Archive for the ‘Prayer’ Category

How to Hear God’s Voice

Friday, November 15th, 2013

how-to-hear-God's-voice

Do you wonder how to hear God’s voice? How do you differentiate between the voice of God and the voice of the enemy, our flesh, or even our own thoughts? God often speaks through Scripture. But guess what? Satan also uses Scripture to rationalize sin in our lives. Just think of how Satan tried to get Jesus to sin. He tempted Jesus through quoting Scripture. This sends shivers down my spine.

The voice of God is not audible, but it’s a clear impression that is similar to your own thoughts. This is why people often confuse God’s voice with their own thoughts or words from the enemy. After teaching the session on How to Hear God’s Voice at the prayer Bible study in my home, many women asked for a chart that would help them to distinguish the voice of God from the voice of our flesh or the enemy. First I will list what God’s voice is like, and then I will list what the enemy’s voice is like. At the end, I will give you a downloadable PDF for you to print out, to help you visually see the differences.

God’s Voice

  • Selfless
  • Doesn’t contradict Scripture
  • Quiet and confident; not forceful
  • Personal
  • Often the opposite of what you expected
  • Leads gently; doesn’t push
  • Focused on the present, on what you should do today
  • Peace results when obeyed
  • Sometimes seems impossible, but God empowers you to do it

The Enemy’s Voice / The Flesh

  • Uses logic and reasoning to persuade you to do it
  • Self gain (selfish)
  • Sometimes based on emotion
  • Urgent
  • Forceful; gives orders
  • Works with what we pre-suppose
  • Motivated by fear of what other people think (or other fear)
  • Focused on the past (to condemn us) or on the future (to worry us)
  • No peace; tumult

Next time you wonder whether your thoughts are from God or from the enemy, examine your thoughts to see which side of the chart you’re on:

If you missed the audio workshop “How to Hear God’s Voice,” you can download it here. Be sure to “like” the Facebook Prayer Page (Becoming a Prayer Warrior: A Personal Journey) to not miss a single session on how to have a deeper prayer life. (Did you miss the first prayer workshop “The Beginning of a Prayer Warrior”? You can download it here.)

 

Abiding in the Vine

Thursday, August 22nd, 2013

abiding-in-the-vine“I am the vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me and I in him, he bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing.”  John 15:5 NASB

I am a branch connected to Christ, and the Holy Spirit flows through me like sap, energizing me to produce fruit. As a branch, I am not the root; I am completely dependent upon Christ to draw strength. All water and nutrients come through the roots, so if I do not allow the Holy Spirit to control me and pump me with fresh nutrients each day from His Word, I will shrivel up and die. Jesus says, “If anyone does not abide in Me, he is thrown away as a branch and dries up; and they gather them, and cast them into the fire and they are burned.” (John 15:6) What I’m doing with my life is worthless if I am not connected to the Vine.

The only reason I am allowed to share in the life of the Vine is to produce fruit.

Bearing fruit (glorifying God in our actions, being sanctified, and becoming more like Christ) is what we’re saved for. Jesus says: “My Father is glorified by this, that you bear much fruit, and so prove to be My disciples.” If we are true disciples we will bear fruit. (James 2:17)

You bear fruit not for yourself, but for your owner. The Father owns the vine and prunes the branches to produce more fruit. Anything that is not needful for fruit-bearing must be lopped off. Better fruit results when the vine is tended to by the owner. The branch is more beautiful, fruitful, and healthy.

“If you abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you.” (John 15:7) We have incredible power for answered prayer if our will is yielded to God, because He grants us the desires of our hearts. “Delight yourself in the LORD; And He will give you the desires of your heart.” (Psalm 37:4) That’s because your will and God’s will are the same. It’s aligning your heart to God’s heart. And then you are one. This is why your prayers are answered. God changes your desire and then grants you that desire because you yielded.

“The vine provides the sap, the life, and the strength. The branch waits, rests, receives, and bears the fruit.” -Andrew Murray in The True Vine: Meditations

“Abiding fully means praying much,” says Andrew Murray. We will care about the souls of others and be given up to the work of God when we are abiding. As a result, we will be people of prayer.

Andrew Murray goes on to say: “The branch is not only one with the vine, but with all its other branches.”  The sap running through the vine is the love of God. When you are connected, you will abide in that love. People that do not love do not know God. God is love. The biggest difference in the life of a believer after salvation is the ability to love. Do not hate your brother.

“These things I have spoken to you so that My joy may be in you, and that your joy may be made full.” (John 15:11) Andrew Murray says: “As long as our joy is not full, it is a sign that we do not yet know our heavenly vine correctly.”

