-
It all started in a small upper room,
-
with humble, fervent prayer
-
threatened by the authorities
-
and banned from preaching,
-
the church prayed that the two
men witnessed
-
with power and grace.
-
And people prayed everywhere in one accord
-
in repentance with confession
and humility.
-
And the lives of people were changed.
-
Two men started out on a missionary
journey
-
that would turn the world as they knew it
upside down.
-
And the message went out to the world
beyond.
-
Corporate prayer helped a prisoner escape.
-
A king requested that his people fast
and pray
-
and the enemy was defeated.
-
A battle won without the need to fight.
-
Through a faithful servant
and a young queen's faith and courage,
-
a people were saved.
-
Stories in the Bible showing
the power of united prayer.
-
As I read the book of Acts,
-
it's really a book about believers
coming together to pray,
-
and a prayer-answering God.
-
Personal prayer is important.
-
Secret prayer is the life of the soul.
-
But we know that there has never been
a revival anywhere on this planet
-
that wasn't preceded by united and
continuous prayer.
-
Our Lord on one occasion says where
two or more of you agree
-
on touching anything that is according
to My will, it will be done.
-
So there is a synergy that happens
-
when we hook up together and unite
our voices in crying out to God.
-
As the spirit of prophecy tells us,
-
prayer is the key that unlocks the storehouse
of heaven's treasury and blessings.
-
Some of Ellen White's counsel and statements
-
on united prayer are powerful as well.
-
She says in one place that when she was
writing
-
to the Farnsworths, I believe it was,
-
she says there's more power in
united prayer
-
than even in private prayer.
-
Then she says, why is that?
-
It's because the unity of heart
of the believers.
-
It's like God gets really excited
-
when we're really of one accord
-
when we unite together just like they
did in Acts.
-
Another statement she says,
-
at the sound of fervent prayer,
Satan's whole host trembles.
-
Jesus knows that the habit of praying
with others
-
helps to rid our lives of the
self-centeredness of our prayers
-
when we pray by ourselves.
-
So when the Bible talks about
continue earnestly in prayer,
-
that's not just an individual activity.
-
It's a call to the church as a community
to call out to God.
-
Not to change God's mind,
-
but that we come into alignment
with God's will
-
and actually I think he uses us as part
of the answers to those prayers.
-
As you look at the book of Acts,
-
united prayer brought God's people together.
-
In Acts chapter 1 and verse 14 and 15,
-
the entire church met together and prayed.
-
They knew that the task before them
was too great.
-
They knew the challenge was too immense.
-
They knew there was no way they could
carry the gospel to the world.
-
But yet as they prayed,
God did something miraculous.
-
He poured out His Holy Spirit on the
day of Pentacost
-
and three thousand were baptized.
-
You know when you read the text there,
-
one of the things that jumps out at me is
the simple English phrase -
-
they were in one accord.
-
Pentacost was just an extraordinary event.
-
It came after the culmination of Christ's
ministry on this earth.
-
And it looked as though everything was
completely dashed and destroyed.
-
When Christ was hanging on that cross
-
and then of course the resurrection
took place.
-
And He appeared to His disciples
-
which gave them a completely
different perspective
-
on what their ministry was all about.
-
Our blessed Lord told his disciples
-
to tarry in Jerusalem united in prayer.
-
And that was one of the prerequisites
-
for bringing that rushing mighty wind
-
and the presence of the Holy Spirit
on the day of Pentacost.
-
It was the time of Passover
-
and we were in an upper room
in Jerusalem.
-
We were all praying in one accord.
-
We were praying for repentance
and humility,
-
and we were confessing our sins.
-
We were also seeking the Lord's vision,
power and the Holy Spirit.
-
There was an incredible feeling of oneness
-
as we prayed earnestly together.
-
Suddenly there was the sound of a
violent wind
-
that filled the whole room where
we were sitting.
-
Then tongues of fire came down
-
and this fire rested on people.
-
All the people in the room
were filled with the Holy Spirit.
-
Now remember that at the time
of the Passover,
-
people came from many countries to worship.
-
Now suddenly they could hear the gospel
-
each in their own language.
-
As a result of this, three thousand people
-
were added to the believers in one day.
-
The people devoted themselves
-
to the apostles' teaching and
the fellowship.
-
To the breaking of bread and of prayer.
-
Every day they would meet together
in the temple courts.
