Any Day Now Blog

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America: Freedom removed

January 27, 2021

Biden Regime Moves Swiftly to Impose Communist Agenda

by John D. Guandolo

Having brought down the American Republic by unlawfully seizing Executive and Legislative power, the communists and their jihadi/globalist cabal now control the U.S. federal government.

This regime is placing communists, jihadis, and anti-American atheists in the Cabinet, and in key positions throughout the regime.

The current regime is wasting no time in moving to ensure liberty is snuffed out before Patriots can rally to the cause.

In the first five (5) business days in office, the Biden/Harris regime has already moved to do the following:

*Restricted efforts by ICE to remove criminals illegally inside the United States from local communities

*Included people illegally inside the United States in the U.S. Census in violation of the law

*Cancelled the Keystone project and rejoined the U.S. to the Paris Climate Accords

*Terminated all construction/funding for a wall at the U.S. Southern border

And all of the above – and more – took place on Day One. Mr. Biden also…

*Signed numerous orders which strengthens the use of the “covid pandemic” as a tool of oppression against the American people, including the use of military troops

*Expanded tax-payer funded social programs including food assistance, unemployment insurance, and other programs further socializing and bloating/bankrupting the federal government

*Is moving to make the District of Columbia (Washington, D.C. for those of us who went to public school) a state in the United States in violation of Articles I, IV, and others of the U.S. Constitution

*Reversed the ban on transgenders in the military and opened the doors nationally and internationally to more abortions, many of which will be increasingly tax-payer funded

The current regime dubs those who speak out about injustices – voter fraud, abuse of power, and the like – as “domestic terrorists.” It will not be long before they begin rounding people up as was done in the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, and under Mao’s rule. If you think that is “overboard” you do not understand where this is heading.

Make no mistake, all efforts by Patriots should be considered “counter-revolutionary” since the enemies of liberty have unlawfully and unconstitutionally seized power. Those who have sworn an oath to “protect and defend” have a duty to obey only lawful orders which conform to the moral standard of the founding principles. See our article HERE for more on that.

While this situation appears grave, there is great hope. Local citizens working together to identify and root out hostile actors from their LOCAL communities can, one county at a time, create strongholds for liberty from which we can grow liberty.

UTT is ready to help your community. The time is now. Get trained and get in the war or fund the war effort.

 UTT 

About JG

John Guandolo is a US Naval Academy graduate, served as an Infantry/Reconnaissance officer in the United States Marines and is a combat veteran, served as a Special Agent in the FBI from 1996-2008, and was recruited out of the FBI by the Department of Defense to conduct strategic analysis of the Islamic threat. He is the President and Founder of Understanding the Threat (UTT).
https://www.understandingthethreat.com/biden-regime-moves-swiftly-to-impose-communist-agenda/

We Are Under His Wings – An Encouragement

WE ARE UNDER HIS WINGS–AN ENCOURAGEMENT

Lord, thank You that You care for each and every one of us. Please help our hearts to be surrendered to You.

 

Today of all days I should not be writing an article. Everything is falling apart. The sun seems to have hidden itself. My eyes are clouded with tears.

Things aren’t going well for me lately. It’s hard to believe a solution is possible. To add to this, the nation I live in is under attack. The future feels hazy and unpredictable.

As these things pervade my mind today, I begin moping around the house. With my head down I walk past my son’s room. That’s when I hear a familiar sound. My son’s bird is happily whistling. I walk into the room and immediately he starts singing, “I love you, I love you, I love you.” In an instant my heart melts.

I pick up Casper, who is a beautiful all-white cockatiel, and take him into the living room with me. Right away he starts singing as he walks over to my feet. You see, Casper has a habit most people would find strange. Even the veterinarian thinks it’s unusual. Casper’s weird habit is that he adores feet! The moment he sees my feet, he rushes over and begins spreading his wings over them. He hovers gently and methodically as he sings, “I love you, I love you, I love you.” Next, he kisses my feet and rubs his soft head on them. After a minute or two, he paces back and forth as if guarding my feet from approaching enemies. Then it’s back to hovering over my feet with his wings, while he sings.

 

Today, as I watch this unfold, I begin to cry because I realize Casper’s actions are a reminder of something that supersedes and overcomes all the problems in my life and nation right now. Psalm 91 immediately comes to mind, especially the verse that says, “He will cover you with his feathers, and under his wings you will find refuge.” Like Casper’s wings that hover over my feet, I am suddenly reminded that Jesus has all my problems under HIS FEET. Jesus offers comfort to me in my darkest hour.  As Zephaniah 3:17 says, “he will rejoice over me with singing.” Jesus guards my heart and life. He takes me under his wings and gives me shelter, much like a bird does for its babies.

