”
Unless the vital forces of prayer are supplied by God’s Word, prayer, though earnest, even vociferous, in its urgency, is, in reality, flabby, and vapid, and void. The absence of vital force in praying, can be traced to the absence of a constant supply of God’s Word, to repair the waste, and renew the life. He who would learn to pray well, must first study God’s Word, and store it in his memory and thought.
When we consult God’s Word, we find that no duty is more binding, more exacting, than that of prayer. On the other hand, we discover that no privilege is more exalted, no habit more richly owned of God. No promises are more radiant, more abounding, more explicit, more often reiterated, than those which are attached to prayer. “All things, whatsoever” are received by prayer, because “all things whatsoever” are promised. There is no limit to the provisions, included in the promises to prayer, and no exclusion from its promises. “Every one that asketh, receiveth.” The word of our Lord is to this all-embracing effect: “If ye shall ask anything in My Name, I will do it.”
Here are some of the comprehensive, and exhaustive statements of the Word of God about prayer, the things to be taken in by prayer, the strong promise made in answer to prayer:
“Pray without ceasing;” “continue in prayer;” “continuing instant in prayer;” “in everything by prayer, let your request be made known unto God;” “pray always, pray and not faint;” “men should pray everywhere;” “praying always, with all prayer and supplication.”
What clear and strong statements are those which are put in the Divine record, to furnish us with a sure basis of faith, and to urge, constrain and encourage us to pray! How wide the range of prayer, as given us, in the Divine Revelation! How these Scriptures incite us to seek the God of prayer, with all our wants, with all our burdens!
In addition to these statements left on record for our encouragement, the sacred pages teem with facts, examples, incidents, and observations, stressing the importance and the absolute necessity of prayer, and putting emphasis on its all-prevailing power.
The utmost reach and full benefit of the rich promises of the Word of God, should humbly be received by us, and put to the test. The world will never receive the full benefits of the Gospel until this be done. Neither Christian experience nor Christian living will be what they ought to be till these Divine promises have been fully tested by those who pray. By prayer, we bring these promises of God’s holy will into the realm of the actual and the real. Prayer is the philosopher’s stone which transmutes them into gold.
If it be asked, what is to be done in order to render God’s promises real, the answer is, that we must pray, until the words of the promise are clothed upon with the rich raiment of fulfilment.
God’s promises are altogether too large to be mastered by desultory praying. When we examine ourselves, all too often, we discover that our praying does not rise to the demands of the situation; is so limited that it is little more than a mere oasis amid the waste and desert of the world’s sin. Who of us, in our praying, measures up to this promise of our Lord:
“Verily, verily, I say unto you, He that believeth on Me, the works that I do shall he do also, and greater works than these shall he do, because I go to My Father.”
How comprehensive, how far reaching, how all-embracing! How much is here, for the glory of God, how much for the good of man! How much for the manifestation of Christ’s enthroned power, how much for the reward of abundant faith! And how great and gracious are the results which can be made to accrue from the exercise of commensurate, believing prayer!
Look, for a moment, at another of God’s great promises, and discover how we may be undergirded by the Word as we pray, and on what firm ground we may stand on which to make our petitions to our God:
“If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.”
In these comprehensive words, God turns Himself over to the will of His people. When Christ becomes our all-in-all, prayer lays God’s treasures at our feet. Primitive Christianity had an easy and practical solution of the situation, and got all which God had to give. That simple and terse solution is recorded in John’s First Epistle:
“Whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments, and do those things which are pleasing in His sight.”
Prayer, coupled with loving obedience, is the way to put God to the test, and to make prayer answer all ends and all things. Prayer, joined to the Word of God, hallows and makes sacred all God’s gifts. Prayer is not simply to get things from God, but to make those things holy, which already have been received from Him. It is not merely to get a blessing, but also to be able to give a blessing. Prayer makes common things holy and secular things, sacred. It receives things from God with thanksgiving and hallows them with thankful hearts, and devoted service.
