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Old 09-16-2009, 10:58 AM
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Sam Sam is offline
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We Must Bow Down and Cry Out

I received this yesterday and thought it would be good to pass on.
I think we need to get serious in our prayers for our civil and religious leaders and for our nation and for our churches.

When I read this I thought of something Cindy Jacobs said several years ago. I have her quote in my Bible as a reference to Joel 2:12-19. While teaching in a conference in Phoenix, Arizona on weeping and travailing, the Lord spoke to her and said, “There is a curse on the men of America. They have always been told that men don’t cry, therefore they don’t weep and intercede before me. They’ve been robbed.”

Something else I thought of as I read this was the story in 1 Kings chapter 18 where the prophet Elijah challenged the prophets of Baal to prove who really is the true God. After the false prophets had cried out to their deaf, dumb and dead god with no results, Elijah took action. He rebuilt an old altar that had fallen into disrepair becasuse of long term neglect. He used 12 stones to recognize the unity of God’s people. He then laid the wood and sacrifice in order on the altar (because God is a God of order), and then he did something strange. He had them dump 4 pots of water on the sacrice three different times so that it was thoroughly soaked. Baal was the sun god and the god of fire and he had failed to produce fire from heaven. Now, if fire fell and consumed that sodden sacrife it would have to be God. And, sure enough, when Elijah called upon the name of the Lord, the fire fell from heaven and consumed the sacrifice, the wood, the stones, the water, and even the dust around it. I have a note in the margin of my Bible here that says, “Maybe the fire doesn’t fall because our altar is not wet enough (from tears).”

(Another picture in 1 Kings 18 seen in the repaired altar and sacrifice in proper order; then the thorough soaking in water; and then the fire falling from Heaven in response to calling on the name of the Lord represents the repentance; water baptism; and the Holy Ghost Baptism spoken of in Acts 2:38.)

Jim Ellis

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WE MUST BOW DOWN AND CRY OUT
by J. Lee Grady
Tuesday, 15 September 2009, 2009

On the anniversary of 9/11, I learned that we need extraordinary prayer in this time of national crisis.

Last week I attended a prayer gathering across the street from the World Trade Center site in New York City. Several dozen Christian leaders met in a cramped room overlooking the place where terrorists destroyed the tallest monument to America's financial power and killed more than 2,700 people in the process.

It was the eighth anniversary of 9/11. Flags in the city flew at half-mast while a drizzling rain made the gray mood even more somber. New York City firemen and police officers got respectful applause as they marched in a small parade along Church Street. A few blocks south, in Battery Park, thousands of people filed past a mobile monument that bears the names of all 9/11 victims—including those killed in Washington, D.C. and Shanksville, Pa.

The 50 or 60 Christian leaders who met that day at the Millennium Hotel in lower Manhattan did not come to create a spectacle. No one on the street knew we were there. And no one in the room was making small talk or working deals. Billy Wilson, the leader of the Awakening America prayer initiative, told us at the beginning of our two and a half-hour gathering that we were there to simply cry out to God for a spiritual awakening in the United States.

We were originally supposed to have our meeting on the 55th floor, in a room with sweeping views of the city. But Billy explained to us the night before that a group of lawyers who were working on an important case needed their meeting suite for an extra day. So we were moved to the fourth floor.

I later realized how fitting that was for a gathering of this kind. We did not need to be high. God wanted us low.

There was nothing fancy about the event. Robert Stearns, leader of the Eagles' Wings Ministries, led us in worship with a single keyboard. Denominational executives from the Church of God (Cleveland, Tenn.), the Assemblies of God and the Foursquare Church wore casual shirts instead of their trademark suits. Mart Green, the Christian millionaire who owns the Mardel company, read from the book of Proverbs and then led us in a simple prayer for a restoration of integrity in the American workplace. A group of students from Lee University sang their songs a capella.

And Vonette Bright, the widow of Campus Crusade founder Bill Bright, reminded us of how God answered prayers in the 1970s when a group of leaders cried to God for revival. She said the Jesus movement of that era was triggered by prayers for the youth of the nation.

At one point in the middle of the program Wilson interrupted the schedule. He asked if we could have a time of unscripted prayer, and he encouraged us to "cry out" to God in a humble entreaty for His mercy.