But there’s even more to this and it’s seen in the garment that Jesus would have worn during his time on earth. All Jewish males were commanded to wear a prayer shawl, known as a tallit (Numbers 15:37-41).  This rectangular shawl would have laid on the shoulders of Jesus. There are four corners to the tallit which are called wings. Hanging from the wings are fringes called tzitzit. The tzitzit are knotted and twisted in a special way to symbolize God’s commandments.

The tallit becomes a secret shelter for the person wearing it when they place it over their head. The sides and wings of the shawl become walls of protection around the wearer. Another name for the tallit is “little tabernacle.” It is under this little tabernacle with wings that one dwells with God and takes refuge through prayer. Psalm 91 tells us that, “Whoever dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty.” It is under the shadow of the tallit’s wings that one finds rest. Jesus is the living embodiment of the tallit and his wings surround us with deliverance.

During a Jewish wedding, the groom will cover the bride with his prayer shawl (tallit). This is a reminder that she is under his wings and protection. It’s also a reminder that they will dwell under the commandments of God. In addition, the wedding canopy (chuppah) will often be covered by a large tallit, symbolizing this same concept. The couple is married under this canopy which symbolizes their union with God and his sovereignty over their marriage.

As believers we are the Bride of Christ. Because of this, we too are under the protection of our Groom’s wings. When we are troubled, we must take refuge in Him. We don’t need to have a tallit to do this, but it’s a beautiful reminder of His love and protection.

Jesus most certainly wore a tallit, and it’s referenced beautifully in the story of the woman who had a bleeding condition that persisted for 12 years. This woman had sought many treatments, but to no avail. In fact, the condition grew worse. Her last hope was Jesus.

Even though Jewish law declared she was unclean due to her bleeding issue (Leviticus 15:25-27), she reached out for Jesus’ cloak, which would have been his tallit. The key to understanding this lies in Matthew 9:20-22 when it says, “Just then a woman, who had been subject to bleeding for twelve years, came up behind Him and touched the hem of his garment.”

This word translated as “hem” is actually referring to the fringes of his tallit. These fringes (tzitzit) would have hung from each corner (wing) of Jesus’ garment. The woman simply reached for one of these fringes/tassels. Immediately Jesus felt power leaving him. This is amazing when you consider this verse from Malachi 4:2, NLT which says, “But for you who fear my name, the Sun of Righteousness will rise with healing in his wings.”

Though things are difficult right now, there is healing in HIS WINGS. Like the woman with the bleeding issue, we just have to reach out. The fringes of the tallit represent the Word of God. The wings represent taking refuge in Him through prayer and worship. We need all these things to receive healing in our lives and nation. Like Exodus 19:4 says, “You have seen what I did to the Egyptians. You know how I carried you on eagles’ wings and brought you to myself.”

God cared for the nation of Israel like an eagle cares for her babies as seen in Deuteronomy 32:10-11 (NIV).

“In a desert land he found him, in a barren and howling waste. He shielded him and cared for him; he guarded him as the apple of his eye, like an eagle that stirs up its nest and hovers over its young, that spreads its wings to catch them and carries them aloft.”

God guarded the nation of Israel like a mother eagle. He hovered over them. The word for hovered used in the scripture is the Hebrew verb rachaph (Strong’s 7363). This word can also mean flutter. It is used twice in reference to God. The other place is in Genesis 1:2 which describes the spirit of God moving across the waters and hovering over the deep.

When Casper hovers over my feet I am reminded that God does the same thing for our nation. He stands guard over our land and people. By the way, do you know what Casper does if I try to touch him when he’s guarding my feet? He swiftly charges forward and moves in with a swift bite! Imagine how God feels when the enemy touches the apple of his eye!

God can use his creation to remind us of his promises. He used my son’s pet bird to bring new life into my spirit. Suddenly everything wasn’t falling apart. My heart was filled with joy. But most importantly, the sun was shining– or should I say, the SON was shining. The next time you feel like the wind has been knocked out of you, let Him be the wind beneath your wings.

I’ll leave you with one last thing– a picture of Casper’s wings–do you notice how they are shaped like a heart? I also included a picture of Casper with my prayer shawl (tallit).