In the First Epistle to Timothy, Paul gives us these words:
“For every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving. For it is sanctified by the word of God and prayer.”
That is a statement which gives a negative to mere asceticism. God’s good gifts are to be holy, not only by God’s creative power, but, also, because they are made holy to us by prayer. We receive them, appropriate them and sanctify them by prayer.
Doing God’s will, and having His Word abiding in us, is an imperative of effectual praying. But, it may be asked, how are we to know what God’s will is? The answer is, by studying His Word, by hiding it in our hearts, and by letting the Word dwell in us richly. “The entrance of Thy word, giveth light.”
To know God’s will in prayer, we must be filled with God’s Spirit, who maketh intercession for the saints, and in the saints, according to the will of God. To be filled with God’s Spirit, to be filled with God’s Word, is to know God’s will. It is to be put in such a frame of mind, to be found in such a state of heart, as will enable us to read and interpret aright the purposes of the Infinite. Such filling of the heart, with the Word and the Spirit, gives us an insight into the will of the Father, and enables us to rightly discern His will, and puts within us, a disposition of mind and heart to make it the guide and compass of our lives.
Epaphras prayed that the Colossians might stand “perfect and complete in all the will of God.” This is proof positive that, not only may we know the will of God, but that we may know all the will of God. And not only may we know all the will of God, but we may do all the will of God. We may, moreover, do all the will of God, not occasionally, or by a mere impulse, but with a settled habit of conduct. Still further, it shows us that we may not only do the will of God externally, but from the heart, doing it cheerfully, without reluctance, or secret disinclination, or any drawing or holding back from the intimate presence of the Lord.
Some years ago a man was travelling in the wilds of Kentucky. He had with him a large sum of money and was well armed. He put up at a log-house one night, but was much concerned with the rough appearance of the men who came and went from this abode. He retired early but not to sleep. At midnight he heard the dogs barking furiously and the sound of someone entering the cabin. Peering through a chink in the boards of his room, he saw a stranger with a gun in his hand. Another man sat before the fire. The traveller concluded they were planning to rob him, and prepared to defend himself and his property. Presently the newcomer took down a copy of the Bible, read a chapter aloud, and then knelt down and prayed. The traveller dismissed his fears, put his revolver away and lay down, to sleep peacefully until morning light. And all because a Bible was in the cabin, and its owner a man of prayer.” — REV. F. F. SHOUP.
PRAYER has all to do with the success of the preaching of the Word. This, Paul clearly teaches in that familiar and pressing request he made to the Thessalonians:
“Finally, brethren, pray for us that the Word of the Lord may have free course, and be glorified.”
Prayer opens the way for the Word of God to run without let or hindrance, and creates the atmosphere which is favourable to the word accomplishing its purpose. Prayer puts wheels under God’s Word, and gives wings to the angel of the Lord “having the everlasting Gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people.” Prayer greatly helps the Word of the Lord.
The Parable of the Sower is a notable study of preaching, showing its differing effects and describing the diversity of hearers. The wayside hearers are legion. The soil lies all unprepared either by previous thought or prayer; as a consequence, the devil easily takes away the seed (which is the Word of God) and dissipating all good impressions, renders the work of the sower futile. No one for a moment believes, that so much of present-day sowing would go fruitless if only the hearers would prepare the ground of their hearts beforehand by prayer and meditation.
Similarly with the stony-ground hearers, and the thorny-ground hearers. Although the word lodges in their hearts and begins to sprout, yet all is lost, chiefly because there is no prayer or watchfulness or cultivation following. The good-ground hearers are profited by the sowing, simply because their minds have been prepared for the reception of the seed, and that, after hearing, they have cultivated the seed sown in their hearts, by the exercise of prayer. All this gives peculiar emphasis to the conclusion of this striking parable: “Take heed, therefore, how ye hear.” And in order that we may take heed how we hear, it is needful to give ourselves continually to prayer.
