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http://clashdaily.com/2013/11/prayer-silent-revolution-revolutionary-people/#huU8PJSL8LYWLT5M.99

By / 30 November  2013

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When we think about influencing our culture for good, what are the first  things that come to mind? What are the sorts of things we do when we want to  make a difference?

Take politics, for example. When Americans want to steer the nation in a  better direction, we vote. Elections only happen every two years so we don’t get  to cast our vote very often which means we are merely observers of the political  drama most of the time.

People who are really interested in politics might follow current events on  the internet, watch political programs, and maybe even express their views  through blogs, tweets, status updates, and chain emails. Those who are extremely  engaged go so far as to attend or organize rallies, give money to candidates or  political parties, or find other numerous ways to express their activism.

If Christians want to “win the world for Christ,” we form committees, draft  mission and vision statements, publish our statements of belief, execute giving  campaigns, preach, teach, start small groups, upload sermon podcasts, create a  proper social media platform, and invite people to our buildings for events. But after all of this noise and activity, what is really accomplished? And what  price have we paid for our “success”?

Many Christians fail to take advantage of a form of power, influence, and  service that is unique to the kingdom of God: prayer. Whether we’re talking  about social activism or Gospel ministry, when we set out to make an impact on  the world around us we rarely start with prayer. Christians too often try to  influence society for good by gaining political power or by imitating the  strategies of the corporate world, but the Church’s greatest form of social  activism is prayer.

For those who like to ask, “What would Jesus do?,” one answer is certain:  pray. Jesus modeled a lifestyle of prayer throughout his ministry. “But he  [Jesus] would withdraw to desolate places and pray,” (Luke 5:16). “In these  days he went out to the mountain to pray, and all night he continued in  prayer to God,” (Luke 6:12). “Now Jesus was praying in a certain place, and  when he finished, one of his disciples said to him, ‘Lord, teach us to  pray, as John taught his disciples’,” (Luke 11:1). And when Jesus was  facing the greatest trial of his life, he prayed: “Then Jesus went with  them to a place called Gethsemane, and he said to his disciples, “Sit  here, while I go over there and pray” (Matthew 26:36). If we want to follow  Christ, we must follow him in prayer.

revolutionprayerWe not only have the example of Jesus, we have his  instruction as well. One of Jesus’s most famous teachings on prayer is the Parable of the Persistent Widow.

And he [Jesus] told them a parable to the effect that they ought always  to pray and not lose heart. He said, ’In a certain city there was  a judge who neither feared God nor respected man. And there was a  widow in that city who kept coming to him and saying, “Give me justice against  my adversary.” For a while he refused, but afterward he said to  himself, “Though I neither fear God nor respect man, yet because this  widow keeps bothering me, I will give her justice, so that she will not beat me  down by her continual coming.”  And the Lord said, “Hear what the  unrighteous judge says.”

The woman received justice because of her unrelenting appeals to the judge  and Jesus teaches his followers to do the same in prayer.

One final note on prayer. The widow in the parable sought justice against her  adversary. We could get motivated to pray against our enemies but what about  praying for our enemies? In Luke 6:28 Jesus says, “Bless those who curse you,  pray for those who abuse you.” Jesus instituted an upside down kingdom unlike  anything the people of his day expected and hoped for. Love for our enemies is  one of the greatest and most challenging “upside down” aspects of kingdom  living. What would our social activism of gospel ministry look like if we  blessed those who curse us and pray for those who mistreat us?

Do you seek justice? Pray and continue praying! Do you have adversaries who  curse you and abuse you? Pray for them! The ways of God and his kingdom are very  different than the ways of the world. Prayer is a great example of this.  Oftentimes the methods and manners that seem most implausible to us are very  ones God has chosen to operate through.

Image: Courtesy of:  http://troopstransition.wikispaces.com/riskprotect

About the author: Jeff Wright Jr.

 Jeff Wright, Jr. is a grateful husband, blessed daddy, and long-suffering  Redskins fan. He is a Prison Chaplain in the “city of lost souls” and is the  co-creator of Evangelicals for  Liberty. Jeff holds a ThM from Dallas Seminary, and is a member of the  Evangelical Theological Society. Jeff is a civil liberties activist on behalf of  the “sacred order of freemen” and minister of the “fellowship of twice-born  sinners.”

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