*Wrestling On Our Knees*

*"The great people of the earth today are the people who pray. I do not
mean those who talk about prayer; nor those who say they believe in
prayer... I mean those who take time and pray." -- S.D. Gordon*

It all began fifteen years ago when our son, Aaron, contracted the flu.
Standing up to his strong will, we urged him to stay in bed throughout the
weekend. On Sunday morning I went to church by myself while my wife stayed
home with Aaron and our daughter, Shannon. It was an uneventful morning --
until I arrived home from church.

As I walked into our front door, my wife rushed to meet me with these
words: "You wouldn't believe what happened this morning. Aaron's fever shot
up suddenly and he began to have a seizure." While I was enjoying worship
at church, our house was filled with firemen and paramedics. It was a
terrifying moment for Susan and our daughter as they witnessed this
six-year old boy shake with convulsions. What a relief it was to us when
the seizures stopped and the medical personnel felt it was safe to leave
him.

The one incident that stands out for me that morning is when Aaron first
began to have the seizure. Susan immediately turned to Shannon, who was
three at the time, and said, "Start praying for your brother." This
miniature prayer warrior promptly leaped up, ran to our bedroom, got on her
knees and began praying for her big brother. Realizing Aaron was in danger,
Shannon fervently prayed for God to heal him. She took prayer very
seriously.

I want you to keep before you that vivid image as we think about wrestling
from our knees. I want you picture our young daughter on her knees,
pleading with God to take care of Aaron. Then imagine yourself kneeling by
your bed, entering the throne room of the living God, and pleading on
behalf of a person you love whose soul is endangered.

"On His Knees Before God" - Tucked away in the book of Colossians is the
name of a man whom the apostle Paul held in high esteem. This man wasn't
known necessarily for his great teaching. Paul didn't commend him for how
he preached or for the many souls he won to Jesus Christ. His notoriety
came not from how he stood before crowds and talked about the resurrected
Lord, but how he knelt before the King of Kings and prayed for others.

His name was Epaphras. Paul mentions him three times. The apostle called
him "a faithful servant of Christ" (Colossians 1:7) and "a fellow prisoner
with Paul" (Philemon 1:23). The description of this godly man that stands
out to me in bold print is that he was known simply as a man who was
"always wrestling in prayer" for others (Colossians 4:12).

What about you? How would others describe you? How would they describe your
prayer life? Are you wrestling in prayer for those you love? Why not start
right now? Get a notepad and begin to keep track of those who need your
prayers and begin praying for them every day.









[image: InJesus] <http://www.injesus.com>

-- 
-- 
USE INCREDIMAIL ONLY IN THIS GROUP
NO NUDITY ALLOWED
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"fiftiesoldiesmusicgroup" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to fiftiesoldiesmusicgroup+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to