Excerpt from
Prayer Shield, published by Regal Books (1992).
Click here to order this book online.
Pastors and other Christian leaders who are open to receive personal
intercession and who ask God for it should soon find that intercession makes a
measurable difference in their ministeries. I fully recognize there are also
many benefits of intercession that defy measurement, and sometimes they can be
the most important. But the tangible benefits will also raise both our faith
and our spirits.
God provides intercession in a variety of forms. Most of this chapter will
deal with three kinds of perosnal intercessors committed to pray on a regular
basis for a certain pastor, but we need to recognize that God moves in other
ways as well.
D.L. Moody's Invalid Intercessor
In the previous chapter, we were introduced to the two intercessors God used
to open Dwight L. Moody to personal intercession. He was later involved in a
dramatic incident that shows how God can touch an intercessor specifically for
one event. At times God will assign what I have called a crisis intercessor to
a particular task, rather than a personal intercessor.
This incident happened when Moody visited England in 1872 on a kind of
sabbatical while his new church was being built in Chicago. His main purpose
was to listen to and learn from some of England's great preachers. But one
Sunday he broke his routine and agreed to minister in a church in London.
The Sunday morning turned out to be a disastrous experience. He confessed
afterward that he never had such a hard time preaching in his life. Everything
was perfectly dead. Then the horrible thought came to him that he had to
preach there again that night. He only went through with it because he had
given his word he would do so.
But what a difference! That evening the church was packed and there was a new
and vital spiritual atmosphere. Moody said, "The powers of an unseen world
seemed to have fallen upon the audience." Although he had not premeditated it,
he decided to give an invitation for people to accept Jesus Christ as their
personal Savior and was astounded when 500 people stood up. He repeated the
invitation twice more to attempt to filter out the insincere, but all 500 went
to the vestry to pray to receive Christ. A major revival started in that
church and neighborhood that night!
And the intercession?
A woman who had attended the morning service returned home and told her
invalid sister that a certain Mr. Moody from Chicago had preached. The invalid
sister turned pale. "Mr. Moody from Chicago?" she asked in astonishment. "I
read about him some time ago in an American paper and I have been praying to
God to send him to London and to our church. If I had known he was going to
preach this morning, I would have eaten no breakfast and spent the whole time
he was preaching in prayer for him. Now, sister, go out of the room, lock the
door, send me no dinner; no matter who comes don't let them see me. I am going
to spend the whole afternoon and evening in prayer!"
This story is told by E.M. Bounds, who comments, "So while Mr. Moody stood in
the pulpit that had been like an ice chamber in the morning, the bedridden
saint was holding him up before God, and in the evening God, who ever delights
to answer prayer, poured out His Spirit in mighty power.&"
Gary Greenwald's Team
God frequently empowers ministry through a team of intercessors. Gary
Greenwald, pastor of the Eagle's Nest church in Irvine, California, had been
conducting annual evangelistic crusades in Hawaii. Attendance had grown to
2,000 after several years. As they prayed about it they decided to step out in
faith one year and rent the Hilton Hawaiian ballroom, which seats 4,000. It
cost thousands of dollars, and they would need large crowds to pay their bill.
They sent a team of intercessors from their church in Irvine to stay in the
Hilton Hawaiian one week before the crusade for fasting and prayer. The
spiritual warfare was intense that week. The leader of the team suffered so
much anxiety during the nights that he almost capitulated and returned home.
Several of the team were afflicted with sickness of one kind or another. But
they persisted and felt they were winning the battle. A big question was:
Would they ever fill the ballroom?
The first 3 nights of the cursade they drew 3,000 people. The final 2 nights
saw the ballroom packed out at 4,000. It was one of the most powerful crusades
they had ever conducted. Many conversions and healing miracles took place,
such as a severed Achilles tendon being completely healed. The spiritual
warfare had been done and the crusade itself was easy.
They rented the ballroom again the following year. But sending the
intercessory team for that week had been very expensive so they decided not to
do it again. Hawaii usually has an open atmosphere for preaching, but this
year the crusade was a disaster! The highest attendance was only 1,800.
Divisions occurred among the leadership. Serious problems occurred over the
worship leaders. It was a financial wipeout.
Gary Greenwald learned about the value of teams of intercessors the hard way
that year.
Personal Intercessors
God uses crisis intercessors as we saw with D.L. Moody and teams of
intercessors as with Gary Greenwald. He also uses personal intercessors, those
who make a committment to pray over an extended period of time for a
particular pastor or other Christian leader.
