Episode 1. Praying with Power
Listen to the radio broadcast
Download audio file
So many people believe in God and yet feel powerless in this world. So they go to Him and pray for power. But what if, well, what if instead of praying for power, He wants us to pray with power. …
So many people believe in God and yet feel powerless in this world. So they go to Him and pray for power. But what if, well, what if instead of praying for power, He wants us to pray with power.
One of the most exciting things I know about God – and I’m grinning ear to ear with joy as I sit here talking about it, – is that He delights in empowering little people like you and me.
We kind of somehow imagine that the big names and the big preachers and the big leaders, they’re the ones that God empowers. Well I’m sure He does, at least some of them, but it’s the little people in the pews that He delights in empowering too.
Now that’s important because so often the little people feel as though God’s power is only for the ‘super Christians’, whatever they might look like but actually, actually Gods power is for anyone and everyone that puts their trust in Jesus Christ, His Son.
The reason I know that is that this letter we’re about to read, from Paul, is written to the little people in the pews. The Church in Ephesus, the whole Church, not just the elders, not just the preacher, no, the whole Church. We’re going to have a look at that letter today.
And it’s the apostle Paul, telling these people in the pews in Ephesus, how he prays for them. Let’s have a look with me. If you want you can check it out, it comes from the Book of Ephesians, in the New Testament, chapter 1, beginning at verse 17. This is what he says:
I keep asking the God of our Lord, Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, that He may give you the spirit of wisdom and revelation so that you may know Him better. I pray also that the eyes of your heart would be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which He has called you, the riches of His glorious inheritance in the saints and His incomparably great power for us who believe.
That power is like the working of His mighty strength which He exerted in Christ when He raised Him up from the dead and seated Him at His right hand in the heavenly realms, far above all rule and authority and power and dominion and every title that can be given, not only in the present age but also in the age to come. And God placed all things under His feet and appointed Him to be head over everything for the Church, which is His body, the fullness of Him who fills everything in every way.
You see, I love the way Paul starts off, he’s a great guy. He is so direct and he’s so ‘in our faces’. His prayer is that we, the little people in the pews, would get to know God better. Not that we would sin less, not that we would feel better about ourselves, not that God would use us more powerfully, not that we would become mighty prayer warriors or big people or be used by God to perform miracles or anything else for that matter, no, none of those things.
The apostle Paul wants us to know God better. All of us in the pews.
Paul tells the folk in Ephesus that he has been pleading with God that God would put His spirit in them so they would know Him better. Obviously Paul knows that they need to know God better and there’s a purpose behind this prayer.
Paul wants them to open up their eyes. In fact, he wants God to open their eyes. “Wake up!” I can hear him shouting as only Paul could – “wake up, open your eyes, have a look at this”:
I pray also that the eyes of your heart might be enlightened in order that you may know the hope to which He’s called you, the riches of His glorious inheritance, in the saints and His incomparably great power for us who believe.
See, three things that Paul aches for his beloved friends in Ephesus; to see with their eyes open by God:
1. the certain hope of the future they have in Christ,
2. the riches of their inheritance in Christ and, wait for it,
3. the incomparably great power for us who believe.
Now, I’m definitely no great scholar of Greek. Of course these words were initially written in Greek and then later translated into the English. I, like most people, have to rely on the linguistic work done by others in the main. And here, in understanding the full force of what Paul is saying, I rely on a great teacher and a colleague of mine, Dr Barry Chant who, in one of the classes that I attended when he was lecturing me and I was a student.
He said, “If I were to transliterate the Greek words that Paul uses here to describe the nature of the power that he wants us to wake up to, it would go something like this.” The words for ‘incomparably great power’, the Greek words, Barry said, he would transliterate them like this: “hyperbalistic, megathonic dynamite”. Do you get the point?
Paul isn’t talking about some teensy weensy bit of power. He’s not talking about a moderate amount of power. He’s not even talking about a lot of power. He’s saying, ‘I’m praying for you, that you would get to know your God better and that then you would know, finally wake up to the fact, that the power that He has for you is hyperbalistic, megathonic dynamite”.
“This power is for me, this power is for you”, Paul’s saying and in fact, he goes on to say, “it’s the very same power that raised Jesus from the dead. That same power is the power that God has for you if you believe in Him”.
See, it’s kind of a contradiction. We bow our lives down in complete submission to God through Jesus Christ. We humble ourselves at the foot of the cross and we cry out, “God, it’s not about me, it’s about You” and in doing that, it’s really easy to develop what I call ‘a worm theology’. Psalm 22:6 says:
But I am a worm and not a human, scorned by others and despised by people.
But the point of what God wants to do in our lives is to restore us back to His image, to adopt us back into His family, to give us hope, riches and power. Not to misuse and abuse as we used to do for our own selfish gain, not for that but for us to be His children. His agents of peace on planet earth in this waring world. His light to shine out His glory into this dark and lost world and as we’re restored back into His image.
As we start to live out the lives that He always intended for us, there is a wondrous fulfilment in that. It truly is about Him and yet He fills us with His joy and a peace and a wonder through this laying down of our lives that words simply cannot describe.
Do you believe in Jesus? Are you one of these weak sinners on your knees before God? Then let me say this again, the 3 things that Paul prayed for, here in Ephesians chapter 1, are for you and for me. The hope, the riches and the power are for you, here and now.
I believe it’s time to stop praying for power, it’s time to stop asking God for power because God’s word clearly tells us that this incomparably great power, this hyperbalistic, megathonic dynamite is already ours. I believe it’s time to take the little bit of faith that we’ve got in our hearts and start praying with power, here and now.
Let it sink in, that’s what God wants us to do, let the Holy Spirit etch this on our hearts. Instead of praying for power, it’s time to start praying with power, the hyperbalistic, megathonic dynamite power. The same power that raised Jesus from the dead is the power that God has already given us.
Comments