We have got to believe that underlying God’s Word is prayer, and upon prayer, its final success will depend. In the Book of Isaiah we read:
“So shall My word be that goeth out of My mouth; it shall not return unto Me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it.”
In Psalm 19, David magnifies the Word of God in six statements concerning it. It converts the soul, makes wise the simple, rejoices the heart, enlightens the eyes, endures eternally, and is true and righteous altogether. The Word of God is perfect, sure, right, pure. It is heart-searching, and at the same time purifying, in its effect. It is no surprise therefore that after considering the deep spirituality of the Word of God, its power to search the inner nature of man, and its deep purity, the Psalmist should close his dissertation with this passage:
“Who can understand his errors?” And then praying after this fashion: “Cleanse Thou me from secret faults. Keep back Thy servant also from presumptuous sins. Let them not have dominion over me. Let the words of my mouth, and the meditations of my heart be acceptable in Thy sight, O Lord, my strength and my redeemer.”
James recognizes the deep spirituality of the Word, and its inherent saving power, in the following exhortation:
“Wherefore, lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness, and receive with meekness the engrafted word, which is able to save your souls.”
And Peter talks along the same line, when describing the saving power of the Word of God:
“Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God, which liveth and abideth forever.”
Not only does Peter speak of being born again, by the incorruptible Word of God, but he informs us that to grow in grace we must be like new-born babes, desiring or feeding upon the “sincere milk of the Word.”
That is not to say, however, that the mere form of words as they occur in the Bible have in them any saving efficacy. But the Word of God, be it remembered, is impregnated with the Holy Spirit. And just as there is a Divine element in the words of Scripture, so also is the same Divine element to be found in all true preaching of the Word, which is able to save and convert the soul.
Prayer invariably begets a love for the Word of God, and sets people to the reading of it. Prayer leads people to obey the Word of God, and puts into the heart which obeys a joy unspeakable. Praying people and Bible-reading people are the same sort of folk. The God of the Bible and the God of prayer are one. God speaks to man in the Bible; man speaks to God in prayer. One reads the Bible to discover God’s will; he prays in order that he may receive power to do that will. Bible-reading and praying are the distinguishing traits of those who strive to know and please God. And just as prayer begets a love for the Scriptures, and sets people to reading the Bible, so, also, does prayer cause men and women to visit the house of God, to hear the Scriptures expounded. Church-going is closely connected with the Bible, not so much because the Bible cautions us against “forsaking the assembling of ourselves together as the manner of some is,” but because in God’s house, God’s chosen minister declares His Word to dying men, explains the Scriptures, and enforces their teachings upon his hearers. And prayer germinates a resolve, in those who practise it, not to forsake the house of God.
Prayer begets a church-going conscience, a church-loving heart, a church-supporting spirit. It is the praying people, who make it a matter of conscience, to attend the preaching of the Word; who delight in its reading; exposition; who support it with their influence and their means. Prayer exalts the Word of God and gives it preeminence in the estimation of those who faithfully and wholeheartedly call upon the Name of the Lord.
Prayer draws its very life from the Bible, and has no standing ground outside of the warrant of the Scriptures. Its very existence and character is dependent on revelation made by God to man in His holy Word. Prayer, in turn, exalts this same revelation, and turns men toward that Word. The nature, necessity and all-comprehending character of prayer, is based on the Word of God.
Psalm 119 is a directory of God’s Word. With three or four exceptions, each verse contains a word which identifies, or locates, the Word of God. Quite often, the writer breaks out into supplication, several times praying, “Teach me Thy statutes.” So deeply impressed is he with the wonders of God’s Word, and of the need for Divine illumination wherewith to see and understand the wonderful things recorded therein, that he fervently prays:
“Open Thou mine eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of Thy law.”
From the opening of this wonderful Psalm to its close, prayer and God’s Word are intertwined. Almost every phase of God’s Word is touched upon by this inspired writer. So thoroughly convinced was the Psalmist of the deep spiritual power of the Word of God that he makes this declaration:
“Thy word have I hid in my heart that I might not sin against Thee.”
