Keys For Prayer - Myles Munroe

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The key takeaways are that prayer is man exercising authority on earth to invoke heaven's influence, fasting can ignite God's power within us, and prayer is necessary and should be a priority.

Prayer is a result of God's established authority structure between heaven and earth and is meant for humans to call on God to fulfill his word on earth.

Fasting enables us to receive the fullness of God's power for ministry.

Table of Contents

Title Page
Copyright Page
Introduction
Content
About the Author
Unless otherwise indicated, all Scripture quotations are taken
from the Holy Bible, New International Version ® , niv ® , ©
1973, 1978, 1984 by the International Bible Society. Used by
permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved. Scripture
quotations marked (nkjv) are taken from the New King James
Version, © 1979, 1980, 1982, 1984 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used
by permission. All rights reserved.
Words and phrases in Scripture quotations that are in bold
italics are the emphasis of the author.

Keys for Prayer

ISBN-13: 978-1-60374-031-9
ebook ISBN: 978-1-60374-778-3
© 2008 by Dr. Myles Munroe

Whitaker House
1030 Hunt Valley Circle
New Kensington, PA 15068
www.whitakerhouse.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Munroe,


Myles.
Keys for prayer / Myles Munroe.
p. cm.
Summary: “Inspirational quotations on the topic of prayer
gleaned from the Bible and Myles Munroe’s teachings on the
subject”—Provided by publisher.
ISBN-13: 978-1-60374-031-9 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 1-60374-
031-7
1. Prayer—Christianity. 2. Prayer—Biblical teaching. I. Title.
BV210.3.M83 2008
248.3'2—dc22
2007044808

No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any


form or by any means,
electronic or mechanical—including photocopying, recording,
or by any information
storage and retrieval system—without permission in writing
from the publisher. Please
direct your inquiries to [email protected].
This book has been digitally produced in a standard
specification in order to ensure its availability.
Introduction