-
In their homes, they broke bread
and ate together.
-
And the number of those being saved
grew daily.
-
And we believe something like this
-
is going to happen in the last days
as well.
-
But I think only as a church and
as a people
-
we get together in one accord
-
and in fervent prayer, will we -
-
till we do that, we won't see that happen.
-
And really what happened at Pentacost
-
is going to be again duplicated
by the Lord
-
in an even greater fashion
-
as the three angels' messages go forward
-
as the fourth angel of Revelation 18
has proclaimed
-
and as the final loud cry is heralded
all over the world.
-
And it's going to be people who have
submitted to the Lord,
-
confessed their sins,
-
and then the Holy Spirit can fall
-
and can use us in a mighty way.
-
Well I think in the book of Acts,
Acts chapter 6
-
it seemed like a good problem.
-
The church was growing exponentially.
-
But in the midst of that, there's this
food distribution challenge.
-
The church was undergoing
practical challenges.
-
The Hellenistic Jews were complaining
against the Hebraic Jews
-
because the former's widows were
being overlooked
-
in the daily distribution of food.
-
The apostles decided that they needed
-
to focus on the ministry of prayer
and the word.
-
And so they requested for seven deacons
-
to be chosen for these other
practical tasks.
-
The apostles asked us as a group
-
to chose seven men who were known
-
to be full of the Spirit and have wisdom.
-
This proposal from the apostles
-
pleased our whole group.
-
So we went about selecting the seven men.
-
Once the men were selected,
-
they were presented to the apostles.
-
The apostles laid their hands on them
and prayed for them.
-
With prayer as a priority,
the church would never fail.
-
After this, the number of disciples
increased rapidly.
-
And a large number of priests
became obedient to the work.
-
So I think we find a case study there
-
that says when we face challenges,
-
let's use wisdom, let's use our training
-
but let's also recognize that we have
-
a prayer-answering God who will
give us wisdom.
-
I've seen this over and over and over.
-
Churches with big problems
-
have solved them when they come
together to pray.
-
Peter and John were called in
-
by the chief priests and elders about
their preaching.
-
They tried to defend their actions,
-
but the leaders were very hard on them.
-
They were commanded not to speak
-
or teach in the name of Jesus.
-
After further threats, they let them go.
-
Peter and John went back to their
own people
-
and reported all that the chief priests
and elders had said.
-
When we heard all this we immediately
raised our voices in prayer to God.
-
The entire group prayed for
Peter and John.
-
We prayed for God to give boldness
to these two humble servants.
-
Such intense prayer I had not experienced
for a long time.
-
After we had prayed, suddenly the whole
place was shaken.
-
People were filled with the Holy Spirit
-
and Peter and John went out
-
and gave witness with great power
and grace.
-
They witnessed throughout the land
-
about the resurrection of their Saviour.
-
So I think Peter and John
drew great strength
-
both from knowing they were praying
-
but also from the power that's unleashed
-
when people pray for us.
-
There's a peace.
-
There's a power from God
-
that comes into us when that prayer
is being answered by many believers.
-
Then Esther sent this reply to Mordecai.
-
Go and gather all the Jews
who are in Susa together
-
and pray and fast for me.
-
Do not eat or drink anything for
three days and nights.
-
I and my maidens will fast as you do.
-
After that, I will go to the king
-
even though it is against the law.
-
And if I perish, I perish.
-
(music)
-
We look back at Esther now
-
and we think what a gutsy girl.
-
You know, what a woman of faith.
-
But she was probably just as terrified
-
as any of us might have been.
-
It was a very desperate situation.
-
You the old saying, there's no such thing
-
as atheists in foxholes.
-
And I think this was a case where
they knew
-
without divine intervention,
-
without divine intervention,
all was going to be lost.
-
But she was wise enough
to say to her uncle, Mordecai
-
I will fast and pray.
-
And I will have my people
here in the palace fast and pray.
-
But I want all of God's people
to fast and pray.
-
I think we miss out a lot
-
on the unleashing of God's power
-
in this world by not fasting.
-
And it doesn't have to mean you
have to go totally without food
-
but some form - giving up something
-
we really love every day
-
and uniting that together with prayer
-
and praying with others, it does
something,
-
moves in this great controversy.
-
It's very easy at times to forget
-
just how dependant we are upon God.