Here the Psalmist found his protection against sinning. By having God’s Word hidden in his heart; in having his whole being thoroughly impregnated with that Word; in being brought completely under its benign and gracious influence, he was enabled to walk to and fro in the earth, safe from the attack of the Evil One, and fortified against a proneness to wander out of the way.
We find, furthermore, the power of prayer to create a real love for the Scriptures, and to put within men a nature which will take pleasure in the Word. In holy ecstasy he cries, “O, how I love Thy law! It is my meditation all the day.” And again: “How sweet are Thy words to my taste! Yea, sweeter than honey to my taste.”
Would we have a relish for God’s Word? Then let us give ourselves continually to prayer. He who would have a heart for the reading of the Bible must not — dare not — forget to pray. The man of whom it can be said, “His delight is in the law of the Lord,” is the man who can truly say, “I delight to visit the place of prayer.” No man loves the Bible, who does not love to pray. No man loves to pray, who does not delight in the law of the Lord.
Our Lord was a man of prayer, and He magnified the Word of God, quoting often from the Scriptures. Right through His earthly life Jesus observed Sabbath-keeping, church-going and the reading of the Word of God, and had prayer intermingled with them all:
“And He came to Nazareth where He had been brought up, and as His custom was, He went into the synagogue on the Sabbath Day, and stood up to read.”
Here, let it be said, that no two things are more essential to a spirit-filled life than Bible-reading and secret prayer; no two things more helpful to growth in grace; to getting the largest joy out of a Christian life; toward establishing one in the ways of eternal peace. The neglect of these all-important duties, presages leanness of soul, loss of joy, absence of peace, dryness of spirit, decay in all that pertains to spiritual life. Neglecting these things paves the way for apostasy, and gives the Evil One an advantage such as he is not likely to ignore. Reading God’s Word regularly, and praying habitually in the secret place of the Most High puts one where he is absolutely safe from the attacks of the enemy of souls, and guarantees him salvation and final victory, through the overcoming power of the Lamb.
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Weapons to Use Against the Devil
The arms of combat against the forces of evil must be used by Christians in their totality and unity. Above all, a habitus is necessary; that is, a way of thinking, loving, and acting that conforms to the life of Jesus. A simple and humble soul totally confident in God — as Jesus had in his earthly life — learns how to relate to our Creator. The freedom to choose enables man to resist the Devil, because the Devil can tempt us, but he can never oblige us to do his will.
The arms of combat and defense that Jesus has left us consist of the Word of God, prayer, fasting, and the sacraments.
In using these weapons of defense, we must guard against a superstitious attitude toward their efficacy; that would be a magical concept. In other words, we must not believe that our religious practices dispel demons. On the basis of biblical testimony, the Devil is expelled solely by faith and total trust in Jesus.
Our Lady and all the saints show us how communion with God makes the human being, a creature inferior to Satan, stronger than the Satan himself. This accelerates the Evil One’s intense hostility toward man, which he puts in motion when the person he has attacked decides to return to God with all his being through the use of these weapons.
The Word of God, the Gospel
The Word of God listened to consistently and repeatedly in the course of the day is the inspiration and the weapon that overcomes doubts, anxieties, recurring thoughts, fits of depression, suicide, anger, confusion, and all the disorder that Satan can generate in the mind. Indeed, the attack of the Evil One begins by penetrating the core of the will and the free will — the mind and the intelligence — influencing and subjugating them until he can arrive at the soul and then accompany it to evil.
Often those who go to a priest exorcist are prayerful, go to Mass on Sunday and sometimes also during the week, but they complain of sudden awakenings at night, tormenting dreams and obsessive recurring thoughts, doubts about God and their faith in Him. It must be emphasized that these persons do not participate or assist at esoteric rituals, not even as a joke. Usually, however, they are lacking in involvement with the Word of God, that is, with Jesus Christ, the center and foundation of the Christian life, Jesus Christ, the Word of God.