To understand prayer, you must first understand the purpose


of the Creator. Prayer is a result of God’s established authority
structure between heaven and earth, as well as a product of His
faithfulness to His Word. This is because prayer was born out
of man’s God-given assignment. The Creator said, “Let them
rule…over all the earth” (Genesis 1:26). His design is for
human beings to call upon Him to fulfill His Word “on earth as
it is in heaven” (Matthew 6:10). God’s commitment to His
Word is the basis of the prayer principle. He is faithful to fulfill
His promises and decrees because of His integrity or holiness.
Through Keys to Prayer, you can begin a dynamic new
prayer life based on your assignment from God. You will not
only learn about prayer, but you will also know how to pray—
and receive results!
—Dr. Myles Munroe
Prayer is man exercising his God-given, legal authority on
earth to invoke heaven’s influence on the world. In other
words, prayer is earthly license for heavenly interference.
John Wesley once said, “God does nothing but in answer to
prayer.” Prayer is not an option for mankind but a necessity.
Secretly, we wonder, “Does God really hear me when I
pray?” or “Why is prayer so boring and fruitless for me?”
There’s a strong connection between underdeveloped,
defeated, or directionless lives and confusion over prayer.
Prayer is meant to be answered—or else God would not ask
us to pray. He isn’t interested in wasting your time and efforts.
He is too practical for that.
The power of prayer is the inheritance of the believer.
Prayer is not just an activity, ritual, or obligation. Nor is it
begging God to do what we want. It is communion and
communication with God that touches His heart.
When you understand the principles of prayer, you will
begin to communicate with God with power, grace, and
confidence.
Prayer has the power to…
• transform lives
• change circumstances
• give peace and perseverance in the midst of trial
• alter the course of nations
• win the world for Christ
God is faithful to answer prayer. Every prayer based on
God’s Word and offered in faith by someone in right
relationship with Him is answered.
God answers as soon as we ask, and He reveals those
answers in His timing. Jesus told His disciples “that they
should always pray and not give up” (Luke 18:1).
Jesus expected His prayers to be heard. He said, “Father, I
thank you that you have heard me. I knew that you always
hear me” (John 11:41–42).
We must know how to approach God and learn the kind of
prayers He responds to. We must pray as Jesus prayed.
Jesus said, “Therefore I tell you, whatever you ask for in
prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours”
(Mark 11:24). The answer is so sure that we are instructed to
believe it has already happened.
True prayer…
• builds intimacy with God
• brings honor to His nature and character
• causes respect for His integrity
• enables belief in His Word
• produces trust in His love
• affirms His purposes
• appropriates His promises
God said, “Let us make man in our image, in our likeness,
and let them rule over all the earth” (Genesis 1:26).Amazingly,
man was created not only to have a relationship with God, but
also to share His authority.
The relationship of love God established with mankind is
not separate from the purpose God has for mankind. Rather, the
relationship is foundational to the purpose; both are essential
keys to prayer.
We can function in the purposes for which we were created
only as we are connected to our Source. God doesn’t want man
to work for Him but with Him. The Bible says that we are
“God’s fellow workers” (2 Corinthians 6:1).
When Adam and Eve broke relationship with God by
rebelling against Him, their effectiveness in prayer was also
broken. True prayer is maintained through oneness of heart
and purpose with God. Only then can we fulfill His ways and
plans.
When we pray, we represent God’s interests on earth, and
representation requires relationship.
The heart of prayer is twofold:
• Prayer is an expression of mankind’s unity and relationship of
love with God.
• Prayer is an expression of mankind’s affirmation of and
participation in God’s purposes for the earth.
Prayer means union with God—unity and singleness of
purpose, thought, desire, will, reason, motive, objective, and
feelings. God causes things to happen on earth when men and
women are in agreement with His will.
Whether we are praying for individual, family, community,
national, or world needs, we must seek to be in agreement with
God’s will. God’s plan is for man to ask Him to accomplish His
purposes in the world so that goodness and truth may reign
rather than evil and darkness. This is the essence of exercising
dominion.
God’s will should be…
• the backbone of your prayers
• the heart of your intercession
• the source of your confidence in supplication
