| PRAYERThe 
Mystery of IntercessionBy 
The 700 Club
CBN.com 
-- At some point in our lives, we all face situations where we don't know 
how to pray. Recently, Gordon Robertson sat down and had a chance to interview 
Pastor Jack Hayford, founder of The King's College and Seminary, about the mystery 
of intercession. And he offers helpful insights that will empower your prayer 
life.
 GORDON ROBERTSON: I want to relate a brief personal story. I was reading 
the New Testament one day, and the Holy Spirit just sort of whispered to me, `If 
you were with Jesus, if you were one of his disciples when he was on Earth, what 
would you ask him?' And, you know, I started to think, how do you do miracles 
and how did you walk on water and all those things. And then I was very gently 
reminded that his disciples, the one question they wanted was, `Teach us to pray. 
How do we pray?' I think that needs to be a question that every disciple of Christ 
asks. From your point of view, what is the best way to pray? What should we do? 
 JACK HAYFORD: I think there's two parts to it, Gordon. First, I think the 
Bible says that he that comes to God, believe that he is and that he's a rewarder 
of those that seek him. To believe the Lord wants to answer prayer. There is so 
much of a mind-set everywhere you go -- and amazingly, among hosts of believers 
-- that prayer is kind of like, `Well, God's going to do it anyway, but I'll kind 
of ask him to either hurry it up or maybe, you know, what difference do my prayers 
make?' I think a starting place is to recognize that if we don't pray, it's not 
going to happen. And it has nothing to do with God's heart or desire to act in 
our world. It's that he has made the terms. He said, `I'll act when you ask.' 
And it's not that he couldn't get along without us, but he's chosen to say, `You 
don't have the power. I've got the power, but you have the right to ask, so I'm 
telling you, ask.'  So the starting place is ask. And then in doing that, 
to draw on the energy and power of the Holy Spirit to do that asking because we 
need help to go beyond anything we can pray on our own.  GORDON ROBERTSON: 
It seems a great mystery to me that God seems to almost hold back until his children 
come to him and ask. It's sort of, you know, ask and you shall receive...  JACK 
HAYFORD: Right.  GORDON ROBERTSON: ...seek and you shall find. Knock and 
it shall be opened. And it's not until we initiate the relationship that he comes 
through and responds.  JACK HAYFORD: Well, you know, he has taken the boldest 
and most grand initiative in sending Jesus, in providing salvation and saying, 
`Now that's there for you.' And once we enter a new life, he says, `I'd like to 
grow you up now. I want you to learn this is the way this works. You're the kid, 
I'm the dad, and you ask and we'll start to grow into partnership.' God and sons 
and daughters is the name of the company -- and he's wanting to grow us up in 
him.  GORDON ROBERTSON: You've gotten a revelation about Romans 8:28. I 
know that's been oft quoted and oft repeated. Tell us about that.  JACK 
HAYFORD: Well, it's one of the most beautiful verses in the Bible. The Scripture 
saying, `All things work together for good for them that love the Lord are called 
according to his purpose.' (And we know that in all things God works for the good 
of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. Romans 8:28, 
NIV)  The tragedy with Romans 8:28 is the number of people that take it 
as a philosophical statement and say, `Well, you know, all things work together 
for good.' And it was never meant as a stand-alone verse. I've said -- and people 
look at you like you denied the virgin birth or something -- that Romans 8:28 
isn't true, unless you link it with the preceding two verses. And it's true of 
other portions of the Bible if you isolate it from its context.  Romans 
8:26 and 27 says, `We don't know how to pray in circumstances that transcend us. 
But the Holy Spirit will help us with prayers, with groanings that transcend our 
capacity.' (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 with groans 
that words cannot express. Romans 8:26, NIV)  He'll come alongside. He will 
take hold together with, literally, the Greek verb says that full partnership 
where he bears the burden and energizes the prayer. (And he who searches our hearts 
knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for these saints in 
accordance with God's will. Romans 8:27, NIV)  Oftentimes He gives direction 
and discernment as to how we ought to pray. And then, when we let the Holy Spirit 
help us in prayer, sometimes with the understanding, sometimes praying in the 
Spirit, that then, the Bible says, all things will work together for good. But 
they do not automatically just work out. That's another part of that thing. We 
want to escape responsibility. Say, `Well, you know, God will take care of it. 