In the Gospel of Luke, after Jesus was baptized and led by the Spirit of God into the desert, He was tempted by Satan. In that case, victory over the demon did not occur through prayer. Three times Jesus cited Sacred Scripture in order to resist the temptations and refute the lies of the enemy. Jesus affirmed: “It is written . . .” (Luke 4:1–13). The Word of God was His instrument of truth against the lies and provocations of the enemy.
Jesus, in making Himself man, became one like us to show us how to keep the enemy away. He kept His distance from Satan, citing the source of wisdom and discernment: the Word of God. And He teaches us that, in order to bear our earthly life with serenity, it is always necessary to have His words in mind, so that in every adversity the Word of God comes to our mind and, guided by the Holy Spirit, we may know how to choose what is true and good. It is fundamental that the Gospel be imprinted on our mind, the seat of the will and of free will. Satan knows that if he succeeds in confusing the free will by turning it aside and distancing it from the will of God through sin, he can also corrupt and damage the soul of man. The Word of God listened to and lived each day in concrete choices becomes our defense from the snares of the Evil One.
Prayer
We often take for granted that we know what prayer is, but in reality we do not. From childhood, we were taught to say prayers in the morning and in the evening, but perhaps we did not understand the value or the meaning of it.
At the Last Supper Jesus said: “This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood” (Luke 22:20). With these words, Jesus is telling us that God the Father has established an eternal alliance with man, a relationship of faith founded on the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross. This alliance is maintained only if, through the Gospel, there is a response from man. This response occurs in prayer that has been stirred up by the teaching of the Word of God. To pray is to converse with God after having listened to Him. Jesus tells us: “You did not choose me, but I chose you” (John 15:16).
Prayer is also praise and thanksgiving. This is the prayer Jesus prefers: that He is thanked continuously for life, for what we are, and for what we have.
Prayer is also an invocation or supplication for help. If it bursts from a soul purified by the sacrament of Reconciliation, the prayer is immediately heard because the person praying is in communion with Jesus and He is particularly attentive to humble souls (Luke 18:7–8). The Word is not only a voice; it is a person in flesh and blood, God Himself made man in the person of Jesus (John 12:44–45, 48–50). To listen to Jesus is to listen to the Invisible One, the Omnipotent One, the One made visible and reachable.
Prayer manifests trust, confidence, supplication, praise, and joy and is expressed not only in words but, above all, in the disposition of the soul. Prayer is more effective when it has a precise intention and demonstrates communion with God. In this way, it becomes a force against instinctive states such as solitude, fear, anxiety, confusion, and disorder; and it places everything under the guidance of Jesus, who helps us to overcome human weaknesses and the temptations of the Evil One.
Our prayer, however, cannot be a direct instrument of liberation from the enemy, since we cannot combat him by ourselves. As human creatures, we are weaker beings, inferior to the angelic creatures. To believe that we can liberate ourselves from the Evil One solely through our own prayer would be a sin of arrogance, since we cannot expel the Evil One with our own strength alone. Indeed, by driving away the enemy, we would be making his wickedness even more effective in our life. Therefore, it is only prayer that can expel the demon — that is, insofar as it is a call for the intervention of Jesus, Mary, and the saints.
At times, we might offer a prayer of benediction or liberation and it is not heard. It is not because of our spiritual condition at that particular moment that our prayer seems ineffectual; in reality, it is our unpardoned sin that impedes the action of God.
I have been able to verify through the persons I assist that the majority of spiritual disturbances occur through the conduct of a muddled or hypocritical spiritual life, that is, through inconstancy in prayer, inconstancy in the encounter with Jesus in the sacraments, and inconstancy in listening to the Word of God. In these cases, to assist our prayer, it is helpful to become familiar with a suitable catechism and to receive the sacrament of Reconciliation. The efficacy of this last remedy depends on a coherent and faithful Christian life.
