Have you ever felt the urge to pray for someone and then just put it on a list and said, “I’ll pray for them later?”
Or
has anyone ever called you and said, “I need you to pray for me, I have
this need?” Read the following story that was sent to me and may it
change the way that you may think about prayer and also the way you
pray.
You will be blessed by this.
A missionary on Furlough told this true story while visiting his home church in Michigan.
“While
serving at a small field hospital in Africa, every two weeks I traveled
by bicycle through the jungle to a nearby city for supplies. This was a
journey of two days and required camping overnight at the halfway
point. On one of these journeys, I arrived in the city where I planned
to collect money from a bank, purchase medicine and supplies, and then begin my two-day journey back to the field hospital.
Upon
arrival in the city, I observed two men fighting, one of whom had been
seriously injured. I treated him for his injuries and at the same time
talked to him about the Lord. I then traveled two days, camping
overnight, and arrived home without incident.
Two
weeks later I repeated my journey. Upon arriving in the city, I was
approached by the young man I had treated. He told me that he had known I
carried money and medicines.
He
said, ‘Some friends and I followed you into the jungle, knowing you
would camp overnight. We planned to kill you and take your money and
drugs. But just as we were about to move into your camp, we saw that you
were surrounded by 26 armed guards.’
At this, I laughed and said that I was certainly all alone in that jungle campsite.
The
young man pressed the point, however, and said, ‘No, sir, I was not the
only person to see the guards. My five friends also saw them, and we
all counted them. It was because of those guards that we were afraid and
left you alone.’
At
this point in the sermon, one of the men in the congregation jumped to
his feet and interrupted the missionary and asked if he could tell him
the exact day this happened. The missionary told the congregation the
date and the man who interrupted told him this story:
“On
the night of your incident in Africa, it was morning here and I was
preparing to go play golf. I was about to putt when I felt the urge to
pray for you. In fact, the urging of the Lord was so strong, I called
men in this church to meet with me here in the sanctuary to pray for
you. Would all of those men who met with me on that day stand up?”
The
men who had met together to pray that day stood up. The missionary
wasn’t concerned with who they were, he was too busy counting how many
men he saw. There were 26.
This
story is an incredible example of how the Spirit of the Lord moves in
mysterious ways. If you ever hear such prodding, go along with it.
Nothing is ever hurt by prayer except the gates of hell.
Psalms 91:11 – “For he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways.”
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