⚡️As a church, we are believing for revival! And there is no revival without prayer. Prayer is the means by which we will advance, like the circuit of a machine, we will push forward without ceasing, with power, in Christ, as one!⚡️
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"I fear John Knox’s prayers more than an army of ten thousand men." - Mary, Queen of Scot
In 19th-century England, George Müller cared for over 10,000 orphans without ever soliciting donations. Instead, he relied solely on prayer for provision. Countless times, food and funds arrived just as needed—like the morning the children sat waiting with empty plates, and a baker knocked, saying God told him to bring bread.
In 1949, on the remote Isle of Lewis in the Hebrides, two elderly sisters—Peggy and Christine Smith—committed themselves to fervent prayer, burdened by the spiritual deadness in their village. As they cried out daily for revival, God stirred seven young men to join in prayer in a nearby barn. One night, the atmosphere shifted—the presence of God fell, people wept in repentance across the island, and entire communities were transformed without any formal evangelism. Revival swept through homes, schools, and streets, all sparked by the prayers of two unseen but unwavering women.
He would rise at 4 a.m. daily, spending 3 to 4 hours in intense, private prayer—not for fame or applause, but for revival and the strengthening of the church. He believed that “God does not bestow His gifts on the casual or hasty comers,” and his life reflected that conviction. His contemporaries said he prayed with such fervor that it felt like heaven came near. Though he died in relative obscurity, his written words and prayed prayers have ignited spiritual awakenings around the world for over a century.