A brief story to inspire you:
I recall hearing a respected Scottish preacher reminisce about a prayer meeting started in Scotland in the middle of the twentieth century. A couple of ruling elders in the Church of Scotland covenanted to meet together every week to pray for revival in their church. The sad state of the Church of Scotland today might cause one to question what effect their prayers had. But in the latter part of the twentieth century the Church of Scotland was served by some great evangelical pastors. As the story is told, the weekly prayer meeting never grew beyond those two elders, and after a couple of years of weekly meetings, their burden lifted and the prayer meeting disbanded – without any observable signs in answer to their prayers. However, some years later, it was calculated that many of those great evangelical pastors in the church were called and trained for the ministry during the period those elders were praying.
– John Currie, The Pastors as Leader, p.108 (the story was confirmed from various sources)
You know you must pray. It’s the heart cry of a child of God. But sometimes you’re not sure what to pray for. Every Christian experiences this uncertainty at times.
The best way to begin – and to continue and grow – is to take seriously Christ’s own teaching on prayer. And I want to remind you, dear church, that on two separate occasions Jesus told his disciples to ‘pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send our labourers into his harvest’ (see Matt 9.38 and Luke 10.2).
In Matthew’s gospel, Jesus said this in response to the need. He felt deep compassion for the crowds ‘because they were harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd’, and so he told the disciples to pray for labourers.
In Luke’s gospel, Jesus said this as he looked at the beginnings of a solution. He was about to send out seventy-two(!) preachers to go to different places – a large number of workers, but still far, far too few. So, he tells them ‘pray earnestly…’
There are a number of reasons why this requires earnest prayer. The people needed must truly feel called by God; they must be willing to endure the downsides and difficulties of the call; they must possess certain gifts; they need to have the right kind of character; they need to actually obey and say ‘yes’ to Jesus.
I believe, therefore, that two things are true: First, the need is still there. There’s a harvest of salvation, and too few labourers – in our church, in our city, in our nation, in this world. Second, I believe that God responds to this divinely instructed prayer request.
Therefore, I want to charge you as a church: Pray earnestly, and pray every day, that God would raise up many workers. May we live both to witness and ourselves become a part of the answer to this prayer.