As I have studied the phenomenon of personal intercession fo rseveral years in
the role of a participant observer, I have found it useful to seperate
personal intercessors into three approximate categories. I like to think of
personal intercession as operating in three cocentric circles around the
leader. (See top of next page)
The inner circle. Here we picture the pastor along with what I will call I-1
intercessors.
The middle circle. This contains I-2 intercessors.
The outer circle. This contains I-3 intercessors.
Think of the I-1 intercessors as having a close relationship to the pastor,
the I-2 intercessors as having a casual relationship, and the I-3 intercessors
as having a remote relationship to the pastor. I will describe them from the
outside in.
I-3 Intercessors
I-3 intercessors can be quite remote from the pastor or leader they pray for.
Most I-3 intercession is a one-way relationship. The leader often does not
know who the I-3 intercessor is or that he or she is praying for them and
their ministry. I think of Billy Graham, for example. Many intercessors have
prayed faithfully for Billy Graham and his ministry for years without ever
having so much as seen the evangelist in person. However, Billy Graham will be
the first to tell you that such intercessors have made all the difference in
the world in the effectiveness of his evangelistic ministry.
Of course, a certian amount of visibility beyond the local parish is needed in
order to attract these kind of I-3 intercessors. Campus Crusade's Bill Bright
says, "I would assuem that there are hundreds, if not thousands, who pray for
me daily from grade school through senior citizens." If it were not for such
intercessors, Bright says, "I am sure I would have been dead long ago from
physical exhaustion and would have been incapable of doing all that God has
enable me to do."
My friend Omar Cabrera, whose Vision of the Future Church of more than 100,000
in Argentina is one of the world's largest, has a unique system for recruiting
I-3 intercessors. He simply asks his church members and families to pray for
him and his wife, Marfa, when they say grace at meals. A recent circulation
estimates that they probably receive 20,000 prayers a day through this appeal.
My wife, Doris, and I have a growing list of I-3 intercessors whose names and
addresses we know at this moment. Some of them have international reputations
such as Dick Eastman, Jack McAlister, Quin Sherrer, Jim Montgomery, Archie
Parrish, Gary Bergel and others. Some of them we know only by name since we
have never met them personally. Several are members of our 120 Fellowship
Sunday School class. Others are old-time friends or former students. Many have
the spiritual gift of intercession. Some pray primarily for us. Others have a
long list of leaders they also pray for such as Jack McAlister who prays daily
for more than 200 leaders and others. And I am sure we have I-3 intercessors
whose names are not on the list.
A memorable experience occurred one day when I was standing in the crowded
lobby of the Osaka Hilton Hotel in Japan. A perfect stranger, a Caucasian,
walked up to me and said, "Are you Peter Wagner?" When I told him I was, he
shared that he had prayed for me every morning for the past six years, and was
pleased to finally meet me in person. I thanked him, took his name, and wrote
him a letter, but I never received a reply. I have no idea where he came from
or where he went. He seems like a modern Melchizedek!
My favorite I-3 intercessor is a two-and-a-half-year-old Jess Rainer. His
father, Southern Baptist Pastor Thom Rainer, was doing a Ph.D at Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary and writing his dissertation on Peter Wagner.
Needless to say, we kept in close touch during the process. In the midst of
it, he wrote me a letter and discussed an academic matter or two. Then he
added a paragraph that said, "By the way, my youngest son
(two-and-a-half-year-old Jess) has heard your name so much that he concludes
all of his prayer as follows: '...and thank you God for Peter Wagner, in
Jesus' name, Amen.'" May Jess's number multiply.
I-2 Intercessor
Typical I-2 intercessors will have a regular, but somewhat casual, contact
with the pastor or leader they pray for. Pastors' I-2 intercessors will see
them in the pulpit every Sunday and shake hands when they go out the church
door after the service. They may cross paths from time to time in other
church-related events. But for many, this is about the extent of the personal
contact.
One of the things I am suggesting in this book is that pastors take steps to
cultivate contacts with I-2 intercessors. Most pastors I know experience from
time to a time a certain person in the line of those leaving the church
service gives them an especially warm handshake and says, "Pastor, I pray for
you every day!" We often take that as a formality and do not pay any more
attention to it than we do to the statement, "I enjoyed the sermon." But in
many cases there might be more to it than simply a formality. At least it is a
pathway worth following because it might lead to discovering a personal
intercessor truly anointed by God for supporting us in prayer.