 

Angela Rodriguez. 67owls.com100trumpets.com (Photo Credit: Unsplash.)

WHAT DO WE DO WHEN IT APPEARS EVIL WON THE DAY?

https://ifapray.org/blog/what-do-we-do-when-it-appears-evil-won-the-day/
Lord, we choose to trust in You with all your heart; and lean not on our own understanding. We make the decision to seek Your will in all we do, and You said You would He would show us which path to take.

Habakkuk was written during a day in which the prophet saw violence, lawlessness, and injustice go unpunished. Sound familiar? Habakkuk questioned God’s justice as I know many of us are doing right now.

“How long, Lord, must I call for help, but you do not listen? Or cry out to you, “Violence!” but you do not save? Why do you make me look at injustice? Why do you tolerate wrongdoing? Destruction and violence are before me; there is strife, and conflict abounds. Therefore, the law is paralyzed, and justice never prevails. The wicked hem in the righteous, so that justice is perverted (Hab 1:1-4).

That Scripture sounds like it could have been written today. Habakkuk questioned God, because it seemed evil had won the day—as it feels now.

I have had friends say since the election, “It will be a long time before I can pray again.” But do we stop praying because God didn’t answer our prayers in the way and time-table we thought He should?

For My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways My ways, says the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts (Is 55:8-9)

Several years ago, my pastor passed away from cancer. Only in his fifties, it was a shocking and premature death. He had stood in faith—and the man had strong faith. He had written books on healing and held miracles services in which many people had been healed. And yet he wasn’t—at least here on earth.

The outcome wasn’t what we had prayed and expected. As a result, it shipwrecked many who said, “If he couldn’t get healed, we certainly can’t.”

Wrong answer then and now.

Now is when we must grow roots downward.

Let your roots grow down into him, and let your lives be built on him. Then your faith will grow strong in the truth you were taught, and you will overflow with thankfulness (Col 2:7).

At this time, we need to go back to the Bible to remember who God is and what He has done. Let us not forget who He is:

  1. He is a God of justice.
  2. He said the wicked will not go unpunished.
  3. He is also long-suffering and merciful.
  4. But when His judgement comes…and it will…it will be swift.
  5. He hears the cry of His people.

But what happens when it seems He hasn’t?

I was reminded today of the much-quoted Scripture 2 Chronicles 7:14, “If my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray,” In my opinion we did that. But a friend reminded me the verse didn’t stop there. It also says we are to turn from our wicked ways.

When Nineveh was delivered in biblical days, it was because the entire nation fasted, prayed and repented. America is still a divided land of those who seek after God, those who want to remain neutral and those who seek to remove Him. Many of us had prayed for divine deliverance. Repentance and revival come usually in one of two ways. By supernatural divine intervention that brings the fear or the Lord or by oppression and persecution of the Church. It appears we are headed into the latter.

We have seen many Christian leaders and believers who have abdicated their positions of authority and chosen to remain silent in the face of evil. That happened in the day of Hitler and we see the tragic results. We need to learn from that tragedy. Will we continue to remain silent and say, “This must be God’s will?” Was it God’s will when Satan deceived Adam and Eve and gained rulership of the earth? When Hitler exterminated the Jews? Or the many other acts of ungodly leaders? Just because something happens, doesn’t mean it was His will.

Some have immediately embraced the new leadership thinking it will bring unity. I cannot congratulate an administration that TOOK office in every sense of the word.

But I can and should pray for them. But how?

First, I cannot pray for their success if they work to force ungodly mandates back into law. I cannot align with evil.

But I can pray:

  • That they will walk and govern by the fear of the Lord which is the beginning of wisdom (Prv 9:10).
  • That they will govern according to righteousness and godly justice.
  • That America will not be forced to take part in the unfruitful works of darkness, but instead we would expose them (Eph 5:11).
  • That God will deliver us from evil (Mt 6:13).
  • That they will come to their senses and escape from the trap of the devil, who has taken them captive to do his will (2 Tm 2:26)

And when I don’t know how to pray, I can pray in the spirit. “In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans” (Rom 8:26).

This isn’t the first time in history that people have waited to see God’s deliverance. We must not give up hope because He said He would deliver.

But we also need to remember that when Jesus lived on the earth, the people expected him to deliver them from the evil leadership of Rome. That wasn’t His goal. He came to deliver them from sin.