• the strength of your fervent, effectual prayers
Praying does not mean convincing God to do your will, but
rather doing His will through your will.
All that God is, and all that He has, may be received through
prayer.
Prayer should not be open-ended. It should be purpose-
driven, motivated by a knowledge of God’s ways and
intentions.
The key to effective prayer is understanding God’s purpose
for your life, His reason for your existence—as a human being
in general and as an individual specifically.
Your purpose should be the “raw material” or foundational
matter of your prayer life. Prayer is calling forth what God has
already purposed and predestined—continuing His work of
creation and the establishment of His plans for the earth.
If we ask God for things that are contrary to our purpose, we
will be frustrated. Jesus’ assurance in prayer was based on
knowing and doing God’s will. He always prayed for God’s will
to be done and then worked to accomplish it.
When we stop praying, we allow God’s purposes for the
world to be hindered, and we leave people susceptible to the
influences of Satan and sin.
Time spent in prayer is not time wasted but time invested.
If you do not pray, God will find someone who will agree
with His plans. Yet you will fail to fulfill your role in His
purposes. God does not want you to miss out on this privilege.
“You do not have, because you do not ask God” (James 4:2).
God did not change His purposes when mankind fell,
because His purposes are eternal. Christ Jesus became the
Second Adam. He redeemed mankind so we could be fully
restored to a relationship of love with God and participation in
His purposes for the earth.
To restore God’s purpose, Christ had to be a Representative
of the legal authority of the earth—man. He had to come to
earth as a human being, as the beginning of a new family of
mankind who would be devoted to God—“the firstborn among
many brothers” (Romans 8:29).
Jesus has the right to reign and ask God to intervene in the
world because He was the perfect Man and Sacrifice. His
prayers for mankind are powerful. “He is able to save
completely those who come to God through him, because he
always lives to intercede for them” (Hebrews 7:25).
There is a vital relationship between redemption and true
prayer. The position and authority Jesus won have been
transferred back to mankind through spiritual rebirth in Christ.
Only through Christ’s redemption are we restored to our
purposes, and only through Christ do we have the right to pray
to God with authority.
Because Jesus gave believers the Holy Spirit, we can agree
with God’s purposes even when we are uncertain about how to
pray. “We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the
Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot
express” (Romans 8:26).
Because Jesus delivered us from Satan’s dominion, Satan no
longer has authority over us. Rather, we have authority over
him in the name of Jesus.
The authority of Jesus’ name gives us access to our
heavenly Father. It enables us to agree with Him and His
purposes, and to ask Him to fulfill His Word as He meets our
needs and the needs of others.
Power in prayer is not based on emotions, feelings, or the
theories of men, but upon the Word of God, “which lives and
abides forever” (1 Peter 1:23 nkjv). Prayer is joining forces with
God the Father by calling attention to His promises.
As the Son of Man, Jesus kept a close relationship with the
Father through prayer. He did what God directed Him to do and
what He saw God actively working to accomplish in the world.
He relied on the grace and Spirit of God. We can do the same.
From Genesis to Revelation, God always found a human
being to help Him accomplish His purposes. He comes to you
now and asks, in effect, “Are you willing? Will you help Me
fulfill My purposes for your life and for the earth?”
God says the church is “a royal priesthood” (1 Peter 2:9).
In God’s presence, we can commune with Him, offer effectual
prayer, and be His mediators on behalf of the world.
Because we know God is holy, we can believe He will fulfill
what He has promised. We can believe we will receive what we
ask of Him according to His Word.
A cardinal principle of answered prayer is belief in the
trustworthiness of the One to whom you’re praying. The power
of your prayers
depends on it.
Double-mindedness is the opposite of holiness. If you tell
God you believe Him but act in the opposite way, then you are
not integrated, pure, holy. You are double-minded. “That man
should not think he will receive anything from the Lord”
(James 1:7).
We prepare to enter the presence of God by first asking
ourselves, “Am I in a position to approach God in holiness?
Have I thought, said, or done things that are contrary to His
Word and law of love?”
We must accept Christ’s sacrifice for our sins, repent from
wrongdoing, and make clean the secret closets of sin and
