{"id":6490,"date":"2015-05-04T00:35:39","date_gmt":"2015-05-04T00:35:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.firstofallpray.com\/?p=6490"},"modified":"2015-05-04T00:37:14","modified_gmt":"2015-05-04T00:37:14","slug":"boldness-3","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.firstofallpray.com\/?p=6490","title":{"rendered":"Boldness"},"content":{"rendered":"
A week of worldwide fasting and prayer for the US began on April 30th and will continue through May 6th. Interestingly enough, this fast was not requested by Americans. Australian<\/em> believers have sent out this call.<\/span><\/p>\n Because of that, I am recycling several blog entries I wrote last year. At that time, God prompted me to shift my focus as I prayed for the nation. In short,\u00a0I believe God\u00a0showed me four things\u00a0about which\u00a0to pray:<\/span><\/p>\n Originally posted last year (sixth in series):<\/em><\/p>\n \u2026and pray on my behalf, that utterance may be given to me in the opening of my mouth, <\/em>to make known with boldness<\/em><\/strong> the mystery of the gospel, for which I am an ambassador in chains; that in proclaiming it <\/em>I may speak boldly, as I ought to speak<\/em><\/strong>. <\/em>Ephesians 6:19-20, emphasis added<\/p>\n Back in April, I heard this in my spirit: Pray for people to know what to do<\/em>, so I wrote about it. I also wrote about\u00a0for whom<\/em> to pray (basically everyone<\/em> needs to know what to do right now, and our prayer on their behalf will help to facilitate the distribution of God’s knowledge to each one).\u00a0In the last blog entry, I addressed the need to pray for wisdom<\/em> for the people who are receiving the knowledge of what to do.<\/p>\n Another ingredient needs to accompany knowledge and wisdom\u2014especially for God\u2019s people. In particular, godly leaders must<\/em> obtain this special ingredient: Boldness<\/em>.<\/p>\n The apostle Paul requested prayer along these lines. First, he wanted the Ephesians to pray that he would be given utterance in the opening of his mouth<\/em>\u2014to know what to say by the leading of the Holy Spirit\u2014and secondly, he asked his friends in Ephesus to pray that he would make known the mystery of the gospel with boldness<\/strong>,\u00a0to proclaim it boldly<\/strong> as he spoke it forth.<\/p>\n It\u2019s my opinion that Paul was probably a fairly bold man naturally. Before his salvation, he was a go-getter\u2014a mover-and-shaker type\u2014who was rising in the ranks of Judaism. He had been zealous for his faith and was persistent in pursuing, capturing, and imprisoning members of the early church. Then after<\/em> his conversion, he constantly found himself in the eye of the storm as he proclaimed the good tidings of Jesus Christ. When he acknowledged that his ministry would eventually lead to his death, he faced it with the same characteristic bold confidence\u2014to live is Christ; to die is gain <\/em>(see Philippians 1:21).<\/p>\n And yet this apostle\u2014the author of the bulk of the New Testament and the man responsible for hundreds and thousands of\u00a0true conversions\u00a0during his\u00a0time\u2014requested that his fellow believers ask God to grant him boldness in both utterance and in making known the mystery of the gospel.<\/p>\n Human<\/em> boldness is typically a very positive characteristic for\u00a0Christians to possess. However, human boldness can only go so far before it encounters supernatural obstacles for which it is no match. Paul knew that, and I believe, experienced<\/em> the eventual ineffectiveness of his own personal boldness at some point in his ministry. That is why he so adamantly urged his friends to pray that he move over into the God<\/em>-kind of boldness\u2014a confidence instigated and sustained by the living God Himself for the task of proclaiming the gospel. When God<\/em> emboldens a human, the mystery of the gospel is made known in the hearers supernaturally, and the speech coming forth from that person is bold, bold, bold, as it ought <\/em>to be.<\/p>\n\n