His plan and goal have never changed. Do we continue to pray for justice and deliverance from evil? Yes. But more importantly, may we press in to pray for repentance and revival not only in America but around the world. And may we not remain silent in the face of evil.

 

Lord, we choose to trust in You with all your heart; and lean not on our own understanding. We make the decision to seek Your will in all we do, and You said You would He would show us which path to take. I will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from which comes my help. My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth. He will not allow our feet to be moved for He neither sleeps nor slumbers. Thank You Lord that You are our keeper. You said You would preserve from all evil and preserve our soul.

Help us see from Your perspective. Give us eyes to see and ears to hear. Lord, we pray for our governmental leaders that they will serve with righteousness. We pray that evildoers will be thwarted and the wicked will not go unpunished. We pray for courage for those in leadership to stand up for righteousness and justice. You said when the righteous are exalted the people rejoice. May the righteous be exalted Lord and evildoers removed and may we continue to seek Your face and turn from our wicked ways.

 

Karen Hardin is a literary agent, author, and intercessor. Her work has appeared in USA Today, World Net Daily, Intercessors For America, Charisma, CBN.com, The Elijah List, etc. To order her new book: “INFECTED: How to Stop the Global Spread of Rage, Deception and Insanity” click here. To join the city-by-city prayer movement to save our nation go to: www.city-by-city.org. For additional information on her ministry, business or to sign up for her prophetic blog go to: www.karenhardin.com or you can contact her at www.prioritypr.org.

Is It Wrong to Love My Country? Patriotism and the Bible

https://afa.net/the-stand/faith/2018/01/is-it-wrong-to-love-my-country-patriotism-and-the-bible/

(Editor’s Note: This was posted on The Stand in January 2018. It still holds true today and may be even more timely in today’s cultural climate.)

It might seem shocking to some people that a concept like “nationalism” or “patriotism” would be controversial in America. However, when a country is as politically polarized as ours, everything seems controversial. A nation that is splitting apart into hostile and warring factions is going to argue about even the most basic ideas. 

These controversies intrude not only into family discussions around the Thanksgiving table but also into many church discussions in the Sunday school classroom. After all, Christians in America are Americans, too. 

Is it wrong for Christians to love their country? Can they be patriotic? Are such sentiments a manifestation of idolatry or, at best, a worldly attachment to a temporal entity? 

Of course, before we decide whether or not it is appropriate for a Christian to engage in it, we should make sure we understand what “it” is. 

The word patriotism has a long etymological history, dating back to the Roman republic. However, its current usage is fairly simple, meaning “love for or devotion to one’s country” (Merriam-Webster). 

Nationalism is a bit more complex. The word includes the idea of patriotism but begins with something even deeper: “a sense of national consciousness” (Merriam-Webster). In order to love one’s country, there first has to exist a something to love. There has to be a sense of “we” that is distinct from a sense of “them” – i.e., the people who aren’t “we.” 

Now that we have the basics down, let’s examine the key questions. In this process, I’m going to start small and work my way up to the concept of nationalism. 

The way we are 

Humans are social beings. Not only were we created for relationship with God, we were created to relate to other human beings as an expression of that primary affiliation. After creating Adam, God said in Genesis 2, “It is not good for the man to be alone; I will make him a helper suitable for him” (vs. 18). 

Of course, the creation of Eve not only doubled the number of people on earth, it established an entirely new dynamic; the more individuals that were added to the human race, the more complex that dynamic became. Think of it this way: A single man shipwrecked on a deserted island is different than two men being shipwrecked. With two, suddenly it matters who makes decisions affecting, say, the supply of rainwater or food. Questions arise over issues like ownership of property or division of labor. And when one woman is added…well, you get the idea. 

So it is no surprise that, as communities of people in human history became larger, the complexity of relationships grew. Where customs might have sufficed when a group was small, laws became necessary when the group was large. The patriarch of a family might give way to a chieftain, in turn giving way to a king ruling through a bureaucracy. Etc. 

Now, inside these larger communities, there is a natural affinity for those with whom we are the closest. The tendency for most people is to give to those for whom we have a natural bond. This is why Jesus said, “For if you love those who love you, what reward do you have? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? If you greet only your brothers, what more are you doing than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same?” (Matthew 5:46-47). Jesus understood that the human tendency is to be generous to family and friends. This is not evil; it is natural. This closeness is the glue that holds societies together. Love and compassion create a potent union between a husband and wife; the natural love between parents and children creates a powerful bond unifying the family; strong families produce vibrant communities; these larger groups generate a stable and thriving nation. 