-
And as Dwight Nelson likes to remind us
-
pray desperate prayers.
-
And Esther was desperate.
-
Pray urgent prayers.
-
And pray prayers of expectancy.
-
And think her prayers encompassed
all three.
-
If you look at the book of Acts,
-
prayer was very united.
-
Take, for example, Peter and Cornelius.
-
Cornelius, a Jew - a Gentile.
Peter, a Jew.
-
And Jews and Gentiles would not possibly
come together
-
in any intimate talking
-
or visiting in one another's homes
-
or eating together.
-
This was the Holy Spirit breaking
down some walls.
-
A Gentile of the Italian band, Cornelius,
was praying.
-
It was no accident. He was praying.
-
Peter on the rooftop, praying.
-
And he prayed so long that he fell asleep.
-
Peter has this dream of the sheet
coming down
-
with all these various animals in it.
-
And God says, Peter, rise and eat.
-
And Peter says, I've never eaten snakes
-
and crocodiles and rodents.
-
The vision of course was not about
-
clean or unclean foods.
-
The vision was about respect
for other cultures.
-
Respect for other people.
-
And God sent visions, epiphanies, to
both of them
-
that broke down the walls
-
that divided them.
-
And Peter declared, God has shown me
-
that He is no respecter of persons.
-
As both of them prayed, Jew and Gentile,
-
their prayers ascended to heaven
-
and met at the throne of God.
-
(music)
-
It was around noon when Peter went
up to the roof to pray.
-
It was here that Peter had a vision
-
about a large sheet containing a mix
of unclean animals
-
representing God's affirmation
-
of the diversity of peoples
-
in the growing church.
-
We had heard that Peter was staying
-
at the house of Simon the tanner,
-
and were instructed by Cornelius,
the centurion, to go out and find him.
-
While Peter was still thinking
about the vision,
-
the Holy Spirit told him to go downstairs
-
because three men were looking for him.
-
Peter went down and told the men
-
that he was the one they were looking for.
-
(music)
-
We then told Peter
-
that Cornelius, the centurion,
-
had been told by an angel
-
that Peter would come
-
and see him at his house.
-
So, unbeknown to Peter,
-
Cornelius was already expecting his visit
to Caesarea.
-
What happened here was quite unusual.
-
Just the fact that Peter entered
the house.
-
Remember that it was against the law
-
for a Jew to associate with or
visit a Gentile.
-
Cornelius told Peter how three
days earlier
-
he had been praying in his house
-
when an angel had appeared before him.
-
Peter shared with Cornelius
-
his new understanding that God
-
does not show favouritism
-
and is the Lord of all.
-
This was a real turning point.
-
From this point on,
-
the gospel was given among
other people groups.
-
And it all started out with prayer
and fasting
-
and a vision.
-
Cultures were bridged.
-
Barriers were broken down.
-
Hearts were united.
-
And they became one in Jesus Christ.
-
And the gospel was open to the Gentiles.
-
What does united prayer
-
do for breaking down cultures?
-
When we are kneeling together
-
different cultures, different backgrounds,
-
different sociological backgrounds,
-
different educational backgrounds,
-
different racial complexion.
-
When we are kneeling together
-
our hearts are united as one in
Jesus Christ.
-
I look in Acts chapter 13,
-
where the church in Antioch
-
is sending out Paul and Barnabas.
-
And they hands on them.
-
And they pray for the blessing of the
Holy Spirit.
-
The laying on of hands was the
setting aside in Acts 13
-
of Paul and Barnabas for
ministry in mission.
-
They were going to launch their
missionary journeys.
-
I don't think there's anything magical
about the hands.
-
I think it's a symbol.
-
Like water is with baptism
-
or the unleavened bread and the
unfermented grape juice
-
are in the communion service.
-
When the church comes unitedly,
-
and lays hands on an individual,
-
they are praying for that individual,
-
setting them aside for a specific task
of witness and ministry.
-
As the prophets and teachers
of the early church
-
were fasting and praying,
-
the Holy Spirit called Paul and Barnabas
-
to go on their first mission journey.
-
The church prayed together before sending
them out.
-
Hands were laid on them and we
prayed earnestly.
-
As a united church, we prayed for
their safety
-
and that God would grant them
-
the right words to speak to the multitudes
-
We prayed that our missionaries would
be successful
-
in spreading the gospel.
