Archive for the ‘Prayer’ Category

How Do You Teach Your Child to Pray?

Friday, January 31st, 2014

how-do-you-teach-your-child-to-pray

How do you teach your child to pray?

  • If the child is young, you can have the child repeat simple phrases about real issues. For example, “Please help me not to be selfish and to share with my sister.”
  • Give your children a good example yourself by praying in an honest way in front of them, without using lots of conventions and religious words that sound like God is unapproachable. Your kids become you; they will imitate how you pray.
  • Don’t be afraid to confess sin openly. Admit your own sin before God in your prayers, so that they learn how to confess sin openly without condemnation, expecting forgiveness and change in their lives.

What can you learn from children as they pray?

Jesus says we are to become like little children to enter the kingdom of heaven. (Matthew 18:1-6) What does this mean? What attributes do children display in their prayers?

  • How to be trusting
  • How to be open to God
  • How to be humble
  • How to have a wide-eyed wonder
  • How to adore God in a fresh way

How to Lead Your Children to the Lord

In the audio I share how my husband and I led each of our children to the Lord. We wanted to make sure that they understood their depravity before coming to Christ, so that they could understand why they needed a Savior. We didn’t want to just pray a prayer with them and give them a false sense of being saved when they weren’t. On the other hand, we didn’t want to block our children from coming to Christ. After all, Jesus said, “Let the little children come to Me.” (Matthew 19:14) That said, this is how we led each of our children to Christ:

I share each of these stories with you because maybe one of your children falls under one of the personalities listed above. For example, what do you do when you have a good kid who can’t see that he is a sinner? On the other hand, how to you reach a child who is ruled by anger? Is it possible to teach spiritual things without speaking a word? Hear the full stories in this powerful audio:

Right-click the link, “Save as,” and choose “Desktop” to download the audio.

To keep up with my prayer posts, follow my Prayer page on Facebook.

Praying with Other Believers

Friday, January 24th, 2014

praying-with-other-believers

Praying with other believers is different than praying alone, and Scripture says it can be more powerful. In Acts 12, Peter had been arrested because he was in jail, and the believers were praying together for his deliverance in the home of Mary, the mother of John Mark. A servant girl named Rhoda heard a knocking on the door, and she saw Peter, who had miraculously escaped prison with the assistance of an angel. This was a direct answer to their prayer, but this servant girl was so shocked that God answered, that she left Peter standing there at the gate. The other believers said she was out of her mind, but they eventually went to check at the gate, and sure enough, Peter was standing there!

Everyone knows the Scripture: “For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” Christ Himself says this in Matthew 18:20. James 5:16 says that we must pray for one another, so that we may be healed. This is praying out loud, because we are to confess our sins one to another to pray, and there is no way that we would hear the other person’s confession of their sins if they weren’t saying it out loud. In other words, we are commanded by God to pray aloud for each other, and we are promised to be heard when this happens.

So how is praying with others different than praying alone?

  • Praying alone is more personal, and you don’t have to think about other people listening to it.
  • You can cry, be angry, or show other emotion in your private prayers that might feel out of place in front of others.
  • Other people aren’t distracting you, so it is less likely to be pretentious.
  • On the other hand, it’s easier to focus on prayer without your mind drifting when you are praying with another believer.
  • Scripture commands both types of prayer, and I’ve sometimes not been able to get rid of a fog, a circumstance, or a sin without somebody else praying for me. In other words, after praying alone, I’m sometimes not released from a struggle that I’m having. This is when we need others to pray for us the most.

Praying with others has benefits that sometimes don’t come when you pray alone. What are some of the benefits of praying with others?

  • Other people have different insights than you do, and you can pray more effectively because of this.
  • Your shared love for the person you’re praying for deepens your prayer. You might begin to feel empathy where there was no empathy before.
  • You can bounce back and forth in your prayers, going deeper into one prayer request.
  • Your burden is lifted, and you have more joy. Scripture says that when we pray for each other, we are healed.
  • They can keep you accountable for sin.
  • You’re not usually as rushed when you pray with others, because you are putting time aside to pray.
  • You become aware of people’s prayer requests, and you experience spiritual joy when their prayers are answered through you.

How do you overcome the fear of praying aloud in front of others?