disobedience within us so we can be effective in prayer. “Your
sins have hidden [God’s] face from you, so that he will not
hear” (Isaiah 59:2).
We need to be cleansed continually so we can live before
God in holiness—the holiness Christ died to provide for us. “If
we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us
our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).
God wants to bless us and answer our prayers. That is why
He tells us to deal with our sins. When your sins are forgiven
and you are right with God, you can genuinely fellowship with
Him and with other believers—and that brings the power of
agreement in prayer.
You need to make sure you are in the Word when you come
before God—that you’ve read the Word, that the Word is in
you, that you are obeying the Word. Otherwise, you will enter
God’s presence with your own ideas and attitudes.
We prepare for prayer by separating ourselves from our
normal environment and activities. When you are seeking God,
you can’t be around distractions.
If you’re going to seek God, you have to be serious about it.
God says, “If you want to find Me, you will do so only ‘when
you seek Me with all your heart’” (Jeremiah 29:13).
After you have taken the appropriate steps to enter God’s
presence, then you can “present your requests to God”
(Philippians 4:6).
We have to remain in a state of preparedness for prayer. We
aren’t to approach God in an offhand or careless way. It is
important to learn what it means to honor the Lord and reflect
His nature and character in our lives.
If we are going to do any kind of business with God, we
need to be able to function in the faith the Bible speaks of.
“Without faith it is impossible to please God” (Hebrews 11:6).
Men and women were created in God’s image to operate in
the same way He does—through words of faith. “For he
spoke, and it came to be; he commanded, and it stood firm”
(Psalm 33:9).
God created by believing in the reality of what He would
create. When you ask for something in prayer based on God’s
Word, you must start speaking about it as if it already exists.
Moreover, you have to keep on speaking about it in this way in
order to see its manifestation.
Some answers to prayer have not manifested because it is
not yet their season. Between the seed prayer and the
manifestation of the fruit, stay reading, meditating on,
speaking, and living the Word of God so it can flow
continuously into your life. To keep believing, keep taking in
the Word.
All prayer must be the prayer of faith!
Jesus cast out demons with just a word. He’d say, “Come
out,” and they would leave. This process took only seconds,
yet in the morning, He had spent hours praying. Jesus wants
us to operate as He operated: much time in communion with the
Father, and much accomplished
for the kingdom.
Prayer saves you time. We can never really be too busy to
pray because prayer makes our lives more focused, efficient,
and peaceful.
We often sing, “This is the day that the Lord has made.” I
imagine God is saying to us, “If this is My day, then why don’t
you come and talk to Me about it?”
Hours with God make minutes with men effective.
Prayer gives you discernment you wouldn’t otherwise have.
God tells you what is truly important, compared to what seems
urgent. He tells you what you should and shouldn’t do now.
He gives you wisdom to address your situation. Prayer enables
you to think clearly and wisely.
Why did Jesus spend hours in prayer? It is because He had
a genuine relationship with the Father, and any relationship
takes time to build and maintain.
We often discover that when we spend time in prayer, God
begins to use us to change circumstances.
Many people are waiting for a “burning bush” experience or
the appearance of an angel. They don’t hear from God because
they’re waiting in the wrong way. God doesn’t usually speak
out loud. That’s not intimate enough. He speaks directly to our
spirits. God communicates to us through thoughts, ideas,
impressions, and discernment.
Jesus prayed by Himself to teach us that prayer is a
personal and private relationship and responsibility. Corporate
prayer should never be a substitute for personal and private
time with the Father.
The Lord’s Prayer is a model for prayer. In other words, you
don’t need to repeat the words of this prayer exactly; instead,
you should use them as a pattern.
Praying “Our Father” (Luke 11:2 nkjv) means that when we
approach God, we are to bring other people’s concerns with us.
Our prayers are selfish if we don’t also pray for others.
We are to address God as Father, going to Him with the
awareness and confession that He is the Source who can
provide for the needs of everyone. Whatever your problem, the
Father has the answer.
When you pray, “Our Father in heaven” (Luke 11:2 nkjv),
you’re saying to God, “I recognize I need help from outside my
realm.” It is a confession of submission.