A well-developed team of I-2 intercessors enjoys a two-way contact with the
pastor. It is therfore essential to know who the I-2 intercessors are. Later
on I will discuss the ways and means of identifying, screening, recruiting,
servicing and maintaining these prayer partners. They obviously need to be
kept better informed than I-3 intercessors. They also need to make themselves
available to be called on for special prayer if and when a necessity arises.
The optimum size of a group of I-2 intercessors is not yet know, mainly
because we do not have a large enough number of viable examples to work with.
John Maxwell likes his group to be 100, althrough not more. He has a waiting
list of those who would like to be enrolled as prayer partners and he lets new
ones in only as openings occur. I do think there is an upward limit of I-2
intercessors, but this would not apply to I-3s.
The main principle as I see it is to maintain a reasonably high level of
commitment among I-2 intercessors, and that comes through a certain amount of
intentional personal contact as I will detail later on. Therefore, the number
of I-2 intercessors should not become too large to sustain necessary contact.
It will take time. Some time on our schedules needs to be set aside for this
contac. How much time is reasonable and appropriate is a question that must be
answered in each individual case.
My wife, Doris, and I have 18 I-2 intercessors on our prayer team. Ten of them
are members of our 120 Fellowship Sudany School class: Sandra Gilbreath,
George and Pam Marhad, Joanna McClure, Dave and Jane Rumph, Erick and Joanna
Stone, Lil Walker and Mary Wernle. Two, David and Maureen Anderson, attend
another church in the area. Four are from Texas: Elizabeth Alves, Cindy
Jacobs, Bobbye Byerly and Jane Anne Pratt. One, Mary Lance Sisk, lives in
North Carolina, and one, jean Steffenson, lives in Colorado.
Somewhat predictable, 14 of 18 are women. There again is the approximately 80
percent I mentioned earlier.
The Gift of Intercession
Not all of our intercessors have the gift of intercession, although I think
God has chosen to allow us the privilege of a rather high percentage of those
with the gift for reasons I will mention later. Of our 18 I-2 intercessors, 10
(Elizabeth Alves, Maureen Anderson, Bobbye Byerly, Cindy Jacobs, Joanna
McClure, Jane Anne Pratt, Mary Lance Sisk, Jean Steffenson, Mary Werle and Lil
Walker) have been recognized as having the gift of intercession.
Doris and I consider the eight who do not have the gift of intercession as
essential and precious to ourselves and our ministry as those who do. Some who
do not have the gift are actually more committed to supporting us day in and
day out than some who do. The center and guards are no less important on a
football team than the running backs and the ends. It takes the whole group as
a team to win.
Because of this kind of language is relatively new to our Christian community
in general, the process of absorbing its implications takes time. Pam Marhad
is a key member of our team. But she had to work through her role as a I-2
intercssor as one who does not have a spiritual gift of intercession. She
wrote about her experience in Body Life, our Sunday School class monthly
newsletter. She said, "More often than not, when I decide I will pray for
certain people or situations, a feeling of frustration and 'whats the use?'
overcomes my good intentions and defeats me."
As she prayed about it, Pam felt the Lrod took her to the parable of the
talents in Matthew 25. There it is clear that God is the One who decides who
gets what talents and how many. When she saw that, she confessed, "I've been
guilty of looking around and saying in my ehart, 'Lord, I'm jsut a one-talent
prayer.' Others You have made five-talent pray-ers - let them pray. My prayers
probably don't matter."
Then Pam rightly concludes that all God expects of her is to use the resources
He has given her, nothing more, nothing less. "As I am faithful and obedient
to use what He's given," Pam says, "then He's free to give me more if He
chooses. If I don't value His gifts to me and neglect them because they don't
measure up to what I see others doing, then I very effectively tie the Lord's
handsin my life and find myself on the outside looking in with envy and
resentment."2 It could not be said better.
When we invite I-2 intercessors to be a part of the prayer partners team, we
expect that the relationship will continue for an indefinite period of time.
However, we recognize that God will assign us intercessors for a season, then
give them other assignments, and we are open to that as well. Since we first
formed our team of prayer partners in 1988, several have dropped off and
several have been added. We expect this to continue, although we relate to all
of them at any time as if our relationship will continue for many years.
Doris and I are the only leaders for whom some of our I-2 intercessors have
committed themselves to pray regularly, but others pray on the same level for
several leaders. Bobbye Byerly, for example, who is one of the national and
international leaders of Women's Aglow Fellowship, is also committed as a
personal intercessor for Jane Hansen, Joy Dawson, Cindy Jacobs and Mary Lance
Sisk. Part of Bobbye's highly developed ministry of personal intercession is a
keen sensitivity to the dancing Spirit of God over the people she prays for.