Abiding in the Vine will give you power in prayer as well as incredible joy, and you will bear fruit that is pleasing to the Father.

Leading Others in Prayer

Wednesday, February 27th, 2013

leading-others-in-prayerOnce you have become solid in your prayer life, overcome obstacles, and persevered through trying circumstances, you ought to be leading others in prayer. Absolutely everyone needs prayer. The apostle Paul asked people to pray for him all the time, and we need people to pray for us so that we can fight sin in our lives. I believe we can do this even before we feel ready. Lean on God when someone asks if you can pray for them. Just stop what you are doing and pray for them out loud. When people have done this with me, I have always felt blessed and uplifted. Be a blessing to others.

Many times I have noticed a reluctance of people to pray in front of other people because they feel self-conscious. Banish this thought once and for all. If you’re praying the way you ought to pray, for eternal results rather than temporary ones, others need to know how to do this. What better way than to pray wholeheartedly to the Lord in front of others? Or is your fear of man stronger than your desire to please God? Remember that fear of man brings a snare (Proverbs 29:25). Don’t be ruled by what other people think of you. I much prefer a broken person blurting out a true prayer than a polished prayer with no heart engaged. So does God.

Talk to God as if there were no one else present. When you become more comfortable, change the pronoun to “we” instead of “I,” and pray just as earnestly. Bring the requests of others before the Lord as if they were your own, because they are. You are part of the body of Christ, and you are commanded to pray for others. You are commanded to love others as much as you love yourself (Matthew 22:39).

Many times in Scripture, people were called upon to pray in front of others. Solomon led all of Israel in prayer when he dedicated the Temple. For one section of his prayer, he was kneeling in front of the people, even though he was the king (I Kings 8:12-61). Elijah prayed in the hearing of all the people who worshiped Baal, asking God to strike fire down from heaven, and God answered (I Kings 18:36-39). Jesus prayed in front of the crowds all the time, including when He multiplied the loaves and the fish, and when He raised Lazarus from the dead.

Let’s not stay in a state of infancy in our prayer lives where we are babies and can never pray for others. Let’s ask God to mature us. Let’s be brave warriors who do prayer battle on behalf of our hurting brothers and sisters in Christ. ALL believers are commanded to grow to maturity and stop being babies. Yes, we can lean on others during hard times, but let’s be a rock that other people can come to for strength, where they know that we will pray boldly because we have an advocate with the Father, who is our Lord Jesus (I John 2:1), who intercedes for us day and night (Romans 8:34). Let us lead others in prayer, even if we feel nervous.

Many times I have led someone in prayer, not knowing what to pray. I threw myself upon God, asking silently with all my heart that He would show me how to pray. The earnestness of my prayers have always uplifted the person I was praying for, even if I stopped or blundered in my words. Who cares? I love God, and I love others with all my heart, and that’s why I can pray with others.

True Guilt and False Guilt

Wednesday, February 20th, 2013

true-guilt-and-false-guiltHave you ever been in the presence of God in prayer, wondering why you weren’t connecting? Did you have a vague feeling of defeat, knowing you probably sinned more times than you could count, and that you just weren’t making progress in your walk with God? And then your mind condemns you. You ask God for forgiveness, and the sin doesn’t go away. You’re just sitting there feeling defeated, and how can you pray?

One way that you can know that you are experiencing false guilt is if the enemy throws in your face a sin from the past that you already repented of and that God already forgave you for. I John 1:9 says that “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” If we have already repented of the sin, it’s gone. Stand on the truth. Don’t let the enemy throw it back in your face.

Secondly, God is never vague about sin. He is definite and specific. If you feel a general sense of defeat and yuckiness, you can know that it’s not from God. God wants us to walk in victory over sin (I Corinthians 15:57). Our enemy, however, doesn’t want us to have victory. So he uses our hormones to make us feel defeated. But we do not have to be fooled by his schemes “so that no advantage would be taken of us by Satan, for we are not ignorant of his schemes” (II Corinthians 2:11).

True guilt is when God convicts you of a recognizable sin that you haven’t repented of. There is a definite solution to the problem, which is confession and repentance. The sin will go away instantly. If it doesn’t, I’ve picked up the phone to call a mature sister in Christ, who prays for me. At that point I am always released from sin.

Do not let the enemy tangle you up in a web of lies that keeps you away from having fellowship with God. Conviction and condemnation are different, even though they feel similar. “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death.” Romans 8:1-2