Hallowed be Your name” (Luke 11:2 nkjv). The word


hallowed means reverenced, set apart, or sanctified. We are to
worship the Father as the Holy One. Sometimes we try to
bypass this step and get right into prayer. God is saying to us,
“Honor My name first.” We can make our requests later, but we
begin with worship.
When you pray, honor all the attributes of God’s holiness,
such as His love, faithfulness, integrity, and grace. After you
pray, continue to honor Him in your life and in all your
interactions with others.
Your kingdom come. Your will be done on earth as it is in
heaven” (Luke 11:2 nkjv). A true person of prayer is not
interested in his own kingdom. He is interested in God’s
kingdom and what He wants accomplished. God is delighted
when you are excited about the things He’s excited about.
You don’t have to worry about having your needs met if
you start praying for God’s will to be done in other people’s
lives. God will bless you because He will see that you have
aligned your will with His will, that you are reaching out to
others
in love and compassion.
Give us day by day our daily bread” (Luke 11:3 nkjv).
When you ask for bread, you have to ask for bread for
everybody. We normally say, “Lord, provide for me.” Yet God
tells us, “Ask for others as well as yourself. Pray for others.”
And forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone who is
indebted to us” (Luke 11:4 nkjv). Are you holding anything
against anyone? Does anyone have anything against you?
Don’t expect to have your prayers answered if you refuse to
forgive others. Having good relationships is one of the keys to
answered prayer.
Do not lead us into temptation, but deliver us from the evil
one” (Luke 11:4 nkjv). This doesn’t mean God might steer us
toward temptation against our wills. It means we are to ask Him
for wisdom so we won’t put ourselves into situations that will
cause us to compromise our relationship with Him.
For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory
forever. Amen” (Matthew 6:13 nkjv). After you have prayed,
worship the Father again. This acknowledges to Him, “I know
You’re going to answer this prayer; therefore, I’m going to
thank You ahead of time and give You all the glory for what
happens.”
The Bible says, “Be still, and know that I am God” (Psalm
46:10). In this sense, prayer is the expression of man’s
dependency upon God for all things.
We are usually distracted by many things when we pray.
Our minds are elsewhere. You therefore need to put yourself in
a position where you can become quiet, collect yourself—your
thoughts, attention, and concentration—and let the Lord calm
your heart. Silence helps bring you into a unity of heart and
purpose with God.
After silence, we should give God adoration. When you
adore someone, you express how precious that person is to
you. We are to worship God for who He is: King of all the earth,
our Creator, our Savior, our All in All.
Confession follows silence and adoration in prayer. Most of
us have been taught that confession means bringing up our
past sins, feeling remorse, getting emotional, and so on. That’s
not the heart of confession. Confession means agreeing with
God about what He says to you and about you.
Confession takes place when God points out something in
your life and says, “Get rid of that” or “You know you
shouldn’t have done that,” and you say, “Yes, God, You’re
right. I won’t do that any longer.” Then you put your trust in
Him to enable you to walk by the Spirit.
King David committed adultery, conceived a child out of
wedlock, and killed a man. So why did God say that David was
“a man after His own heart” (1 Samuel 13:14 nkjv)? David was
completely honest about his transgressions. He didn’t make
excuses; he admitted that he had sinned against God. This
made his prayer life powerful.
If you have done something wrong, confess it quickly.
Agree with God, ask for forgiveness, and go on with your life.
If you have confessed before God, then your heart is right,
and you can offer a “sacrifice of praise” (Hebrews 13:15) to
Him. You can give thanks abundantly because your heart is
free.
Supplication implies three things. It means to intercede, to
petition, and to brood. Brooding means a deep passion. When
you offer supplication, you feel the heart of God. You desire
His will so much that it becomes an emotional experience.
Prayer is a very intentional communication. It is an art. You
need to address God specifically for your particular petitions. If
you want peace, you appeal to Him as Jehovah-Shalom (The
Lord Our Peace) rather than Jehovah-Jireh (The Lord Our
Provider). If you need healing, you address Him as Jehovah-
Rapha (The Lord Our Healer).
Write down the things you want to pray for; then, next to
those items, write down the Scriptures you’re going to use
when you pray. You will be praying according to God’s Word,
and God will send help for each request.
Pleading your case before God does not mean begging and
moaning. It is something you do because you rightfully
deserve what you are asking for based on God’s promises.
God wants you to come to prayer with an attitude that says,
“You’re the only One who can help me.” Often, we pray for
God’s help, but we have a backup plan, just in case. We need
to depend completely on Him.
After you plead your case, then believe. Asking, in itself,
doesn’t cause you to receive. When you start doubting, be
honest, like the father of the demon-possessed boy, and say,
“Lord, I believe; help my unbelief!” (Mark 9:24 nkjv). We can’t
let doubt enter into our prayers. It will short-circuit them.
If you truly believe that when you prayed, you received
what you asked for, then you will start thanking God. We are
not to wait until we see the manifestation of our answers before
expressing our gratitude.
Practice active belief that shows you are living in
expectation of the answer to your prayer by making
preparations to receive it. “Ask and it will be given to you;
seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to
you” (Luke 11:9). No barrier can stop what God has for you.
Learning about prayer but not practicing it is a hurdle to
answered prayer. We think it’s a part of our lives, but it hasn’t