For a season she will find God burdening her more for one than the others,
then it might change.
As I write this (possibly because I am writing this book), a note just
received from Bobbye Byerly says, "Peter, you are coming up No. 1 in my prayer
discharge right now. It's nothing I've done or failed to do. Nothing you've
done. I would guess that God is orchestrating a new realm of prayer support
for you at this time."
Feeling the Wind of the Spirit
A few months ago, Doris and I were making a trip to England to do a pastors'
seminar. Just before we left, one of our prayer partners, Dave Rumph, who is a
research engineer at our local Xerox branch, said he sensed that the Lord was
arranging something special in England with Roger Forster, whom I had never
met personally. My assigned ministry in England had nothing directly to do
with Roger or the Ichthus movement he leads.
Bobbye Byerly also phoned with a prophetic word sh had received, and which I
asked her to write out for me. Inpart it said, "Feel the wind of My Spirit. I
am lifting you higher and higher. You need no effort on your part for My wind
will lift you. Greater days are ahead. Far more than you can yet see are My
plans for you."
Sure enough, the trip to England became a milestone in our ministry. Not so
much because of my scheduled pastor's seminar, but because of an unplanned
meeting with Roger Forster and Gerald Coates, two of the leaders of the March
for Jesus movement. In that meeting, God began to give direction to Doris and
me totake leadership of waht we not call "A Day to Change the World" on June
25, 1994, in connection with the United Prayer Track of the A.D. 2000
Movement, which we also coordinate. The plans developing for this are "far
more than we could see" before we went to England. It could turn out to be the
largest prayer meeting in Christian history.
Here were two I-2 intercessors who were so tuned in to our ministry and God's
plans for us that God used them and their prayers (as well as the prayers of
others) to move us into an incredibly exciting and potentially awesome new
area of service for God's Kingdom.
I do most of my teaching at Fuller in one-week or two-week modules. When I do
them in one week, I teach mornings and afternoons each day. It is a
concentrated schedule, but teaching usually stimulates and increases my energy
level rather than diminishing it. A couple of years ago, one of my one-week
church growth classes was not going well. On the Saturday before I began
feeling washed out. Sunday also. When I began teaching on Monday I had no
energy and I felt as though I was carrying a heavy load on my shoulders.
Tuesday was almost as bad. But on Wednesday the load lifted, I could relax
while I taught, and I could think clearly and creatively for the first time
since Saturday.
Soon afterward three of our I-2 intercessors, Mary Wernle, Cindy Jacobs and
Joanna McClure, apprached me one at a time and said, "What happened last
Wednesday? Why did I feel you needed special prayer that day?" When I told
them, we rejoiced together that God had coupled us in ministry and that the
answers to prayer were so tangible.
I-1 Intercessors
God calls I-1 intercessors to have a special close relationship with the
pastor or other leader. Sometimes this involves a close social relationship,
sometimes it is a largely spiritual relationship. Most, if not all, of the I-1
intercessors I know have the spiritual gift of intercession. Through it they
have developed an intimacy with the Father that allows them to hear the
Father's voice and know His purposes more clearly than most.
The leaders I know who relate to I-1 prayer partners sometimes have three of
them, sometimes two, but most frequently one. Through the years, God has
assigned two of them to us. The first was Cathy Schaller who was assigned to
us for seven years. The second is Alice Smith, our current I-1 intercessor.
They are both extremely powerful women in spiritual things, and both of them
were first bonded to us in prayer through extraordinary circumstances.
The Ladder and the Fall
The memorable day of our bonding with Cathy Schaller was March 25, 1983. I
went out to our garage at 8:30 that evening to get some income tax papers. I
had stored them up on a loft in the garage, which was 10 feet off the cement
floor. As I had been doing for years, I climbed the stepladder to get onto the
loft. My head was 12 feet above the floor when I began from the ladder to the
loft.
Then in an instant something pulled the ladder out from under me (I have
chosen those words carefully!) and I took a free fall, landing on the back of
my head, my neck and my upper back. During the second or so it took to
complete the fall, I was thinking to myself, "This is it!" but I also was able
to shout loudly enough so that Doris came running to the garage. My next-door
neighbor, Randy Becker, heard the commotion and rushed over. He and Doris
called the paramedics and prayed.
The ambulance came and took me to the emergency room at St. Luke's Hospital.
