Posts Tagged ‘prayer’

BreakThru40

January 12th, 2010

All across the U.S. ENCM members and leaders will be spending the next forty days in prayer and fasting (January 11-February 19th).

We need God to bring spiritual revival to our own hearts and transformation to our campuses! We can never do it by merely our planning, organizing, strategizing and creativity. Without a work of God’s Spirit, it simply won’t happen!

I want to invite you to join in praying and seeking God with us. Even if you have never fasted before, do SOMETHING in faith. (Ideas: You could fast one meal a week, one day a week, or even fast something other than food, such as T.V.)

Each day of the week we will be focusing on a different prayer point:

Mondays: Desperation

Tuesdays: Compassion

Wednesdays: Evangelism

Thursdays: Family & Ministry Partners

Fridays: Campuses & Youth

Saturdays: Leaders

Sundays: Miracles

If you are on Facebook you can visit the Fan page to interact with others participating. Comment and let others know what God is doing in you during this time!

Let’s cry out to God together for breakthrough…He’s listening! 1 John 5:14-15

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Kung Fu Prayer

October 13th, 2009

Kung Fu Monkey StyleRecently I went to a prayer meeting that involved leaders from a variety of different Christian collegiate ministries. In situations like these it’s interesting to observe how each group seems to have their own style of prayer.

Some are more flamboyant and visibly emotional in their prayers; Some are more physically expressive choosing to physically kneel down for long periods of the prayer meeting; Others are more reserved in their physical demeanor but more deliberate in their choice of words as they communicate to God.

Are some wrong and others right? While our prayers should always be Biblically informed, Christ-centered and sincerely expressed, I think that prayer style is similar to the variety that exists among Kung Fu styles. While I’m certainly no Kung Fu master, by watching Kung Fu Panda and other random movies I’m aware that there are multiple different styles within the discipline: Dragon Style, Monkey Style and Tiger Style, among others. Each is distinctive, but all can be effective.

Instead of getting prideful and thinking that we are more holy than that person from another church or ministry, and avoiding the next ecumenical prayer meeting, how much stronger would the collective body of Christ be if we recognized each others strengths and honored them.

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Persecution: Then and Now

January 9th, 2009

papyri-header

I’m currently reading The Church History by Eusebius of Caesarea who lived apprximately 260-339 A.D.  He records some pretty horrific persecution of Christians during his day. For example he writes, 

“…why need I give example after example of the godly martyrs’ contests throughout the world, especially those who were no longer attacked under common law  but as enemies in war? A little town in Phrygia, for instance, all of whose inhabitants were Christian, was surrounded by armed infantrymen who set it on fire and burned to death men, women, and young children as they were calling on almighty God. The reason? All the townspeople, from the mayor himself and the magistrates to the entire populace, confessed their Christianity and refused to commit idolatry.” (Book 8.11)

He continues in Book 8.12 (For some reason they called each chapter a book back then.), 

“Sometimes they were killed with an axe, as was the case in Arabia, or had their legs broken, as those in Cappadocia. At other times they were hung upside down over a slow fire, so that smoke rising from the burning wood suffocated the, as in Mesopotamia. Sometimes noses, ears, and hands were mutilated and the other parts of the body butchered, as was the case in Alexandria.

At Antioch they were roasted on hot gridirons for prolonged torture, not seared to death.”

Sadly, such grotesque atrocities against followers of Jesus are not merely historical. Brutal persecution of Christians still takes place in many parts of the world today.

Those of us who live in relative comfort must be careful not forget our Christian heritage, and still more we must remember to pray for our brothers and sisters who are facing severe persecution in our time.

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