  • Realize that it’s a sin to care more about other people’s opinions than God’s. Fear of man brings a snare. (Proverbs 29:25)
  • God commands you to pray with others. Not praying with others is disobedience. (James 5:16)
  • When you stumble in your prayers in front of others, it is refreshing and sincere. People don’t care as much about that, as about the fact that you cared enough to pray with them.

Here is the prayer audio that will help you as you pray for others:

To listen to more audios on prayer and get a free e-book on prayer, like my Prayer Page.

 

Controlling Your Mind

Friday, January 17th, 2014

controlling-your-mind

The only way to conquer sin in your life is to learn to control your mind. All sin begins in the mind. Understand that your mind has a doorway, and that you can close the door on any thought. You don’t have to think whatever thoughts come into your head. None of us should be ruled by our emotions or by random thoughts, but we are to be ruled by the Spirit.

Philippians 2:12-13 says, “Therefore, my beloved, as you have always obeyed, so now, not only as in my presence but much more in my absence, work out your own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure.” (ESV) If you don’t assert your will over your thoughts, you are not actually working with God. Both you and God need to be working together to overcome sin. If you expect God to do everything when you aren’t even trying, you will be waiting in vain. You must seek God with all your heart and soul, forcing your will to do what’s right, and cry out to God. Then God does the miraculous work of transforming you in an impossible way.

Like I said, all sin starts in the mind, so if you can learn to “take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ” (II Corinthians 10:5), you will have victory over sin. I bear witness that this has been true in my own life many times, and many mature believers confirm that the same has happened to them. They overcome sin in miraculous ways when they take their thoughts captive.

In the audio, I describe several instances from my life where I took thoughts captive to overcome sin. Here are some supporting articles that describe two of these situations in more detail:

The boomerang verse I referred to in the audio: “Those who guard their lips preserve their lives, but those who speak rashly will come to ruin.” Proverbs 13:3 NIV (I think there was a different verse that talked about gossip coming back on your own head, but I can’t find it! If you find it, please write it in the comments. It might not have been in Proverbs…)

Here is the next prayer audio in the Becoming a Prayer Warrior audio series:

How to Pray for Wisdom

Friday, January 10th, 2014

how-to-pray-for-wisdom

On the night before teaching the prayer Bible study about how to pray for wisdom, I was out on my porch talking to my husband. I asked him what I should say if some of the women have asked God for wisdom and didn’t get it. In other words, what blocks people from getting wisdom from God? And conversely, what can we do to ready our hearts to receive God’s wisdom?

I asked my husband because so many times he has received supernatural wisdom from God when I came to him with an impossible situation that I needed him to fix. I always thought my husband was just gifted in godly wisdom, but he laughed. He said that whenever I came to him with an impossible situation, he would freak out God-ward, and then God would give him the answer. In other words, my husband leaned on God and cried out to Him with all his heart and soul, and God answered by giving him wisdom on the spot.

Many times God has done this in my own life. I have counseled women, where I felt like I was in over my head. I would inwardly freak out God-ward, and then He gave me the right words to say at the time that were straight from the heart of God to that person.

God is King of the universe, and He knows all things. He knows the real answer to everything. As a believer, the God of the universe lives inside of us through His Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is our paraclete or counselor. (Psalm 16:7) He counsels us, and if we ask Him for wisdom He will grant it. (James 1:5)

So what are the things that block us from getting wisdom from God? There are two main reasons:

  • unbelief
  • unconfessed sin

First let’s deal with unbelief. James 1:5 says “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him.” So we must believe Him at His Word. Is God a liar? If not, He will give us wisdom. James 1:6-8 says that if we doubt and don’t believe that God will give us wisdom, we shouldn’t expect to receive anything from the Lord. So we must believe Scripture. Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. (Hebrews 11:1) So we can ask God for faith if we have no faith. But His Word says He will give us wisdom when we ask, so please believe God at His Word.

Secondly, if you have unconfessed sin in your life, God will not hear you. (Psalm 66:18) So of course He will not give you wisdom.

But if your sin is confessed and you believe that He can give you wisdom, the reason you haven’t received it is probably because you didn’t pause long enough to receive it. Do you race into your prayers, ask God for wisdom, and say Amen, and run off to the next thing? Did you pause and open your heart to God to receive the answer?

Here is the next audio in the prayer series, which will help you to understand how to receive wisdom: (Right click “Save as,” and choose “desktop” to download the audio)

Like my Prayer Page to keep up with my prayer posts!