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Go! And Pray In The Spirit Series
Contributed by Dean Courtier on Dec 3, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: The 21st century believer is bombarded on every side — temptations, anxieties, cultural pressures, distractions, spiritual deception, and the subtle erosion of biblical conviction. Into this battlefield Paul gives us a clear command to pray in the Spirit.
Go! And Pray in the Spirit
Introduction – Gripped by a Call to Battle
Church, if there were ever a time when the people of God must awaken to the reality of spiritual warfare, it is now. The 21st century believer is bombarded on every side — temptations, anxieties, cultural pressures, distractions, spiritual deception, and the subtle erosion of biblical conviction. And into this battlefield the apostle Paul gives us a clear command — not a suggestion, not an optional practice — but a divine call to action:
Ephesians 6:18 (NLT): “Pray in the Spirit at all times and on every occasion. Stay alert and be persistent in your prayers for all believers everywhere.”
This is not a casual verse. It is the breath of a believer’s spiritual survival. It is the fuel of spiritual warfare. It is the bloodstream of intimacy with God.
Today, the Lord calls us: Go! And Pray in the Spirit.
1. THE CALL: “PRAY IN THE SPIRIT AT ALL TIMES”
Paul has just described the Armour of God (Ephesians 6:10–17). But armour alone is not enough. A soldier might wear armour, but without communication with the Commander, he is ineffective. Prayer is the communication line, the spiritual radio frequency, linking us to the King of Kings.
The phrase “pray in the Spirit” uses the Greek verb proseuchomai, meaning to interact with God, exchanging human wishes for His will.
And the phrase ?? p?e?µat? (en pneumati) means in the realm, atmosphere, or enabling power of the Holy Spirit.
So Paul is not calling us merely to pray habitually, but to pray Spirit-empowered, Spirit-directed, Spirit-saturated, and Spirit-sensitive prayers.
Jude 20 (NLT): “But you, dear friends, must build each other up in your most holy faith, pray in the power of the Holy Spirit.”
Writing to believers threatened by false teaching, Jude says spiritual strength is not found in debate or intellect but in Holy Spirit empowerment.
When you pray in the Spirit, you pray beyond your weakness, beyond your vocabulary, beyond your limited understanding. You pray with divine assistance.
John Piper says, “Prayer is primarily a wartime walkie-talkie for the mission of the church.”
And church, he’s right. Prayer is not a domestic intercom to call God to bring us a cushion; it is a battle cry for divine intervention.
1 – The Soldier Without Communication
Imagine a soldier on the battlefield with polished armour, sharpened weapons, and impressive training — but his radio is turned off. He is isolated, directionless, vulnerable. He may look strong, but he is moments away from disaster.
That is the Christian who does not pray in the Spirit.
The enemy is not afraid of an armoured Christian — he is afraid of a praying Christian.
2. THE FREQUENCY: “AT ALL TIMES AND ON EVERY OCCASION”
Paul is not speaking of continuous verbal prayer but of continuous connection — a posture of dependence.
The Greek phrase ?? pa?t? ?a??? (en panti kairo) means in every season, every opportunity, every crisis, every joy, every moment when God opens a window.
1 Thessalonians 5:17–18 (NLT): “Never stop praying. Be thankful in all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you who belong to Christ Jesus.”
Paul instructs the early church to maintain continual spiritual awareness.
Application:
In the office — pray.
In the commute — pray.
In temptation — pray.
In decision-making — pray.
When anxious — pray.
When joyful — pray.
When spiritually dry — pray.
Prayer becomes the believer’s instinct, not the emergency brake.
Charles Stanley said, “Fight all your battles on your knees and you win every time.”
Church, prayerless Christians are powerless Christians. Spirit-filled prayer is victory before the battle even begins.
3. THE ALERTNESS: “STAY ALERT AND BE PERSISTENT”
The Greek word for stay alert is agrupneo, meaning to stay awake, to be spiritually vigilant, to be watchful like a guard on duty.
We cannot afford spiritual drowsiness.
Matthew 26:41 (NLT): “Keep watch and pray, so that you will not give in to temptation. For the spirit is willing, but the body is weak!”
In Gethsemane, Jesus reveals that prayer is the weapon against temptation.
Application:
Prayer sharpens discernment.
Prayer awakens the soul.
Prayer exposes Satan’s schemes.
R.T. Kendall wrote, “The greatest opposition to spiritual growth is complacency.”
Complacency kills prayer. But prayer kills complacency.
2 – The Lighthouse Keeper
A lighthouse keeper once neglected filling the lamps with oil. One night a storm came, and ships crashed against the rocks because the light had gone out.
Church — prayer is the oil.
Without it, your spiritual light dims, your witness weakens, and people around you crash in darkness.
4. THE MISSION: “PRAY FOR ALL BELIEVERS EVERYWHERE”
Christian prayer is never selfish. Spirit-led prayer is outward-looking, kingdom-minded, intercessory.
Colossians 4:2–3 (NLT): “Devote yourselves to prayer with an alert mind and a thankful heart. Pray for us, too, that God will give us many opportunities to speak about his mysterious plan concerning Christ.”
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