Prayer and Bible Reading Guide March 10-‐16, 2013 Day 1
Day 2
Day 3
Day 4
Day 5
Day 6
1 Peter 1:22-‐2:3
Leviticus 19:17-‐18
1 John 3:15-‐18
Luke 10:25-‐37
Romans 1 2:19-‐21
Matthew 5:43-‐48
This coming Sunday we return to the Sermon on the Mount, considering Christ’s call to kingdom citizens to love their enemies. At the end of this passage, Jesus says, “You therefore must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.” What an incredible statement! J.C. Ryle commented on this, “The perfection of practical Christianity consists in attending to the little duties of holiness as well as to the great.” The readings for this week in the passages above focus the theme of sincere and impartial love.
Mar 1 7-‐Matt 5:43-‐48, Love Your Enemies Mar 24-‐John 12:20-‐33, Palm Sunday Mar 3 1-‐Easter Sunday
PRAYING FOR GOD’S GLORY Pray that we would sincerely love others, and that as we love with an otherworldly consistency, God’s glory would be revealed through us. God is impartial in dispensing his kindness: “on the just and on the unjust” (Matt 5:45). Pray that we would likewise be perfect in this, revealing the goodness of our eager-‐to-‐forgive and ever-‐compassionate God. PRAYING FOR GOD’S PEOPLE This week we will be praying for Grace Church -‐ AME (downtown Raleigh) and their pastor Stacatto Powell. Please pray for these brothers and sisters throughout the week. Also pray for the following: Day 1: Pray for pastors/members of Grace Church, that their gospel love would stand in stark contrast to the darkness of sin. Pray that they would be a b lessing to their community as they reflect Christ’s love. Pray that the Word of God would be taught faithfully in the church each week. Day 2: Pray for the ministry to the inmates at the C.A. Dillon Detention Center. Pray that these men would understand and love the gospel, and that they would experience reconciliation to God and others. Pray for Jeff and June Eason who lead this ministry and Bible study on the second Sunday of each month. Day 3: Pray that we would be “world Christians” – full of interest and concern in the world at large and all the peoples in it. Just as God is not a tribal God, so our concern should be for “all the nations.” Pray that God would expand the concern of our prayers, the direction o f our giving, and the decisions o f our futures; that we would be guided in these things not by the hope of comfort but by the advance of the gospel. Day 4: Pray for Tom Mercer as he p repares to teach this coming Sunday from Matthew 5:43-‐48. Pray that the Spirit would give insight and direction in his study (1 Cor. 2:12-‐13). Day 5: Pray for the women of Christ Covenant, that they would be self-‐controlled, rich in good works, and full of gospel boldness in their relationships with non-‐Christians (Titus 2). Day 6: Pray for the various Bible studies: Table Talk, women’s Bible study, Adult Education, various small group Bible studies. Pray that God would be using these to increase our love for Him and bring conviction and repentance over sin.
PRAYING FOR GOD’S WORLD This week we are praying for the advancement of the gospel among the people in Kazakhstan, the world’s ninth largest country. Please use this information to inform your prayers, taken from Operation World (available in the bookstore):
Religion Christians Evangelicals Muslim
1,914,045 104,511 8,456,457
Pop % Ann Gr 12.15 -‐1.5 0.7 3.5 53.68
“To be a Kazakh is to be a Muslim” – but theirs is a folk Islam strongly influenced by shamanistic practices. Other Muslim countries (Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey, Pakistan) invest huge amounts of money to send Muslim missionaries – some are effective even in converting Russians to Islam. The number of registered mosques grew from 46 in 1989 to 1,282 in 2002 (quite apart from many unregistered ones). Traditional Islam is on the rise, even trendy in some sectors, despite the government actively opposing radical Islam. Orthodox Christianity is perceived as the religion of Russians, and evangelicals are often regarded as dangerous sects. Pray for this misconception to be broken; pray for freedom from historic spiritual bondages and prejudices.
Russians and Ukrainians – from the early 1990s onward – have emigrated back to their ancestral homeland in large numbers. M ost who remain are non-‐religious or Orthodox with German Catholics and Lutherans as well. The Orthodox Church increasingly aligns itself with Muslims, seeking to cement its own religious status at the expense of newer religious groups. Pray for renewal among the Orthodox. Many Russians are impacted by the fast-‐ growing evangelical/charismatic/Pentecostal churches, much more so than Kazakhs.