They put me though all these tests and X-rays and a couple of hours later sent
me home. Remarkably, they found no structural damage or internal injuries. I
was badly bruised, stiff and sore for about six weeks, but had no after
effects at all from what was the most serious accident of my life.
That evening Cindy Schaller and her husband, Mike, who is a school
psychologist, had taken a group of young girls to a Ken Medema concert in a
church about 10 miles from my home. Cathy at that time was in her late 20s,
and was working part-time as a speech therapist. They had three children who
were not with them that evening. Some months previously they had joined Lake
Avenue Congregational Church and the 120 Fellowship, but we had not known each
other well as yet.
A Life and Death Battle
When Mike and Cathy returned to their seats after an intermission, Cathy
happened to notice that her watch said 8:30. They began to dim the lights for
effect when an incredibly powerful cloud of evil darkness seemed to envelope
Cathy. The presence of evil was so strong around her that she could smell it.
In her spirit she identified it as a spirit of death and destruction. The Holy
Spirit said to her, "It has come to destroy someone you have a relationship
to, but not one of your children." She felt a shield of protection raised
between the force of evil and her own being, so she knew she was personally
safe.
Without hesitation, Cathy began to pray under her breath for "legions of
angels." Then a severe pain came into her back. It felt as through her back
was breaking. She squirmed with pain and Mike whispered, "What's wrong?" All
she could say was, "My spirit is troubled and my back hurts." Mike laid on
hands and prayed that her back would be healed. Cathy continued to pray in the
Spirit under her breath for 20 minutes, then sensed a total release. The
battle was over, the evil cloud left, she relaxed, enjoyed the rest of the
concert and went home to bed.
Late that night her bedside telephone rang. It was our Sunday School class
president alerting the class prayer chain to pray for me because I had
suffered a terrible accident. Cathy instantly knew in her spirit what she had
prayed for at the concert, but the president could not confirm the exact time
of the fall.
The next morning Cathy's call to Doris and me was one of the most incredible
telephone calls I can remember. We could not prove it in a court of law, but
Doris and I do not need a court of law to be convinced taht Cathy's
faithfulness in prayer that night literally saved my physical life. Satan had
sent an evil spirit (which we later located, but that is another story) to
kill me. for years and years after that, Doris and I took Cathy and Mike out
to dinner every March 25 to celebrate my deliverance from "The Fall" and
express our gratitude to her for ministering to us.
Seven Years of Learning
"The Fall" incident was the dramatic beginning of a prayer partner
relationship of seven years, which ultimately changed the direction of our
lives and ministry. At the beginning none of us knew much about prayer or
personal intercession.
Cathy recalls that some time before the incident someone casually mentioned to
her that she might have the gift of intercession. Subsequently she received
internal impressions about relatives who were in danger on two seperate
occasions, but had no idea how to respond to them. Both of them died! You can
imagine how grateful I am that the third time she did respond. When she called
me the next morning, I said, "Cathy, do yo know that this is a gift of
intercession?"
Through the years, Cathy related to Doris and me as our first I-1 intercessor.
Those were the years the seed thoughts for the content of this entire book
were planted. She was learning what it meant to be an intercessor. We were
learning how to receive intercession. We had our ups and our downs, and we
needed both of them to learn what we know now.
After seven years, Cathy's gift had developed to the extent that God released
her from her assignment to the Wagners and assigned her to be the full-time
prayer leader for DAWN Ministries, an international mission agency promoting
saturation church planting. She is now an ordained minister and an intercessor
for James Montgomery, DAWN's president, and his wife, Lyn.
Few people have had the profound effect on our lives, careers and ministries
as has Cathy Schaller. Her name will come upon several other occasions as the
book moves on.
Intercessors Need Help Too
One of the things we learned about I-1 intercessors is that they, particularly
during critical times, need intercessory help themselves. The spiritual
warfare they find themselves engaged in on behalf of the pastor or leader can
become overwhelming. Moses, for example, would not have been able to intercede
effectively for Joshua without the timely help of Aaron and Hur as he fought
the battle of Rephidim. I recall one time when Cathy desperately needed her
Aarons and Hurs.
During the 1980s, I had invited John Wimber to help me teach a new course on
Signs, Wonders and Church Growth at Fuller Seminary. It eventually stirred up
a very intense controversy and I was in the center of it for years. This was
by far the most painful experience I have personally had since leaving the
mission field in Bolivia. And it lasted for three and a half years!