I'll do my best and, you know, just cross my heart and hope to live.'  But 
the Lord says, `I want to you pray, and when it's beyond you, my Holy Spirit will 
help you.'  GORDON ROBERTSON: When I preach in front of audiences occasionally 
on intercessory prayer, I ask, `How many of you are intercessors?' And generally, 
I get a smattering of people to raise their hand. And then I say, `Well, Jesus 
was an intercessor -- is an intercessor, is our intercessor, and we're supposed 
to be like him.' So now how many of you want to be an intercessors? And then everybody 
says, `OK, now that I'm theologically educated, I can now properly respond.' But 
I don't think many people really understand those verses in Romans Chapter 8 from 
an experiential point of view, the groanings that cannot be uttered. How does 
one enter into that realm, where the Spirit comes alongside to help our inability 
to pray?  JACK HAYFORD: Gordon, it's just really a matter of passion. There 
is not some magic from heaven that you have to know how to do this and thereby, 
you become this awesome intercessor. In fact, the Bible using the word `groans 
that cannot be uttered.' Many of us believe, and I think it's true from passages 
in the Scripture, `I will pray with the Spirit, and I will pray with the understanding.' 
The Apostle Paul is inferring prayer in the Spirit there, but I believe it includes 
also just plain times that you are groaning out, and there's a cry from the inner 
person. And even when people just say, `Oh, my God,' and they're not just saying, 
`Oh, my God,' they're crying out that the heart of God reaches directly there, 
and the spirit of man, activated by the spirit of faith, the holy spirit of faith, 
touches the heart of God.  Now again, God is touched anyway, but he's confined 
himself to his own rules. And that's his right. He's said, `It's when you ask 
there will come answers.' And it is that responsibility to accept our place and 
to move in partnership. The Lord says, `Without me, you cannot. But without without 
you, I will not.' So he invites us and summons us to partnership in prayer, and 
then gives us the power to fulfill that by the help of the Spirit.  GORDON 
ROBERTSON: Is there another part of that "all things working together for good" 
where you can actually look at the hard times in your life as times where God 
is calling you into that kind of deep intercessory prayer to teach you the lesson 
that when the pressure comes and you groan in response to it -- that that is part 
of the working together for good?  JACK HAYFORD: It is. In fact, the ensuing 
verse, Romans 8:29, says, `It's by this means that we become conformed to the 
image of Jesus, that there is a process in the trial.' (For those God foreknew 
he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that he might 
be the firstborn among many brothers. Romans 8:29, NIV)  God didn't make 
the problem to say, `I'm going to beat up on you, so you have to pray and then 
I'll do a good thing.'  GORDON ROBERTSON: Right.  JACK HAYFORD: The 
problems come in the world. `Man is born to trouble as the sparks fly upward,' 
Job says. Jesus said, `In the world, you'll have tribulation.' Trouble comes. 
The Holy Spirit shows us how to pray. God calls us to pray. As we pray, the power 
of God enters the situation and begins to transform the situation. And in the 
middle of that, we are being transformed. So there's no question. That's why sometimes 
people say, `Well, God must have made the problem because I grew out of it.' But 
God didn't say, `I'll make problems to make you grow.' He says, `I'll show you 
the way you grow through learning the passion and the power and pathway of prayer.' 
 GORDON ROBERTSON: Amen. He's not the author of temptation, but he does 
see us through it and there's nothing that he's given us that we can't escape. 
Well, in addition to being an intercessor, you're also a tremendous worship leader. 
You write songs that really get you right into the presence of God. And you've 
come up with a new book, "Worship 
His Majesty." And I think in addition to the intercessory prayer movement, 
we're now going to see it linked up with a new movement in worship. Tell us about 
that. What do you see happening in that realm?  JACK HAYFORD: Gordon, the 
two are so immediately approximate, and as you mentioned at the onset of our talk, 
they said, `Lord, teach us to pray.' And he said, `You pray this way.' And what 
he says, `First, you worship God, our Father who art in heaven, holy be your name.' 
Worship lays the foundation to then, `thy kingdom come, thy will be done.' There's 
the introduction and the welcome of the kingdom power and working of God in our 
world situation. So worship is intended by Jesus' own directive to be linked to 
prayer. And my book "Worship 
His Majesty" is intended to focus on the tremendous joy of worship -- it is 
so clearly apparent where worship renewal is taking place. I would like people 
to not just get excited about worship, but to see how pivotally fundamental and 
foundational it is to the staging of the Lord's impacting every area of our life 
-- our congregation's life, our community life -- because we see the relationship 
between invoking the kingdom power through welcoming the presence of the king. More 
from Jack Hayford Send 
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