WHEN THE CHURCH PRAYS
Acts 4:23-33
If you study the history of revival, you will discover this undeniable fact: in the recorded history of the church there has never been a mighty outpouring of the Spirit in a Revival which did not begin in the persistent, prevailing prayer of a desperate people. Revival has never come because men “planned” it and put it on the calendar.
This much is sure in all churches, forgetting denominational labels; the smallest meeting numerically is the prayer meeting. If we are weak in prayer, we are weak everywhere.
Wherever the church is aroused and the world’s wickedness arrested, somebody has been praying.
I. WHEN THE CHURCH PRAYS THE PRESENCE OF GOD IS PERCEIVED (31).
“The place was shaken where they were assembled together.”
This expression symbolizes God’s presence and activity. You’ll find a similar phrase in Acts 16:26. Imprisoned, Paul and Silas conduct a midnight prayer and praise service and “suddenly there was a great earthquake, so that the foundations of the prison were shaken." This is a manifestation of the presence of God. It is God manifesting Himself, letting the people know He is present and has the situation under control.
But, you say, isn’t God always present when two or three are gathered together in Christ’s name? Yes, but God being present doesn’t necessarily mean we perceive His presence. Take for instance Genesis 28:16 where is says “And Jacob awaked out of his sleep, and he said, Surely the LORD is in this place; and I knew it not.”
When the church goes to its knees in real prayer, the presence of God is perceived. Suddenly we know He is with us, working, moving, answering.
“when .....they lifted up their voice to God with one accord” (24). Not only were they all there and all praying but they were all praying for the same purpose. There wasn’t a man over here praying for his pet project and another huddled in this corner praying for his pet project. They were gathered in unity with one heart and one soul.
This reminds me of the verse in the Old Testament that tells us that on a certain day all the men of Israel came together with one heart to make David king. That’s the kind of praying that shakes the place. When God’s people come together with one heart to make Jesus king! When all our different little concerns are thrust aside and our hearts flow into one main stream . . . that’s when the presence of God is manifested and people are conscious that God has taken the action.
II. WHEN THE CHURCH PRAYS THE POWER OF GOD IS RECEIVED.
“And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost.” Upon the conclusion of their prayer the Spirit of God filled every believer gathered in that room. “They were ALL filled,” the record states. Not just the apostles, but every member of the church. There had been a filling on the Day of Pentecost but the church cannot operate on past experiences. The church’s experience of God must always be fresh.
There is something remarkable about this incident. As a result of their praying they were filled with the Spirit, but did you look at the prayer closely? The Holy Spirit isn’t even mentioned in the petition. They didn’t pray to be filled but they were filled. With the filling of the Spirit came great power (33).
I believe if we examine the content of their prayer we’ll discover what kind of praying results in the fullness of the Spirit.
A. We must recognize God as Sovereign.
In verse 24 we have these words, “And when they heard that, they lifted up their voice to God with one accord, and said, Lord, thou art God, which hast made heaven and earth, and the sea, and all that in them is.”
This is where they started in their prayer—not with the threats of the enemy but with the absolute sovereignty of their God. And that’s where victory always begins——with the recognition that God is our Sovereign Lord.
His Sovereignty is seen in His creation of all things. They prayed, “Thou art God, which has made heaven, and earth, and the sea, and all that in them is.”
They acknowledged God as creator of heaven, earth, the sea, and all that in them is. Why? Because they were having problems with some of the “all that in them is.” However, they recognized that the Sanhedrin were creatures, and that their God was the Creator. They looked beyond the creation to the Creator, beyond the visible to the invisible. You might say they were telling God on them. Part of the creation was troubling them, and they were appealing to the Creator about it.
His sovereignty is also seen in His Control of all things. Look again at their prayer (26,27). What a formidable host that gathered against Christ! And what did these enemies of Christ come together to do? Look at verse 28. It’s tremendous. “For to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel DETERMINED BEFORE TO BE DONE.”
These persecuted believers looked back to the darkest day of their lives——the day their hopes and dreams disintegrated with the death of Christ——and saw God in charge of it all. And if it was true with the crucifixion of the Lord how much more with the persecution of His disciples. What a display of His absolute sovereignty!
B. We must recognize ourselves as His servants.
In verse 29 they refer to themselves as servants, bond-slaves. This was a prayer of submission. They didn’t complain about the circumstances or call down fire upon the Sanhedrin. They didn’t ask God to move them to a more favorable situation! They simply asked God for more of what got them in trouble in the first place—— boldness.
This is submission to the God-allowed circumstances. And then there was submission to the God-appointed commission. The point of the whole prayer is that they would have the boldness to continue speaking the word, and that Jesus would be glorified. And that was what God called them to do in the first place.
Now let’s put it all together. In their prayer, which brought a fresh supply of the power of God they acknowledged God to be their sovereign Lord and submitted to Him and His redemptive purpose. And any Christian who recognizes and submits to His Lordship will be filled with the Spirit.
When the Holy Spirit finds a Christian who wants what He wants they GET TOGETHER. The Spirit is interested in only one thing——glorifying Jesus as Lord and Savior. And He is ready to empower any Christian whose sole desire is to see Jesus glorified in his body.
III. WHEN THE CHURCH PRAYS THE PURPOSE OF GOD IS ACHIEVED
There is a chain reaction here. When a church is filled with the Spirit, it will fulfill the purpose of God with boldness. You cannot divorce the fullness of the Spirit and purpose of God. The power of God is given to accomplish the purpose of God. And unless we are willing to be instruments of His purpose it is useless to pray for His power
The purpose was three-fold.
A. They wanted to EXPRESS His WORD (29)
Witnesses aren’t made by training programs. Such programs are good and may teach a man HOW to witness, but they will not make him a witness. Only the compelling power of the Holy Spirit can do that.
B. They wanted to EXPAND His WORK (30)
The church must go to its knees to extend the work of God. Spiritual revival and national survival demand it.
They prayed that the Lord would extend His hand. Look now to Acts 5:12. He answered their prayer by using their hands.
After World War II a great cathedral was bombed. In the courtyard of a great cathedral was a statue of Jesus Christ with outstretched hands. Some of the soldiers though they would rebuild that statue, and so they searched the courtyard for pieces of that statue. After they had reformed it, the found that they did not have the hands. The hands had been blown apart, pulverized. So one of the American soldiers put a plaque on the statue which read: “He has no hands but our hands.” How true that is!
C. They wanted to EXALT HIS WORTH
They wanted all the signs and wonders to be done in the name of Jesus. They wanted to lift up Jesus.
Conclusion:
Things happen when the church prays. Far too many churches are depending on so many other resources and neglecting the one resource that God has given to us - the marvelous resource of prayer.
Have you ever notice that the first recorded meeting in the book of Acts was a prayer meeting (1:14)? The second recorded meeting in the book of Acts was a business meeting where the group selected a successor to Judas, and even the business meeting was bathed in an atmosphere of prayer (1:24).
Prayer for the church is the SOURCE FOR ITS WISDOM, the SUCCESS FOR ITS WITNESS, the SECRET OF ITS WARFARE, the SUPPLIER OF ITS WORKERS, and the STRENGTH OF ITS WALK.