Without going into details here, by the end of three and a half years I had
come to the end of my patience. I had been on the defensive for all that time
and I was prepared to switch to the offensive. A crucial meeting had been
scheduled with the seminary Faculty Senate. My temper was on edge and my guns
were loaded for hte showdown. I went to the meeting. A grimfaced dean entered
and put my book "How to Have a Healing Ministry" on the table in front of him.
A distinguished theological professor did the same. I knew very well htat both
of them had higher IQs that I did. I thought I was in for it!
But the meeting was called to order and there was no showdown. The proposal I
presented was passed unanimously. No one was nasty. A couple of rather routine
questions were addressed to me, nothing else. I had my guns loaded, but did
not have to pull the trigger. Why? The spiritual warfare behind the whole
scenario had been done before the meeting began. I believe that Cathy as my
I-1 intercessor was the principal agent for winning that spiritual battle.
But it was not easy for her by any means. Looking back, I am convinced that
this Faculty Senate meeting was a significant milestone in my personal
ministry career, it not also for Fuller Seminary. Because of that, the warfare
was more intense than usual.
During the days leading up to that meeting, Cathy experienced several
devastating events.
Cathy's car was totalled and she received a serious whiplash. The other driver
was clearly at fault, but they were suing Cathy!
The family of a student in the Christian junior high school where Cathy was
then teaching had pressed a written list of 30 trumped-up charges against her
competence and character. She was emotionally devastated. The charges were
being taken to her school board, which coincidently was meeting to consider
them on the same day our Faculty Senate was meeting.
Cathy's kitchen caught on fire, and the fire burned a hole through her kitchen
floor.
Aarons and Hurs
More than ever before, Cathy needed her Aarons and Hurs. And God sent them.
The first one we knew about was Dave Rumph, an I-2 intercessor who does not
have a gift of intercession, but does have a recognized gift of encouragement.
God assigned Dave to pray for Cathy at that time, but especailly to call her
on the telephone several times that preceding week to encourage her.
After the fact, we learned about eight others who prayed for Cathy. Christy
Graham, whom I have previously mentioned as an example fo a crisis
intercessor, had been assigned by God to rpay intensely for Cathy six weeks
before the Faculty Senate meeting, and she had been praying faithfully every
day.
Lil Walker, who is now one of our I-2 but at that time was not, was assigned
to pray for Cathy. Linda Stanberry, a furloughed missionary taking my courses
at Fuller, received a week-long burden to pray for Cathy. Nanette Brown, a
member of our Sudnay School class, was awakened by God at 3:30 a.m. The
morning of Cathy's school board meeting and she prayed for Cahty for
three-quarters of an hour before going back to sleep. The other four were
Yvonne Lindsey, Joanna McClure and Elizabeth Philip from our Sunday School
class, and one of the other teachers in Cathy's school.
Cathy was doing wat Euodia and Syntyche did for the apostle Paul: spiritual
warfare on my behalf. I did not have to go through the potentially explosive
Faculty Senate debate I had anticipated. Cathy took the brunt of the spiritual
attack for me. It never occurred to her to complain. She was using her
spiritual gift and flowing with the Holy Spirit, and her prayers for me were
being answered. But she needed help. None of the nine people who helped her
was praying for me at the time. Satan was trying to get Cathy's arms down (to
use the analogy of Moses praying for Joshua), but God provided her the nine
Aarons and Hurs.
The results of their prayers? The lawsuit from the accident was dropped; the
school board dismissed the charges totally; the fire insurance paid for
rebuilding Cathy's kitchen floor much better than it had been before the fire.
She told us that the week after the Faculty Senate meeting was one of the most
relaxed, pleasant and less stressful weeks she could remember both in her
school and with her family. The battle had been fought and won!
A helpful analysis of what happens spiritually in situations like this comes
from Sylvia R. Evans of Elim Bible Fellowship in Lima, New York. She says that
one of God's most wonderful blessings is His faithfulness "to waken
intercessors for the 'night watch' or an 'early morning watch' and to place
them on duty to hold off the enemy." She sees intercessors as watchmen
constantly on the alert to be assigned their position in battle.
Speaking of the full armor of God in Ephesians 6, Evans interprets the passage
as suggesting that the intercessor "is to be able to aggessively withstand the
enemy, taking the attack for others who may be the real target. The watchman
must be able to quench all the fiery darts, not only against himself or
herself but also against the ones for whom they are standing watch."3
Doris and I are thankful to God for raising up intercessors willing and able
to take the fiery darts of the enemy for us. They are the most precious group
of people related to our lives and our ministry. And we rejoice as we see God
spreading this kind of spiritual power more and more widely throughout the
Body of Christ these days.