made it from our heads to our hearts, from theory to practice.
The best approach to prayer is to pray.
Mental assent agrees with God but does not believe God.
The only way God’s promises will become a reality in your life
is for you to act on them—and you can’t act on them without
faith.
We are trained and conditioned to live by our five senses
alone. If we cannot analyze something and empirically
conclude that it works, we do not believe it is real. Yet faith is
the substance and evidence of things that our sense
knowledge cannot see.
We must internalize the Word if it is going to make an impact
on our lives. Let it truly sink into your spirit. Turn it over in
your mind in order to understand its truths and implications
and then apply it to your life. This is how the Word of God
becomes the means for answered prayer.
Hope that is focused only on the afterlife can become a
hurdle to answered prayer. God wants to give us blessings in
this life. If we think God’s blessings are all in the future, we will
not exercise faith to see their fulfillment now. Where faith is not
applied, fulfillment cannot be given.
God’s blessings have already been accomplished in the
spiritual realm. He is waiting for a human to believe Him so He
can release them. Jesus said, “According to your faith will it
be done to you” (Matthew 9:29).
When we exhibit wishful thinking and doubt, we show that
we are skeptical about God’s character and integrity. Doubt is
really an insult to God. No wonder James said that if a person
doubts, “that man should not think he will receive anything
from the Lord” (James 1:7).
It is not the size of your faith that counts—it is the size of
your God.
When a person doesn’t want to bother with prayer because
he feels he has more important things to do, or when he allows
the many concerns of this life to crowd out the practice of
prayer, then whatever he does know about prayer will not bear
any fruit in his life.
There is now no condemnation” (Romans 8:1). This truth is
crucial for us to understand if we are to approach God in
prayer. God has forgiven and forgotten your sin if you have
confessed it, repented of it, and believed that it is covered by
the blood of Jesus.
Some people are hindered in prayer because they don’t
believe they are worthy enough to receive an answer. We
should treat ourselves with respect and approach God as His
children, who have been given “the riches of God’s grace”
(Ephesians 1:7). He has made you a co-heir with His Son.
Therefore, live and pray accordingly.
You do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives,
that you may spend what you get on your pleasures” (James
4:3).
Are you praying for something just to promote your own
selfish purposes? Or are you asking God to fulfill His Word so
His kingdom can come on the earth?
Broken relationships in the home will hinder your prayers. If
we do not demonstrate the love, compassion, forgiveness, and
grace of God to others, we are misrepresenting Him. How can
we ask Him to fulfill His purposes by answering our prayers
when we are violating those very purposes by the way we treat
others?
God will not answer our prayers if we are seeking idols. This
means not only statues, but also idols of the heart. An idol is
anything we give higher priority than God. God deserves our
primary love, respect, and devotion.
An ungenerous heart can hinder your prayers. Proverbs
21:13 says, “If a man shuts his ears to the cry of the poor, he
too will cry out and not be answered.”
Prayer is actually very simple. It is speaking the Word to
God exactly as He gave it to us.
Our power in prayer is the Word of God. Our job is to learn
how to handle it properly and responsibly. This can make the
difference between answered and unanswered prayer. We can
use God’s Word correctly only when we understand what it is
and how to apply it.
God Himself is speaking in the Word, because the Word is
who He is. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God” (John 1:1). Therefore, God’s
presence becomes a part of our prayers when we speak His
Word in faith.
The power of God’s Word is so great that, as Jesus said, if
our faith is the size of a mustard seed, mountains can be
moved.
God is a God of the Word. He says,
“My Word…will not return to me empty, but will accomplish
what I desire and achieve the purpose for which I sent it”
(Isaiah 55:11). If the church would believe this Scripture, it
would shake the world.
There are two conditions to answered prayer: Jesus said, “If
you abide in Me, and My words abide in you, you will ask
what you desire, and it shall be done for you” (John 15:7 nkjv).
What does it mean for you to abidein Jesus? It means to
constantly flow in spiritual communion with Him. You do this
by fellowshipping with
Him, worshipping Him, praying, and fasting.
What does it mean to have Jesus’ words living in you? The
Word is truly inside us when it directs our thoughts and
actions. What’s the first thing that comes out of your mouth
when you are under pressure? Is it an affirmation of faith? Or is
it fear, frustration, doubt, or anger?
Jesus gave the condition, “If…My words abide in you…”
(John 15:7 nkjv) so the last part of the verse having to do with
prayer could be fulfilled: “…ask what you desire, and it shall
be done for you.” If His words are in you, what you ask for will
reflect those words.
The Word is powerful because it produces in us what
pleases God and causes Him to respond to our requests
—faith.
If you have faith in God’s Word, He will take what is
“impossible” and make it seem like an everyday thing.
Sometimes He will take away all your other alternatives
because He wants to show you His miracle-working power. If
the Word is all you have to go on, you’re about to receive a
miracle!
When you pray God’s Word in faith, things that have been
bound up will suddenly open up. You will say, “But I had been
trying to accomplish
that for ten years!” Yes, but you hadn’t prayed according to
God’s Word until now. Belief will open doors that hard work
cannot unlock.
You can be sure God always hears your prayers—one
hundred percent of the time—when you pray according to His
will.
The Bible is filled with stories of the power of God to save,