If prayer springs forth from a soul in communion with God, it is immediately effective against the attacks of the enemy. I had the case of a man who suddenly went from extremely devout to refusing the sacred. His sister, also very faithful, pointed out this apparently unexplainable change. I counseled her to invoke mentally the intervention of Mary Immaculate precisely at the moment of her brother’s visceral anger. She told me that, as a result of the prayer, her brother calmed down at times and at times grew worse. This was proof that the change was not chosen by the brother; rather, it was the consequence of the Devil’s vexation. The brother, in fact, was not able to know about his sister’s mental prayer.
There was also the case of a five-year-old boy whose mother had taught him how to pray the Hail Mary. I was called because the child saw shadows around his bed. I told the parents to maintain themselves in the state of grace with God through the sacrament of Reconciliation in order to render the prayer more powerful, and that, when this phenomenon reoccurred, to invoke the intervention of our Mother in Heaven.
After a week they called me, saying that the phenomenon was reduced but not ended. I asked if they had prayed with the boy. They said no. I invited them to pray with him when the phenomenon occurred. They did. They told me that as soon as the child said “Hail,” the shadows no longer returned. That “Hail” alone prayed by the little child in trust and in genuine and total faith was enough to chase away the powers of darkness.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church reminds us that
to attribute the efficacy of prayers or of sacramental signs to their mere external performance, apart from the interior dispositions they demand, is to fall into superstition (cf. Matt. 23:16–22). (no. 2111)
The prayer that comes forth from a humble heart and is in communion with God is not only efficacious; it also becomes an instrument of perception for unmasking the enemy and his actions.
Editor’s note: This article is from a chapter in An Exorcist Explains How to Heal the Possessed, which is available from Sophia Institute Press.
Where does your wisdom and comfort come from? Who or what do you turn to in your time of need or when you have an important decision to make? Make it a habit to always seek the Lord, His word and His counsel whenever these tough situations arise.
Look to prayer and the Word of God to guide your footsteps. When we open our ears to hear what the Spirit is saying, we allow our hearts to be encouraged, thereby allowing the Holy Spirit to operate in us. God will do what he says He will do. We can anchor our faith on His Word.
It’s in the difficult times that we often turn to our favorite Bible verses or books. What are your favorite Bible verses or book of the Bible? Let us pray.
Proverbs 2:6-7 – For the Lord gives wisdom; From His mouth come knowledge and understanding; He stores up sound wisdom for the upright; He is a shield to those who walk uprightly.
James 1:5 – If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all liberally and without reproach, and it will be given to him.
Jehovah Nissi, night departs and day arrives. As I go out into the world fulfilling Your will for my life, I ask that You keep me out of harm’s way. Lead the way.
Oh Heavenly Father, guide me accordingly. Shape me and mold me into a better person. As I draw near to You, may I understand Your teachings and apply them to my life.
Psalm 111:10 – The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom; all those who practice it have a good understanding. His praise endures forever!
Speak Into My Life
Grant me the understanding and knowledge of You and Your word. As I open my Bible to read the scriptures, give me wisdom and discernment.
And even as I sit and listen to the pastor, preacher or apostle reveal what Your Holy Book is speaking into my life, help me to see and understand.
Help me to understand Jesus Christ, and the way in which He lived His life, so that I can follow in His precious footsteps.
Ecclesiastes 7:12 – For the protection of wisdom is like the protection of money, and the advantage of knowledge is that wisdom preserves the life of him who has it.
Bless Me With Divine Knowledge And Wisdom
I long to be in Your Holy presence, Oh Lord. Sit right beside me as I learn. Bring understanding to my mind as Your teachings are revealed to me.
Bless me with divine knowledge so that I could one day teach others. Help me to learn how to be more understanding, kind, patient and compassionate towards my brother just as You were when You walked the earth and came to save us.
In Jesus’ mighty name, I declare and decree that a revelation of wisdom and knowledge of the word would be dawned upon me, Amen.
Proverbs 1:7 – The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge; fools despise wisdom and instruction.
Matthew 7:7-8 – “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it will be opened.