Praying People Share Christ
Until Argentine-American revivalist Edgardo Silvoso coined the words and wrote the book Prayer Evangelism, some assumed that praying people rarely shared their faith and that evangelists rarely prayed. We’ve discovered that’s not the case at all. People who pray for the lost are rarely reluctant to share the gospel with them. And people who share the gospel with those who are lost typically pray fervently for them! Thankfully Ed Silvoso’s insightful concepts concerning prayer evangelism have helped us to understand this fact.
Read Acts 4:31. What happened to the members of the early church after they prayed and were filled with the Holy Spirit?
Read Isaiah 6:8. After Isaiah had a powerful encounter with God’s presence, what did God ask him?
How did Isaiah respond?
As intercessors, we should expect that when we are in the place of prayer, God will give us a burden to share His message with those who have not heard.
Charles Swindoll tells a moving story about how prayer and evangelism worked together.
My mother loved the woman who lived across the street from our home, who had married late in life. She really had found her security in her husband. He was a wonderful man, and one day, he had a sudden heart attack and died within seconds. After his funeral, she began to visit the gravesite. My mother became very concerned over her friend Thelma.
She said to me one hot summer afternoon, "Charles, I want you to pray. I’m gonna take these cookies and this lemonade across the street, and I’m gonna try to encourage Thelma. Just pray that her heart will be open to what I have to say. I’m gonna talk to her about Jesus."
And so I did. My mother, wonderfully, very graciously, led her to Christ. She said to Thelma, "You know, Thelma, there’s something I need to mention to you. You really don’t need to keep going back to the cemetery."
"Oh," she said, "Lovell, I just have to do that."
So my mother said, "Well, let me suggest you do it for another reason. Why don’t you go back, not to try to make a ‘connection’ with your husband, but to minister to other people who are trying to do that."
Thelma took my mother’s advice. As a matter of fact, she’s the only cemetery evangelist I ever knew. There at the memorial park in Houston she has led a number of people to Jesus Christ.
Praying people listen to God
People of prayer are intercessory partners with Christ. In fact, they speak only what they hear. You see, all true prayer begins in heaven, where Jesus is interceding at the Father’s right hand (Heb. 7:25).
When He was on earth, Jesus did only what He saw the Father doing. We should be like Him—as praying people, we should pray what we hear Him praying.
"How?" you may ask.
The apostle Paul wrote two interesting verses. First he said, "We have the mind of Christ" (1 Cor. 2:16). From the moment we are saved, we have the mind of Christ. We are also to "put on the mind of Christ," as Paul wrote to the Philippians: "Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus" (Phil. 2:5, NKJV). These verses do not conflict, as it may first appear. Let me illustrate. I (Eddie) have a blue suit. But there is a distinct difference between my owning the blue suit and my putting it on.
As Christians, we have the indwelling Holy Spirit. He intercedes in and through us. He knows the mind of the Father. We "put on the mind of Christ" by emptying ourselves of ourselves and allowing Him to fill us. (Read Romans 8:9, 26–27; 1 Corinthians 2:14–15; Ephesians 5:18.)
A young mystic traveled a great distance to study at the feet of a revered sage. When the young man arrived, he proceeded to try to impress the master with his knowledge and wisdom. Instead of asking questions, the would-be student ranted on about his beliefs and philosophies. The master listened quietly for a long while.
Finally, the student stopped talking for a few moments. The master asked his guest if he would like some tea. "Why yes," the young man replied.
The old man began to pour the tea into his visitor’s cup. But he didn’t stop when the cup was full. He continued to pour as the tea overflowed the cup, into the saucer and then onto the tabletop where it began to run out on the floor.
"Stop!" the young man cried. "The cup is full. Can’t you see? It can hold no more."
"It’s true," the wise one explained. "We cannot put more into an already full cup. And you are like that cup. Until you empty yourself of yourself, your fullness will prevent you from learning."
The same is true of us. Our fullness of self can keep us from being filled with Christ through the Holy Spirit. We should never forget that His "power [strength] is made perfect in [our] weakness" (2 Cor. 12:9).
Paul summarized his experience this way.
I have been crucified with Christ [emptied] and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me [filled]. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. —GALATIANS 2:20
When we are totally surrendered to and filled with the Holy Spirit, we will seek only His pleasure and purpose. At that point, we will begin to hear His voice deep within our spirit-being.
We will have "put on the mind of Christ" in prayer.
Read Romans 12:1–2. How is it that our minds are renewed so that we can think the thoughts of God?
With a renewed mind, what are we able to prove?
Read Titus 3:4–6. What else renews us?
Remember, God answers prayer that originates in heaven! So, the next time you pray, may we suggest that you spend the first five to ten minutes quieting your heart and mind before the Lord. Allow the Word of God and the renewing of the Holy Spirit to help you discern what God’s perfect will is in the situation. Put yourself at His disposal! (Read 1 Samuel 3:10.)
Some praying people from history
In India, William Carey baptized his first convert only after praying and working for seven long years!
Praying people today
Today, the greatest prayer movement in history is taking place. Pastors are gathering regularly across denominational and ethnic lines to pray for their cities. Churches are setting their sights on becoming houses of prayer. God is mobilizing men and women, boys and girls, from every nation, tribe and tongue to cry out to Him night and day. For what are they asking? They are asking the Father for the nations. And the Father is responding with an unimaginable harvest of souls around the world (Ps. 2:8). This prayer movement is fueling unprecedented evangelism and church planting around the globe.
David Bryant says, "About 70 percent of all progress toward completing the Great Commission has taken place since 1900. Of that, 70 percent has occurred since World War II. And 70 percent of that has come about since 1992."
Think about it…
People of prayer tend to live in a state of "holy dissatisfaction." Have you felt the tug of holy dissatisfaction in your life? What issues cause this feeling in your spirit?
Like Jesus, as His intercessors we too are in the "building and wrecking business." On the lines below, list three works of Satan you want to see wrecked through your prayers. Beside Satan’s works, list the work of God that you want to see begin to replace the work of Satan.
This lesson teaches us that to be "full" of God’s plans and purposes, we must be "empty" of our own plans and purposes. On the lines below, write down at least two areas of your life where you feel you still need to be emptied of your own purposes in order to be filled with God’s.
We learned that God is raising up an army of intercessors who will pray for a harvest of the nations. What are the nations of the world for which God has given you a burden? What would you like to see God do in each of these nations?
Your time with God
Isn’t it amazing to learn how God has used praying people? You can be one, too. We learned that God gives intercessors a holy dissatisfaction for the way things are. Are you content with things around you? Are you willing to pray to see things changed? The greatest prayer movement on Planet Earth is occurring right now. Pray big prayers! Believe God for big things!
Lord God, until the earth is filled with the knowledge of Your glory, I never want to be satisfied with the way things are. Stretch me! Enlarge me! Teach me to believe You for the nations! Please help me to empty my heart of all other affections and distractions so that I can truly be filled with the thoughts and desires of God. I want to pray Your will, not mine. In Jesus’ name I pray, amen.
Eddie and Alice Smith