No sane Christian asks the question, “Is it OK to love my family?” God designed us to love them. The teachings of Jesus assume that this is the way things naturally are, such as when He states that even the wicked “know how to give good gifts to [their] children” (Luke 11:13). This natural love is expressed by devotion, loyalty, and sacrifice. 

The Christian is called to make sure he or she excels in this kind of love. For example, in the famous marriage passage in Ephesians 5: 25-33, husbands are commanded to “love their own wives as their own bodies.” This love is expressed when the husband “nourishes and cherishes” his wife; he is to sacrifice for her “just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her.” 

The Bible takes this responsibility so seriously that Paul says, “[I]f anyone does not provide for his own, and especially for those of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever” (1 Timothy 5:8). 

Drawing a larger circle 

In the same way, then, why would someone suggest that it is wrong to love one’s nation? Isn’t a nation merely an aggregate of thousands of families that naturally love each other? I am called to love my neighbor as myself (Mark 12:31). Do I draw the line in my neighborhood only, or expand it to include my nation? 

What does that love look like? Surely, it would include the vision and hard work necessary to better my nation and make it prosperous! If we were talking about building a business, would we even question such work? We would expect the founder of a business to have a vision, build it to last, protect it, and make it profitable. A business is a heart-and-soul endeavor, expressing the creativity God has placed in those fashioned in His image. 

This is not idolatry. In the parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14-30), for example, there is no rebuke of the servants that invested well and prospered the master’s business. In fact, the opposite is true. These faithful servants were praised. 

So why is that different from Christians loving their nation and trying to build it the best they can? Are we not to glorify God in everything we do (1 Corinthians 10:31), at school, work, in marriage, family – and beyond? If love for family includes devotion, loyalty, and sacrifice, why shouldn’t it also include love for nation? 

The Bible makes clear that love for the people that make up someone’s nation is just as normal and natural as love for family. David showed concern for the spiritual life of his countrymen, whom he calls “my people” (Psalm 59:11). The prophet Jeremiah mourns the fate of his countrymen as well, saying, “Behold, listen! The cry of the daughter of my people from a distant land” (Jeremiah 8:19). 

Who can forget the powerful sentiments expressed by the apostle Paul, lamenting the rejection of Christ by unbelieving Jews: “I have great sorrow and unceasing grief in my heart. For I could wish that I myself were accursed, separated from Christ for the sake of my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh, who are Israelites” (Romans 9:2-4). 

Paul did not think it a strange thing that his own heart broke for his “kinsmen according to the flesh,” nor that he would have sacrificed himself for their sake if he could have brought them to Christ. 

We are on solid biblical ground to assert that it is normal, natural, and pleasing to God that we love our country and the people in it and that we seek the benefit of those who live in it. 

Biblical limitations and expansions 

However, there are two additional, very important biblical considerations to take into account. 

First, God has set limits to human affection, prohibiting the exaltation of natural love to a place that supersedes love for Him. 

I said earlier that, not only were we created for relationship with God, we were created for relationships with other human beings as an expression of that primary affiliation. That is the proper order of things; reversing it is idolatry. 

In fact, Jesus made this a test of true discipleship, because natural bonds of love and devotion can tempt the Christian to spiritual infidelity. He said, “He who loves father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me; and he who loves son or daughter more than Me is not worthy of Me” (Matthew 10:37). The person who loves family more than Christ will eventually abandon Him; the person who loves Christ more than family will remain faithful, even when faced with family betrayal and death (vv. 21, 34-36). 

The same is true for love of country. The Christian must always love God enough to refuse complicity with national and cultural evil. How many white Christians, rather than standing against the evil of Jim Crow laws, instead embraced the wickedness of racism in the South? How many Christians in Germany embraced the hell-inspired nationalism of Nazism, rather than reject it because of devotion to Jesus? 

Second, God has called the Christian to go beyond the smaller circle of natural love to the unlimited circle of supernatural love. 

While there is nothing wrong – and everything right – with love for family and friends, this is to be enlarged in the Christian life by an ever-expanding generosity. Such love serves as an expression of God’s love. After all, divine blessing is motivated by unmerited grace. You don’t have to be a part of the “insider” group to receive from God. 

Jesus said the Father “causes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous” (Matthew 5: 45). 

