I. Introduction
Welcome to the Victory Church podcast and Sunday worship gathering.
Victory’s mission: reaching the lost, restoring the broken, reviving believers.
Joy and gratitude for being in God’s house where worship, prayer, the Word, and fellowship occur.
Emphasis that God’s grace enabled people to be present, overcoming hindrances.
II. The Nature and Purpose of Prayer
Prayer and the Word as central priorities at Victory Church.
Biblical commands to pray: “men ought always to pray,” “pray without ceasing,” “watch and pray,” “continue earnestly in prayer.”
Clarification: prayer is not a religious ritual but a relational conversation with a loving Father.
Prayer as sharing cares, dreams, concerns with God; Scripture as God sharing His thoughts and heart with us.
III. Reactive vs. Proactive Prayer
A. Reactive Prayer
Definition: responding to events, crises, and immediate needs after they happen.
Typical reactive requests: jobs, finances, housing, healing, family and school pressures.
Affirmation: these needs matter to God; believers should cast all cares on Him.
Problem: if this is the only kind of praying, discipleship and prayer life are out of alignment with God’s best.
B. Proactive Prayer
Definition: creating or shaping situations by praying God’s will in advance, not only reacting.
Example from the Lord’s Prayer: “Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven” as a proactive request.
Goal: move believers beyond crisis-only praying into kingdom-focused, forward-looking prayer.
IV. Acts 4 as a Model of Prayer
A. Context of Acts 4
Acts as early church history, showing the Spirit-empowered beginnings of the church.
Peter and John preaching, healing a crippled man, and provoking opposition from religious leaders.
Authorities command them not to speak or teach in the name of Jesus.
Connection to today: pressure in culture to silence biblical truth and the name of Jesus.
B. The Disciples’ Response
They return “to their own” (the church, fellow believers) when threatened.
Principle: where you turn in crisis reveals much about your heart.
They share the report as a prayer request and turn immediately to corporate prayer.
They pray in alignment with Scripture (Psalm 2) and God’s will, not just emotions.
C. Content of Their Prayer (Acts 4:24–31)
Acknowledge God as Creator and Sovereign Lord over heaven and earth.
Rehearse Scripture about nations raging and rulers opposing the Lord and His Christ.
Interpret persecution as part of God’s sovereign purpose in Christ’s suffering.
Reactive element: “Lord, look on their threats.”
Proactive element: ask for boldness to speak the Word, and for God’s hand to heal with signs and wonders in Jesus’ name.
Result: the place is shaken, all are filled with the Holy Spirit, and they speak God’s Word with boldness.
V. Praying with the Word and God’s Will
Call to pray not only from need or emotion but aligned with Scripture.
Examples of praying Scripture over needs (provision, healing, emotional and spiritual needs, relationships).
Recognition that God’s will includes timing; believers must be sensitive and obedient.
Emphasis: there is power when prayer and the Word are joined.
VI. From Problem to Launching Pad
Observation: in Acts 4, the crisis launches the church into deeper proactive prayer, not retreat.
Instead of praying primarily for safety and comfort, they pray for greater boldness and impact.
Application: believers today should ask God to use trials to produce testimony, messages, and greater influence for His glory.
VII. Call to a Proactive Kingdom Focus
A. For Truth and Witness in a Confused Culture
Culture tolerates generic “god talk” but reacts strongly to the exclusive claims of Jesus.
Expect opposition when living and speaking biblical truth, without being obnoxious or hypocritical.
The church must stand firm on Scripture, not be shaped by social media or worldly opinions.
B. For Local and Global Mission
Victory Church’s call: reach Providence and the nations through evangelism and missions.
Example: missions trips (Kenya, Sierra Leone, Liberia) and conferences to strengthen pastors and churches.
Appeal for proactive prayer for missions: bold preaching, anointing, signs and wonders, and lasting fruit.
C. For Revival and Awakening
Distinction: revival for the church (bringing believers back to life), awakening for the lost.
Invitation to pray for souls, discipleship, anointing, revival in churches, and awakening in the nation.
Desire to create cultures of discipleship, evangelism, missions, and deep engagement with Scripture.
VIII. Illustrations of Proactive Prayer in History and Life
Personal testimony: long season in temporary housing, choosing contentment and kingdom focus while trusting God’s timing.
Application of Matthew 6:33: prioritizing God’s kingdom and righteousness, trusting Him to add needed things.
Biblical example: Job praying for his friends and receiving double restoration.
Historical examples:
John Knox’s burden “give me Scotland or I die” and its influence.
David Brainerd’s fervent prayer for Native Americans and resulting impact.
William Tyndale’s martyrdom for translating Scripture and the later spread of English Bibles.
The Moravians’ 100-year prayer meeting and remarkable missionary sending.
IX. Practical Application and Invitation
Challenge: move beyond “needs-only” praying to kingdom-centered, proactive prayer.
Specific areas to pray proactively: personal walk, church, ministries, missions, national awakening, and social issues.
Encouragement to stay for times of corporate prayer, lifting up pastors, leaders, and global work.
Final appeal: cultivate a passion that cries, “Lord, give us souls, give us revival, use my life and this church for Your glory.”