-
Paul and Barnabas travelled to
several places.
-
In Cyprus, they proclaimed the word of God
-
in the Jewish synagogues.
-
In ? Antioch the whole city gathered to
hear the word of the Lord.
-
When the Gentiles heard their messages,
they believed.
-
The word of the Lord spread throughout
the entire region
-
and the disciples were filled with joy
and the Holy Spirit.
-
Paul and Barnabas appointed elders
in every church
-
and prayed with fasting commending
them to the Lord.
-
They gathered the church together
-
and reported all that God had done
through them
-
and how He had opened a door of faith
to the Gentiles.
-
As a praying community,
-
when we lay hands upon those that we're
praying for
-
it represents the hand of God.
-
Kneeling around that person,
-
setting them aside for that task,
-
we're asking the Holy Spirit to come
-
to empower them, to strengthen them
-
for the task that God has given them
through the church.
-
I remember a story where Paul was -
-
he encountered a beautiful woman.
-
Her name was Lydia. And she was praying.
-
And, I don't know, that might have been
beside a river, for all I know.
-
It may have been beside a well.
-
Maybe it was in the middle of a market.
-
You know, at their time. Wherever it was.
-
God was able to reach her heart
-
and the Bible tells us that she accepted
-
the message of the gospel and she
was baptized.
-
We were a group of women outside
the city gate
-
by the river at a place of prayer.
-
Lydia, a dealer in purple cloth,
-
from Thyatira was also there.
-
Two men came along and started to speak
to us,
-
and asked to join us in prayer.
-
We knew that they were Paul and Silas.
-
The Lord opened Lydia's heart to heed
Paul's message.
-
She and all the members of her household
were baptized.
-
Another day Paul and Silas were on their
way to a place of prayer.
-
They were met by a female slave
-
who had a spirit in her that could predict
the future.
-
She earned a lot of money for her owners
by fortune telling.
-
She followed us and shouted at us.
-
This was disrupting and so Paul ordered
the spirit out of her.
-
When her owners realized that their chance
of making money was gone,
-
they dragged Paul and Silas to
the authorities
-
and they were put in prison.
-
At around midnight, these two very
positive prisoners
-
named Paul and Silas were praying
-
and singing hymns to God.
-
The rest of us were listening to them.
-
Suddenly there was a violent earthquake
-
and the prison shook.
-
All the prison doors flew open
-
and everyone's chains came loose.
-
The jailer woke up, saw all the doors open
-
and drew his sword to kill himself.
-
He thought all the prisoners had escaped.
-
But Paul assured him and shouted
-
that he should not harm himself.
-
The jailer ? rushed in and lay
in front of them, trembling.
-
The jailer accepted Jesus Christ
-
and his whole family was baptized.
-
So prayer can happen anywhere.
-
For Hope Channel, you know I anchor
a program -
-
I co-anchor a program called Let's Pray.
-
And so here we are in a television studio
-
with lights and cameras and action
-
and yet we are a very much in the manner
of prayer.
-
And we have seen God, we have seen
-
amazing answers to prayer from the studio.
-
So it can happen anywhere.
-
One friend of mine has said
-
that we must pray with such specificity
-
we will know when God answers our prayers.
-
In Acts chapter 12, Peter is in prison.
-
He is scheduled for execution.
-
He's chained between soldiers.
-
Herod has decreed that he will die.
-
As Peter's in prison, the entire church,
-
I like that, the entire church is praying
-
for Peter in prison.
-
Right before that, James was, you know,
-
taken to prison but was killed.
-
And I think the people got
really concerned
-
that they may now lose Peter
-
when he was hauled off to jail.
-
And that caused them to get worried
-
so they got together and really prayed
all night long.
-
King Herod had arrested some who belonged
to the church
-
and was planning to persecute them.
-
When Herod had James put to death
with a sword,
-
and saw how the Jews had approved of this,
-
he seized Peter also.
-
Peter was guarded by four squads
-
of four soldiers each.
-
We were very concerned for his safety.
-
And the church prayed earnestly for him.
-
The night before Herod was going to
bring him to trial,
-
Peter was sleeping between two soldiers
-
bound by chains and centuries stood guard
at the entrance.
-
Suddenly an angel of the Lord appeared
-
and light shone into his cell.
-
The angel struck Peter on the side to
wake him up
-
and the chains fell off his wrist.