I really cannot explain what happened next. I felt compelled to fall on my knees, so I slid to the floor and buried my head in my hands. Suddenly I felt overcome with emotion. I had not felt stirred that day by any of the 9/11 events, and even being near the World Trade Center site had not evoked sorrow in my heart. But all of a sudden I was sobbing.

These were not like the tears that occasionally well up in my eyes when I attend a wedding or when I hear a particularly moving song. This was different. These tears were guttural. They were being pulled out of the deepest part of my soul. It seemed as if this weeping did not even originate with me. It felt like a holy cry that God had initiated.

What I was praying went something like this: "Lord, please forgive us. God have mercy on the United States. Forgive Your church, Lord, for our backslidden condition. Cleanse us from our moral failure. Reach down and awaken us. Set our hearts on fire again, for You and for the mission You called us to. We are crying out to you for another chance to reach our generation before it is too late."

I can't tell you exactly how long that time of weeping lasted, but I could hear people sobbing in other parts of the room. I knew I did not make this happen. God was in it. And His Spirit was orchestrating the prayers that He needed to hear.

We can't force moments like this. But I believe that at this critical time in our nation's history we must release the tears and the travail of the Lord if we expect to see His miraculous answer.

The prophet Joel told wayward Israel: "Let the priests, the Lord's ministers, weep between the porch and the altar, and let them say, ‘Spare Your people, O Lord, and do not make Your inheritance a reproach, a byword among the nations.'" (Joel 2:17a, NASB). And the Lord spoke through Jeremiah and said: "Consider and call for the mourning women, that they may come; And send for the wailing women, that they may come! Let them make haste and take up a wailing for us, that our eyes may shed tears and our eyelids flow with water.'" (Jer. 9:17-18).

Tears have always preceded the outpouring of the Spirit. The fallow ground must be broken before the harvest can come. The alabaster box must be broken before the fragrance of Christ can be released. We must know true brokenness! We must allow the Holy Spirit to pray through us, even if that means He will intercede "with groanings too deep for words" (see Rom. 8:26).

This is the time to cry out. I encourage prayer groups around the nation to dispense with your normal routine and shift into extraordinary prayer. We must weep for our national sins and for the church's faithlessness. Please cry out until He sends a tsunami of His power to save us.

J. Lee Grady is editor of Charisma.
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Old 09-16-2009, 01:27 PM
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Cindy Cindy is offline
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Re: We Must Bow Down and Cry Out

I agree.
__________________
If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.
2 Chronicles 7:14 KJV

He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? Micah 6:8 KJV

Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he is. 1 John 3:2 KJV
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Old 09-16-2009, 02:51 PM
Rhoni Rhoni is offline
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Re: We Must Bow Down and Cry Out

This is good!
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Old 09-16-2009, 03:08 PM
1Corinth2v4 1Corinth2v4 is offline
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Re: We Must Bow Down and Cry Out

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sam View Post
I received this yesterday and thought it would be good to pass on.
I think we need to get serious in our prayers for our civil and religious leaders and for our nation and for our churches.

----------------------------------

WE MUST BOW DOWN AND CRY OUT
by J. Lee Grady
Tuesday, 15 September 2009, 2009

On the anniversary of 9/11, I learned that we need extraordinary prayer in this time of national crisis.

Last week I attended a prayer gathering across the street from the World Trade Center site in New York City. Several dozen Christian leaders met in a cramped room overlooking the place where terrorists destroyed the tallest monument to America's financial power and killed more than 2,700 people in the process.

It was the eighth anniversary of 9/11. Flags in the city flew at half-mast while a drizzling rain made the gray mood even more somber. New York City firemen and police officers got respectful applause as they marched in a small parade along Church Street. A few blocks south, in Battery Park, thousands of people filed past a mobile monument that bears the names of all 9/11 victims—including those killed in Washington, D.C. and Shanksville, Pa.

The 50 or 60 Christian leaders who met that day at the Millennium Hotel in lower Manhattan did not come to create a spectacle. No one on the street knew we were there. And no one in the room was making small talk or working deals.

Billy Wilson, the leader of the Awakening America prayer initiative, told us at the beginning of our two and a half-hour gathering that we were there to simply cry out to God for a spiritual awakening in the United States.



J. Lee Grady is editor of Charisma.

How many more planes must hit our buildings for this "U.S. spiritual awakening?" This person is asking for something that already has come to pass.
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