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Praying For Deeper Prayers

Streams_in_the_desert

Several people I have run into lately and I have talked about faith healing a lot recently. About the power that the holy spirit - God in us - possesses to do great things through us; our ability we have to command the spiritual realm through faithful prayer. Granted there are some cooks and TV evangelists that distort our view of God in this way, but I think this stuff is true.

There is a guy that has been brought into my life in a way that only God can. He had been having some heart issues, and then got a flu shot and became paralyzed. He can't get his surgery (which he has no health insurance for) until he comes out of this paralysis. 

We are going tomorrow to pray over him. Please be praying for him. His name is Mark.

My devotional today was very relevant to me, as I find happens to me often... Perhaps it will be to you. I have underlined, bolded and italicized parts that stuck out to me:

 

November 2, Streams In The Desert by L.B. Cowman

"Peter was kept in prison, but the church was earnestly praying to God for him" (Acts 12:5).

Prayer is the link that connects us with God. It is the bridge that spans every gulf and carries us safely over every chasm of danger or need.

Think of the significance of this story of the first-century church: Everything seemed to be coming against it, for Peter was in prison, the Jews appeared triumphant, Herod still reigned supreme, and the arena of martyrdom was eagerly awaiting the next morning so it could drink the apostle's blood. "But the church was earnestly praying to God for him." So what was the outcome? The prison was miraculously opened, the apostle freed, the Jews bewildered, and as a display of God's punishment, wicked King Herod "was eaten by worms and died." And rolling on to even greater victory, "the word of God continued to increase and spread" (vv. 23-24).

Do we truly know the power of our supernatural weapon of prayer? Do we dare to use it with the authority of a faith that not only asks but also commands? God baptizes us with holy boldness and divine confidence, for He is looking not for great people but for people who will dare to proved the greatness of their God!

In your prayers, above everything else, beware of limiting God, not only through unbelief but also by thinking you know exactly what He can do. Learn to expect the unexpected, beyond all that you ask or think.

So each time you intercede through prayer, first be quiet and worship God in His glory. Think of what He can do, how He delights in Christ His Son, and of your place in Him -- then expect great things.

Our prayers are God's opportunities.

Are you experiencing sorrow? Prayer can make your time of affliction one of strength and sweetness. Are you experiencing happiness? Prayer can add a heavenly fragrance to your time of joy. Are you in grave danger from some outward or inward enemy? Prayer can place an angel by your side whose very touch could shatter a millstone into smaller grains of dust than the flour it grinds, and whose glance could destroy an entire army.

What will prayer do for you? My answer is this: Everything that God can do for you. "Ask for whatever you want me to give you" (2 Chron. 1:7).

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I want this sort of prayer life. Today I find myself praying for deeper prayers.

My life is a medium to help bring about a bigger purpose; a purpose bigger than my own understanding, but a purpose worth living and dying for. 
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