You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might
go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name
the Father will give you. John 15:16
The first request of us from the persecuted church is that we pray for them.
And correspondingly, they are usually great models of people of prayer which we
can emulate. But we often need to be reminded that they do not ask us only to
pray for them but also to pray with them. If we only
pray for them, we will pray for their safety and the termination
of their persecution. They want us to pray with them which means
we will pray for: the advance of the gospel in their land; that they will bear
fruit that will last; and for perseverance and fearless courage in the face of
suffering.
Pastor Samuel Lamb from Guangzhou, China, has an interesting prayer for
severe situations of persecution which expresses his trust in a great God. He
prays: “Lord, I rejoice in how You are going to work this out.”
Moses Xie, a Chinese Church leader who spent more than twenty years in jail
for his faith, says that when asking visitors to pray for him he is really after
three distinct outcomes:
“First, I want them to experience the blessing of prayer for themselves. They
will go to God on my behalf, but they will receive a great blessing from being
in the presence of God.
Second, I know that as they pray, their burden for the persecuted will
increase, and as their burden grows, so their commitment to assisting us in all
sorts of other ways will increase also. Prayer alone makes them be the body.
Third, I want them to release more of God’s power into our situation through
intercession, since I know that God has bound Himself not to act until we
ask.”
Today is a great day to glorify God in our lives and those of the persecuted
church.
RESPONSE: Today I will not only pray for the persecuted but I will
also pray with the persecuted.
PRAYER: Lord, may my life glorify You today and may I be a lasting fruit
bearer who only desires that Your will be done.
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