heal, and bless. These accounts are God’s faith messages to
us, telling us that He will intervene on our behalf, also.
When we wholeheartedly embrace the Word, it will keep our
lives in line with God’s will so that nothing will hinder us from
walking in His ways and receiving answers to our prayers.
Jesus’ name is not a magic formula that guarantees
automatic acceptance of our prayers. We’re not effective in
prayer just by using the word Jesus, but by understanding the
significance of who He is and appropriating His power through
faith in His name. It’s not the name, but what the name
represents, that makes the difference.
No one can claim power through Jesus’ name without
having official child-of-God status. The authority we have in
His name through prayer is a covenantal authority; it is based
on our covenant relationship with God through Jesus Christ.
We must be able to legally use the authority behind the
power of Jesus’ name to obtain results in prayer. The Father
asks, “Are you praying based on Christ’s righteousness or on
your own merits? Do you understand who My Son is? Do you
believe in His authority and power?”
Jesus alone can be your legal channel to the Father. “For
there is one God and one mediator between God and men, the
man Christ Jesus” (1 Timothy 2:5).
Jesus, meaning “Savior,” is the name of Christ in His
humanity because He came to earth to accomplish the
salvation of the world. I Am is the name of Christ in His divinity
because Jesus is the revelation of God in human form. Since He
is the I Am, His attributes are as numerous as your needs—and
beyond!
When you give someone power of attorney, that person has
the legal authority to speak for you and do business in your
name. Praying in the name of Jesus is giving Him power of
attorney to intercede on your behalf when you make requests
of the Father.
Jesus is actively working on our behalf, representing our
interests to God: “Therefore he is able to save completely
those who come to God through him, because he always lives
to intercede for them” (Hebrews 7:25). If the Son is
representing you, then you don’t
have to worry about your requests being heard by the Father.
Jesus gave us the Holy Spirit, who assists in exercising
power of attorney and enables us to pray. “The Spirit
intercedes for the saints in accordance with God’s will”
(Romans 8:27). “Pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all
kinds of prayers and requests” (Ephesians 6:18).
Prayer and fasting are equal parts of a single ministry. Jesus
said, “When you pray…” and “When you fast…” (Matthew
6:5, 16). Just as prayer is not an option for the believer, fasting
is not an option. It is a natural expectation of God for His
people.
A fast is a conscious, intentional decision to abstain for a
time from the pleasure of eating in order to gain vital spiritual
benefits.
The Holy Spirit may move upon a person or group and give
them a desire to fast. Yet most of the time, fasting is an act of
our faith and our wills. It is a decision we make based on our
obedience to Christ and our love for Him.
Fasting is a point of intimacy with God. It means putting
God first, focusing your attention on Him alone—not on His
blessings, but on God Himself—and giving your whole heart to
Him in prayer. It shows Him you love and appreciate Him. It is
setting yourself apart and seeking God rather than your own
interests.
Fasting is not a matter of trying to get something from God.
It’s a matter of trying to get to God.
Fasting does not change God; it changes us—and it
transforms our prayers.
God reveals Himself only to people who want to know Him.
“You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your
heart” (Jeremiah 29:13). When you find God Himself, you will
discover that everything you need comes with Him.
Fasting fosters a sensitive environment for the working of
prayer. It enables us to see the fulfillment of God’s Word and
purposes for us as individuals and as the body of Christ.
The main purpose of fasting is to benefit others. It is a form
of intercession. Fasting often brings breakthroughs in difficult
circumstances or in the lives of those who are resistant to the
gospel.
Fasting enables you to increase your spiritual capacity. It
exerts discipline over your physical appetites, bringing them
under subjection to what your spirit desires. Your body begins
to obey your spirit rather than its own impulses and habits.
The body becomes a servant of the Lord, rather than the
master of your spirit.
Fasting is emptying ourselves of food and filling ourselves
with God. It allows us to receive guidance, wisdom, instruction,
and knowledge from Him. We receive revelation from God we
can’t receive otherwise.
Fasting enables us to receive the fullness of God’s power
for ministry. Sometimes prayer alone is not enough to
accomplish His purposes. You may need to add a spirit of
consecration to God and abstain from what can interfere with
the flow of His power in your life.
Although you received the Holy Spirit when you were born
again, a fast will ignite His power within you. Your love for the
Father will be renewed. It will be a joy to witness to others
about God’s love and grace. You will be able to serve God in
ways you never expected.
The absolute necessity of prayer must be like an indelible
image upon our hearts and minds. If we want to see God’s will
done on earth, we must do our part—we must pray. God
desires you to partner with Him in the great purpose of
reclaiming and redeeming the world.
Prayer is a sacred trust from God and the most important
activity of humanity.
A church is only as powerful as its prayer life.
Prayer is the greatest opportunity and privilege offered to a
person in Christ. It is for the entire body of Christ—not just an
elite group of “intercessory prayer warriors.” All of us have the
power to bring God’s will on earth so the world can be healed
and transformed by His grace.
Use the purpose and position God has given you to invite
heaven to intervene on earth. Prepare your heart, mind, soul,
and strength to agree that God’s will be done until “the
kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord
and of his Christ” (Revelation 11:15). Become a person of
prayer.
About the Author

