Several years ago I had the opportunity to attend a dinner held in conjunction with the National Prayer Breakfast. The annual breakfast is actually more like a series of lunches, dinners and other meetings that culminate with the breakfast. Its history dates back to the 1930s.
The dinner I was at was made up of politicians, business leaders, and ministers all from the same state. It was an interesting group, with people holding polar opposite political views from each other. But for a short time they put aside their differences, visited with each other over a meal, and prayed together.
Too bad this is only once a year!
Yes, politicians need to spend more time considering the Lord and praying for their nation, but so do those of us who aren't elected officials. We all need to be in prayer for our nation. (This blog is read by folks all over the world--and whatever country you live in, your nation needs prayer as well.) We should pray for our lands and for our leaders that they would acknowledge God and bring Him glory in what they do.
Psalm 60 could be considered a national psalm or prayer. It was written by King David when his country was having a tough time militarily. The nation's enemies were winning some battles, but as David turned to the Lord, they experienced an overwhelming victory. Notice seven things about David from this psalm, and pray that our leaders would emulate them:
- David looked at his nation from God's perspective. Were they pleasing Him or had they turned their back on the Lord? (v1)
- Although David was a warrior and had an army, he knew that ultimately any victory would have to be from above (vv5,11). History is full of stories where smaller, less-skilled forces defeated large armies of skilled warriors. David's faith was in the Lord not his military.
- David saw the hardships that were facing his nation as lessons God was using to get their attention (vv3,10).
- David shifted his primary focus from politics and war planning to spiritual matters. He would pray and lead his people to seek God's face (v6).
- David asked for God's intervention in the nation. He saw himself as a steward, not the owner, of the nation. It belonged to God (vv6-7).
- David praised the Lord when God responded and the tide turned in his favor. He didn't take the credit for victory; instead, he gave all the glory to God (v12).
- David continued his focus on the Lord after the crisis was resolved.
Stop now and pray these seven points for your political leaders. Then, let's not let prayer for our nation be just an annual event, but rather let's make it a regular part of our prayer life.
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Frank Banfill is an author, international speaker, and president of MaxPoint Ministries, whose purpose is to help individuals, churches and ministries reach their full potential. Please forward this blog to your family & friends. Not a subscriber? Sign up now at www.FranksBibleBlog.com.
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