Remember what Jesus said in Matthew 5:46-47, that if Christians only love those who are close to them, “what reward do you have?” Unbelievers love those inside the smaller circle. If you only do the same, “what more are you doing than others?” What’s so supernatural about your life if you restrict your love to family and friends? What evidence is there that God indwells you? 

There’s even more. Jesus challenges His people to bless the people in the larger circle without thought of repayment! He said: “When you give a luncheon or a dinner, do not invite your friends or your brothers or your relatives or rich neighbors, otherwise they may also invite you in return and that will be your repayment. But when you give a reception, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed, since they do not have the means to repay you; for you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous” (Luke 14:12-14). 

Expanding this to our discussion of love of country, I think this means the Christian should consider helping even those outside the borders of their own nation. Certainly, this includes the preaching of the gospel in obedience to the Great Commission, but wouldn’t it also include giving aid to work that meets physical needs as well? I think it absolutely does. 

It would be strange to hear a Christian insist that we should not love our country, as it becomes clear in the New Testament that the love that characterizes the life of the Christian is not to have limits. That limitless circle would, by definition, include our nation – and beyond.

HOW TO INTERCEDE FOR LEADERS YOU DON’T LIKE

HOW TO INTERCEDE FOR LEADERS YOU DON’T LIKE

https://ifapray.org/blog/how-to-intercede-for-leaders-you-dont-like/

Father, help us to love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us- like it says in Your Word.

Have you been wondering why you should intercede for people you don’t like? Have you been at a loss for words for HOW on earth to pray for people whom hate God and hate everything He stands for?

If so, I want to encourage you today with the Word of God—and equip you to pray in power even for people you don’t like.

First, why should you pray for people you don’t like?

This is the easiest question we address today: we pray for people we don’t like because Jesus commanded that we should. For example, in Matthew 5:43-48, Jesus told us:

“You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven; for He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust.

For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? And if you greet your brethren only, what do you do more than others? Do not even the tax collectors do so? Therefore you shall be perfect, just as your Father in heaven is perfect.”

The Word of God is clear that we should pray for people we don’t like—even for people who persecute us. But why? WHY would the Lord command us to do such a thing?

The answer is twofold:

  1. According to Matthew 5:43-48, obeying God in this area makes us like Him. After all, each and every one of us were God’s enemies before we gave our lives to Jesus. Yet, God in His mercy forgave us. We deserved to die in our sins, but Jesus gave His own life for us while we were yet sinners (Romans 5:8); while we were still the enemies of God.
  2. We are to pray for people we don’t like because our prayers open the door on the earth for God to move.

Psalm 115:16 tells us: “The heaven, even the heavens, are the Lord’s; but the earth He has given to the children of men.”

This means that the Lord has delegated stewardship of the earth to us. Jesus has ultimate authority, but He has made us His “middle-managers,” if you will. And since He has delegated stewardship over the earth to us, placing us in authority over it, He needs us to pray and ask Him to move in order for Him to have permission to move on the earth. (For more about the authority delegated to us, read President Biden’s Administration and the Sovereignty of God.)

This is why your prayers are so important, even when you’re praying for someone you don’t like.

But you don’t have to pray the same way for the ungodly as you do for the righteous—and that’s a big key to effective prayer.

When you’re praying for the righteous, you can and should pray for all the blessings to come into their lives that God promises to the righteous! After all, they meet the conditions! Anyone who is obeying God has the right by covenant to receive all of God’s blessings!

But people who are not obeying God do not meet the conditions to receive His blessings. For those people, therefore, we must pray differently. We pray:

  1. For them to be saved and give their lives to Jesus, for it is not God’s will that any should perish but that all should come to repentance.
  2. We ask the Lord to change their hearts and make them aware of their need for Him.
  3. We ask Him to convict them of their sin; to show them Jesus, so they will know what righteousness looks like; and to convict them of judgment, showing them that there is no hope or future in their sin.
  4. We ask God to loose Heaven into their lives and that He would change their hearts so that such a blessing is even possible.
  5. We pray that the Lord would bind them and prevent them from doing evil.

John 16:7-11 says this:

“Nevertheless I tell you the truth. It is to your advantage that I go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you; but if I depart, I will send Him to you. And when He has come, He will convict the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment: of sin, because they do not believe in Me; of righteousness, because I go to My Father and you see Me no more; of judgment, because the ruler of this world is judged.”