Dr. Myles Munroe is an international motivational speaker,


best-selling author, educator, leadership mentor, and consultant
for government and business. Traveling extensively
throughout the world, Dr. Munroe addresses critical issues
affecting the full range of human, social, and spiritual
development. The central theme of his message is the
transformation of followers into leaders and the maximization of
individual potential.
Founder and president of Bahamas Faith Ministries
International (BFMI), a multidimensional organization
headquartered in Nassau, Bahamas, Dr. Munroe is also the
founder and executive producer of a number of radio and
television programs aired worldwide. He has a B.A. from Oral
Roberts University, an M.A. from the University of Tulsa, and
has been awarded a number of honorary doctoral degrees.
Dr. Munroe and his wife, Ruth, travel as a team and are
involved in teaching seminars together. Both are leaders who
minister with sensitive hearts and international vision. They are
the proud parents of two college graduates, Charisa and Chairo
(Myles, Jr.).
For Information on Religious Tourism
e-mail: [email protected]
1.800.224.3681
www.worship.bahamas.com

These inspirational quotes from best-selling author Dr. Myles


Munroe
on leadership, single living, marriage, and prayer can be applied
to your life in powerful and practical ways.
Keys for Leadership: ISBN: 978-1-60374-029-6 • Gift •160 pages
Keys for Living Single: ISBN: 978-1-60374-032-6 • Gift • 160
pages
Keys for Marriage: ISBN: 978-1-60374-030-2 • Gift • 160 pages
Keys for Prayer: ISBN: 978-1-60374-031-9 • Gift • 160 pages

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