-
As he was instructed, Peter followed the
angel out of the prison
-
past all of the guards to the
gate of the city.
-
Many people had been praying together
-
in the house of Mary, the mother of John.
-
As the servant in the house, I heard
knocking on the door.
-
With caution, I went to open the door
-
and to my surprise, there stood Peter.
-
We had just been praying earnestly for him
in prison.
-
Once again, united prayer had worked
-
and the word of God continued to spread
and flourish.
-
No one who was at that prayer meeting
that night
-
would ever forget that they have a God
-
answering prayer after that night.
-
Everywhere those people went
-
for the rest of their lives, they told
that story,
-
which is part of the reason we know
it today,
-
they told that story with great power
-
because it was utterly convincing to them
-
of not only God's willingness to help,
-
but God's ability to do it on a grand and
surprising scale.
-
Here were three big, huge nations
-
converging on his little dinky kingdom
of Judah
-
and from a human standpoint,
it was wipeout.
-
Jehosophat says some very honest things
-
about the ones praying.
-
We don't know what to do.
-
We're weak.
-
We're helpless against this great number
that's come against us.
-
But he says some very honest things
about who God is too.
-
God, You are capable. You are willing.
-
You are able and we are ready.
-
All of which prepared God's people
for His deliverance.
-
But I think when we humble ourselves
in prayer
-
we're giving God permission
-
to break through in a supernatural way.
-
And, we're even told in the book,
Christ's Object Lessons,
-
that we are to present our prayers
-
with a determination that
will not be denied.
-
What a promise.
-
(music)
-
Many people came and told Jehoshaphat
-
that a vast army was approaching to wage
war against him.
-
Alarmed by this news, Jehoshaphat
proclaimed
-
a fast for all of Judah.
-
People came from every town in Judah
-
to fast and pray together.
-
We were part of a large group and
-
Jehoshaphat was earnestly asking God
for assistance.
-
Than a man called Jahaziel stood up
-
and said that Jehoshaphat should not
be concerned,
-
that it was not his battle but
God's battle.
-
(music)
-
It was early in the morning
-
when we set out to the desert of Dacoa(?)
-
We were seriously concerned about facing
-
this huge army, but we were told to
have faith.
-
We had also prayed.
-
When our reconnaissance platoon came
over the hill,
-
we only saw dead bodies all around.
-
The enemy had apparently turned on
each other.
-
Jehoshaphat's prayers had won them
the battle
-
without even having to fight.
-
When you look at prayer
-
in the book of Acts in the Bible,
-
a definite pattern emerges.
-
That pattern is that the disciples,
-
as they begin to share what God has put
on their heart,
-
they are persecuted, sometimes to
the point of death.
-
As the persecution begins,
-
they actually gather the believers
together.
-
They pray and the Holy Spirit
is poured out.
-
Thus causing the word of God
-
to be spread even more boldly.
-
Thus the church of God grows.
-
United prayer is critically important
-
to the church because it is the key
-
to national revival and to the healing of
national challenges.
-
Prayer, especially united prayer,
-
is not about leverage,
-
twisting the hand of God with more people
-
praying the same phrase over and
over again.
-
It is about God's people together
-
getting aligned with His will.
-
When we pray, I think it changes
our hearts.
-
And when we can unite together in prayer,
-
there is a unity that is experienced.
-
And then when we ask, whatever we ask,
-
in the powerful name of Jesus,
things happen.
-
Why is united prayer important?
-
Because it opens our hearts
-
to the power of the living God
-
to accompany our witness.
-
It brings you to the foot of the cross
together.
-
United prayer is unleashing God's power
-
in the universe and I believe
-
in a great controversy.
-
He's what we need, not the prayer.
-
In the controversy between good and evil
-
God does not violate our
freedom of choice.
-
But as we pray, God opens up new avenues
of working.
-
Isn't God already working for that son
or daughter before we pray?
-
Isn't He working for the community
before we pray?
-
He is. But he's limited by their choice.
-
But as we pray, just as in the
book of Acts
-
as the church prayed, God honours
the choice of the praying one.
-
And miracles occur as we pray unitedly.
-
When we get things right on the vertical
-
they will become right on the horizontal.
-
(music)
Janine Honiball Dahl
Well done Candice. Thank you very much for your hard work! Kind regards Janine Honiball