Prayer Servants
This week, I was responding to someone's prayer request and started to type, "The prayer warriors are on it."
Just before I hit send, I felt a gentle check in my spirit.
I paused, erased the words, and almost rewrote the entire sentence. Then another phrase quietly rose within me:
Prayer servants.
That stopped me in my tracks.
What is a prayer servant?
What does that way of seeing ourselves imply?
The more I sat with it, the more it seemed to reflect the heart of Jesus. I doubt He would have described Himself as a warrior, especially in the way we often use that word today. The people of His day were looking for a warrior king, someone who would overthrow Roman oppression. Yet Jesus consistently revealed a different kingdom.
"The greatest among you shall be your servant."
That changes the atmosphere of prayer.
A prayer servant is not someone who rushes into battle armed with opinions, formulas, or predetermined solutions. A prayer servant first becomes still. Like Jesus, we seek only to do what we see the Father doing. We learn to abide. We listen before we speak. We receive before we release.
That kind of prayer requires trust. It requires surrender.
Instead of prescribing answers for someone else's life, we become available to God's heart for that person. Our role is not to control outcomes but to faithfully echo what He is already saying.
As I've continued to reflect on this, prayer itself has begun to change in my mind.
It feels far less performative. It is no longer an impressive speech or a beautifully crafted oration. Jesus warned against praying simply to be heard by others. Instead, He invited us into the secret place, the inner prayer closet, where there is no audience except the Father.
That is where a prayer servant is formed.
Perhaps this is also why Jesus' prayers for people were often so brief. He wasn't trying to convince God. He wasn't trying to impress the crowd. He simply spoke in agreement with what He had already received from the Father.
His words carried authority because they flowed from communion.
I wonder how our prayers would change if we spent just a little more time listening before speaking.
Maybe the deepest work of prayer isn't learning what to say.
Maybe it's learning how to hear.
This is one of the reasons we gather each weekday morning for Christian meditation. We aren't trying to master a technique or manufacture an experience. We are simply creating space to become quiet enough to notice God's presence, to listen for His voice, and to learn the posture of a prayer servant.
If that resonates with you, I'd love to invite you to join us Monday through Friday at 7:30 a.m CST. We spend time becoming still before God, allowing silence, Scripture, and attentive listening to shape the way we pray and the way we live.
The Zoom details are https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85171005489?pwd=cgFjezp8wzxXdNQ11muSOq64npzg3M.1.
Perhaps becoming a prayer servant begins with something wonderfully simple:
Be still.
Listen.
Then pray.
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