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September 2008 Issue
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40/40 Prayer
Vigil
A Cooperative Effort Calling Southern Baptists
to Prayer
by Dwayne Hastings
While many Americans claim to pray
on a daily basis (nearly as many don't), the bigger question is
who are they praying to and are they getting a response?
With the results of a recent study by the Pew Forum on Religion
& Public Life now available, it is estimated that 58 percent
of Americans pray on a daily basis but only 19 percent say they
receive an answer "at least once a week."
Among evangelical church members polled in the Forum's Religious
Landscape Survey, 78 percent say they pray daily, but only 29
percent hear from God. Nearly 40 percent (38 percent) of evangelicals
told the researchers they received answers to their prayers only
"several times a year" or "seldom or never."
While these statistics may indicate we are a praying people,
Richard Land believes that for some of us there is a disconnect
between our lips and God's ears.
We know that God is faithful to respond when believers come
to Him with praise and petitions in line with His will, said Land,
president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics & Religious
Liberty Commission, citing Matthew 7:7 and 1 John 5:14-15. "For
too many people of faith, our prayer lives are reflective of the
startling separation from God that is evidenced in the Pew Forum
study," he said.
"Our nation needs a great movement of the Holy Spirit,"
he said, "and it is not going to happen without sustained
prayer from God's children." Noting the teaching of 1 John
1:9, Land said there is a desperate need for Christians to take
any unconfessed sin to God.
Land noted there is no merely human solution to the truly momentous
issues facing individuals and families across the nation. He said
the only hope is a spiritual revival among those who know Christ,
which then ripens into a spiritual awakening that will usher in
a "reformation that will change America for Jesus Christ."
We have "God-sized problems that are beyond our checking
account, our programs, and our resources," he added, saying
that when believers come back to God on their knees, another Great
Awakening may sweep across the land.
He noted real, lasting answers to society's troubles will not
be found in Supreme Court rulings, Congressional action, or White
House initiatives. "The future of America rests in the hearts
and prayer closets of followers of Christ all across the nation,"
he continued.
Land's burden for the spiritual health of individual Americans
and the spiritual state of the union led the ERLC and the SBC's
North American Mission Board to launch a wide-ranging, cooperative
call to prayer among Southern Baptists the 40/40
Prayer Vigil for Spiritual Revival and National Renewal.
The 40/40 Prayer Vigil will begin in late September
and conclude on the Sunday morning, November 2, before Election
Day.
"The vigil consists of forty days of prayer from September
24 to November 2, 2008," Land said, noting it begins with
thirty-seven days of daily prayer and concludes with forty hours
of around-the-clock intercession during the final three days for
God to move in believers, in churches, and in the nation.
Land said this cooperative effort by the ERLC and NAMB is aimed
at helping God's people embrace God's call in 2 Chronicles 7:14:
[If] my people who are called by my name humble themselves,
pray and seek my face, and turn from their evil ways, then I will
hear from heaven, forgive their sin, and heal their land.
Geoff Hammond, president of the North American Mission Board,
is delighted that the two SBC entities are partners in such a
vital and timely effort, and he is hopeful that Southern Baptists
across the nation will cooperate together in this critical endeavor.
"This is a strategic opportunity for Southern Baptists to
join hands in praying for our nation, asking the Lord to grant
sweeping repentance, renewal, and spiritual awakening," Hammond
said.
"Prayer is the only hope for a nation that is looking
more and more like Corinth," Land observed, noting that city
was the sexual and moral cesspool of the Roman Empire.
Despite the tremendous growth in the number of "born-again"
evangelicals in the U.S., Land said, "Instead of influencing
the culture, it appears on most fronts the culture is influencing
us. Too often, instead of being 'salt' and 'light,' we are being
salted and lit by the secular culture around us."
"Our churches are in need of a truly spiritual revival,
and our nation is in need of a great movement of God's Spirit,"
Land said, emphasizing that nothing will happen without God's
blessings.
Land said that before Bible-believing Christians can impact
others' lives, they must first be changed by God's touch. "We
must pray for and experience spiritual regeneration, or spiritual
renewal on the part of believers, and then recognize and accept
our responsibilities as Christians to be 'salt' and 'light' in
our families, our churches, our communities, and our nation. If
we're going to demonstrate faith in practice, we've got to get
our faith right first," he explained.
"As Christians, we need God to give us wisdom as we select
the next president of the United States," Land said, stressing
that whichever candidate Americans tap on Election Day to be their
next chief executive, the country, as well as the next administration,
needs divine guidance and direction.
"People must realize that government, at every level,
is a lagging social indicator," he said. "True and lasting
change in our nation will come from spiritual renewal in the hearts
of America's citizens, not from government programs.
"Government is a caboose, not a locomotive. If and when
the country is spiritually awakened, it will be the locomotive
of spiritual awakening that will pull the government 'caboose'
along behind it," he continued. "Real, lasting, meaningful
change begins in individual hearts and in individual families,
churches, and communities, not Washington, D.C," Land added.
"The battle for our nation's soul is not just about voting
booths. This is first and foremost a spiritual contest. A spiritual
battle is being waged across our nation, and it must be met first
of all with spiritual weapons. God's people must pray for a great
outpouring of God's Spirit on them, their families, their churches,
and the nation. Then, when God has responded with His outpouring,
His people will be empowered and motivated to do the hard work
of restoring our nation's moral foundations," reads the introduction
to the prayer guide.
Land said the prayer vigil promises to have far-reaching impact
for families, churches, and the nation, if Southern Baptists and
other people of faith embrace the effort genuinely and enthusiastically.
It is Land's prayer that the routines established during the vigil
by those involved in the effort will become a lifelong habit of
prayer and meditation upon the things of Christ.
The guide has a page dedicated to helping individuals pray
every day and every hour of the vigil. Each page references Scripture
that is relevant to that day's prayer theme, which ranges from
prayer for revival to prayer for renewal and wisdom, as well as
a suggested prayer focus.
God draws close to those who call out to Him, Land said, paraphrasing
Psalm 145:18. He hears and is faithful to answer our earnest prayers,
he added.
"It is God's way or no way," Land said. "It's
not God and country; it's God alone. When our perspective is right,
God will use us His people for His purposes in our
land," he said.
Dwayne Hastings is a member of Clearview
Baptist Church in Franklin, Tennessee, and is vice president of
editorial and print communications for the Southern Baptist Convention
Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission.
Praying for Revival and Renewal
The Ethics & Religious Liberty
Commission and the North American Mission Board are partnering
in a Convention-wide prayer initiative calling Southern Baptists
to engage in a time of prayer for personal spiritual revival and
national renewal this fall.
The initiative will feature forty days of prayer beginning
September 24, concluding with a dedicated forty hours of prayer
in churches and homes across the U.S., which will begin at 4 p.m.
October 31 and end November 2 at 8 a.m.
The intent of the 40/40 Prayer Vigil is to encourage
Southern Baptists to focus on their own walk with God, to reflect
on His values as revealed in Scripture, and to ask God how His
values should direct their lives.
The emphasis of the 40/40 Prayer Vigil is on
personal spiritual revival, not politics, although our nation
will profit greatly when believers come to God on their knees.
Visit iLiveValues.com/prayer for more information, as well
as a day-by-day prayer guide.
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