Holy Spirit’s job on the earth is to convict the world—to convict both sinners and the righteous—of their sin; of what righteousness looks like and why they need to be righteous; and to convict them of judgment. Therefore, our prayers along these three points release Him and give Him permission to work in this way among the wicked.

Additionally, however, we also need to pray to bind evil. As an intercessor for the great nation of America, this means:

  • We ask the Lord to give us righteous leaders.
  • We ask the Lord to remove any leader who is not leading the country into the ways of God.
  • We ask the Lord to restore the great Restrainer of evil—Holy Spirit Himself—into our governments at every level (including at the local level), so that evil will be restrained and prevented.
  • We ask the Lord to compel our leaders to walk in the ways of God and speak the words of God, even if they have zero intention of doing so.

Remember the story of Balaam in Numbers 22? Balaam was paid by a wicked ruler to speak curses over Israel. However, the Angel of the Lord—whom the Bible indicates is the preincarnate Christ—came personally to stand against Balaam, saying: “Behold, I have come out to stand against you, because your way is perverse before Me” (Numbers 22:32b). In this passage, someone who claimed to be from God was exposed by the Lord Himself as walking in perversity, and God Himself came to stand against him!

However, the story didn’t stop there. The next day, even though Balaam’s way was perverse, God placed His own words in Balaam’s mouth and he spoke a major blessing over the people of Israel—despite that fact that he had begun his journey and been paid to do harm to God’s people!

Wow! What a story!

We actually see scenarios repeated over and over like this in the New Testament. One after the other, pagan kings rise up in the nations around Israel—but God uses them to accomplish His own purposes toward Israel. Yes, sometimes those purposes are for discipline. Sometimes, however, God uses the pagan kings for the preservation of His people … and sometimes He converts them.

The ways of God are perfect, and they are past finding out.

This doesn’t mean we should ever agree with lies or injustice.

We should never turn a blind eye to evil. We should never “look the other way” and ignore anything that goes against the Word of God.

As it says in Isaiah 8:20: “To the law and to the testimony! If they do not speak according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.” We have to remember this: our convictions, prayers, and conversations must remain 100% aligned with the entirety of God’s inerrant, infallible Word—the Bible.

But it does mean that we must pray for our leaders, for our family and friends, and for everyone else—whether we like them or not.

We must ask the Lord to accomplish His purposes in them and through them. We must remember:

  • That God loves sinners as much as He loves His children;
  • That the heart of God breaks whenever He sees anyone caught up in sin; therefore, we must pray in sympathy with His heart so that His plans can come forth.

When we see things from God’s perspective, it suddenly becomes easier to pray that His Kingdom would come and His will would be done on earth—even in the lives of people we don’t like—just like His will is done in Heaven. When we are willing to admit that God can work even the plots of men out for the good of His people and His Kingdom, then it becomes easier to pray along those lines.

Again, the people we are praying for don’t have to have any intention of honoring God in order for God to use them. God is able to use people, nations, and kingdoms for His purposes even when the people are completely unaware that He is doing so.

So beloved, in these trying times, I encourage you: Don’t fall into sin by refusing to pray for those who hate you. Let’s respond rightly, in accordance with God’s Word, whether you are faced with a neighbor you don’t like, a friend who mistreats you, or a national situation or leader you’d rather not pray for.

Anything less is rebelling against God.

The truth is that we, as intercessors are not accountable for the actions of people for whom we pray. However, we are accountable for responding rightly, and for obeying God in personal holiness by yielding to His command to pray.

Therefore, beloved, if you are dealing with someone who hates you, please understand that God loves them too. Pray that righteousness and justice, which are the foundations of God’s throne, would be established in your life and in the lives of every person around you. Pray for every person and situation in sympathy with the heart of Jesus, that Jesus would no longer be grieved.

And as we pray, let’s believe God together that He really meant it when He said:

“And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28).

Check out this warning about not praying from leaders from an IFA intercessor: I’M NOT GOING TO MAKE THE SAME MISTAKE AGAIN

Jamie Rohrbaugh is an author and speaker who equips people to walk in the manifest presence and power of God. Jamie blogs for a global readership at FromHisPresence.com, where she writes about radical prayer, the prophetic word, the supernatural lifestyle, inner healing, and Kingdom wealth. She is a frequent contributor to Charisma Magazine, The Elijah List, Spirit Fuel, and various other ministry outlets. You can download her free ebook containing 555 names of God for prayer and worship here(Photo Credit: Unsplash.)

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