10 Prayer Warriors Who Changed History

10 Prayer Warriors Who Changed History

Jared BrockToday I have a pleasure to welcome Jared Brock to Flowing Faith as a guest blogger. Jared is the author of A Year of Living Prayerfully, a humorous travel memoir about prayer. He is the cofounder of Hope for the Sold, an abolitionist charity that fights human trafficking one word at a time. Jared is happily married to his best friend, Michelle, whom he first kissed in the seventh grade.

Here’s Jared:

I recently traveled 37,000 miles around the world on a modern-day prayer pilgrimage. I met the Pope, danced with rabbis, visited monks, walked on coals, and revived my prayer life. I discovered a world of prayer traditions across the Judeo-Christian faith family, and dug into the history of our family’s greatest prayer warriors.

Here are ten I discovered along the way.

  1. Francis of Assisi

Francis, the patron saint of ecology, was a nature-loving monk, and his followers have founded dozens of hospitals and universities. He’s one of the few saints revered in all three major branches of Christianity.

I’m inspired by Francis’s boldness in prayer and action – in a time of enormous war and upheaval, Francis traveled to meet the Muslim sultan, in hopes of winning him to Jesus. While he didn’t succeed, he didn’t get executed either. In fact, the sultan so appreciated his boldness that Francis stayed for an entire year.

Takeaway: Where can you practice boldness in your life? Maybe it’s a conversation you’re putting off or a new chapter you’ve been making excuses for not moving forward.. Be bold and start today!

  1. Brother Lawrence

Lawrence was a monk who washed dishes and cooked meals, and tried to pray without ceasing. He became so famous for his habit that someone interviewed him, and published a little book called, The Practice of the Presence of God. The book hasn’t been out of print in over 300 years, with over 20 million copies in English alone.

Lawrence believed it was easy to be close to God in prayer – if you didn’t wander far from Him during the rest of the day. I discovered Lawrence’s home after many months of research, and the impact of his simple prayer philosophy has helped me – and millions of people – to constantly commune with Christ.

Takeaway: Find ways to connect the everyday to the eternal. When you wake up, pray about being alive in Christ. As you shower, ask God to cleanse you from unrighteousness. As you put on your clothes, put on the armor of God. As you walk or drive to work, pray about your spiritual journey.

  1. Teresa of Avila

Teresa is the Doctor of Prayer in the Catholic church – a high honor, especially for a woman born 500 years ago. I visited her simple monastery in Spain, just outside the beautiful walls of Avila.

Teresa believed we are all on a spiritual journey, and there are seven “levels” in the process, ranging from practicing humility to achieving ecstatic spiritual marriage. While the lower levels of prayer – including the humble recognition of God’s work in our life – is very helpful, things got a little crazy towards the end. Teresa was said to levitate. I tend to stick to her first few ideas, trying to see where God is at work in my life.

Takeaway: Think about the times during the day you could focus on God more often. When do you get distracted, and how can you incorporate God into your life in those times?

  1. Benedict of Nursia

This pious monk is considered the father of Western monasticism, and for good reason – he literally wrote the book on it. The Rule of Saint Benedict has served as a guidebook for millions of monastics throughout the centuries, famously summed up by the phrase “Ora et Labora” – pray and work.

The patron saint of monks and spelunkers built a dozen monasteries in his lifetime, but his last one was truly impressive: a hulking hilltop fortress called Monte Cassino. I’ve visited the massive stone fortress where Benedict died, and reflected on the impact of his prayer and work.

Benedict believed that prayer and work aren’t mutually exclusive, and that times of work and prayer can go together. Prayer infuses mission with meaning.

Takeaway: Instead of trying to fix your problems by work alone, start with prayer. Then, as you work, continue to see it as an offering or a constant supplication. Let your work and prayer be one.

  1. John of the Cross

The Christian life is beautiful, but it isn’t easy. In this life we will have trouble. John of the Cross was no exception. His level of devotion was so extreme that another group of monks kidnapped and imprisoned him, bringing him out for regular public floggings. It was during the desperate time that he wrote the epic poem Dark Night of the Soul. He eventually tore the hinges off his cell and escaped, and went on to found a handful of monasteries.

Like John of the Cross, and Mother Teresa many years later, I too struggle with dark nights of the soul. John’s life encourages me to weather those difficult times – to make Christ my rock and anchor in the storms of life.

Takeaway: Make Jesus your firm foundation. Rather than trying to fix or avoid our problems, take time to do the greater work in prayer.

  1. Brother Roger

Roger Schütz was 25 years old when World War II started, and he decided that Switzerland was too safe a place for any Christian to be during a time of war. So he bicycled to France.

One night he stopped in an almost-abandoned hilltop town called Taize, and an elderly woman invited him in for dinner. She asked him to stay in Taize, and he did. As the war progressed, Roger helped Jewish refugees flee from Nazi persecution.

As the years went on, more and more people started to visit Taize – today, almost 100,000 young people visit each year, for prayer and meditation. My wife and I visited Taize, and it was a wonderful experience. We prayed before breakfast, before lunch, and after supper, and each time of prayer started with 8 minutes of silence. Our goal was to “maintain inner silence in all things so as to dwell with Christ.”

Takeaway: Rather than always asking for things during prayer, set aside a moment to simply spend time with Jesus.

  1. John Wesley

Literally tens of millions of people are part of the Christian faith family because of the work of Wesley and his fellow ministers. The tiny preacher had a big mission – he’s famous for declaring that “the whole world is my parish.” I’ve had the opportunity to visit Wesley’s simple house, where I discovered a curious walk-in closet off his bedroom – his prayer room.

Wesley spent two hours in that little room every morning, and it became known as “The Powerhouse of Methodism.” I’ve had the opportunity to pray in that closet, using Wesley’s own Bible – he always prayed with an open Bible, as he was always seeking a word from the Lord.

Takeaway: As you read through the Scriptures, turn Bible verses into prayers and pray them back to God.

  1. George Muller

George Muller was a legendary prayer warrior – according to his autobiography, he had over 5000 requests answered on the day he prayed them. Muller started 117 schools and ran a group of orphanages in England that took care of over 10,000 boys. He “retired” at the age of 70 and became a traveling evangelist, logging over 200,000 before the days of planes.

Muller had five friends who were far from Christ, and he committed to prayer for them every day until they were part of God’s family. After a few months, the first man came to Christ. Within 10 years, two more had come to faith. After 25 years, the fourth man was saved.

But the fifth man was a holdout, so Muller continued to prayer for him every single day… for 63 years and 8 months. Muller eventually died, and before his coffin was placed in the soil, his fifth friend committed his life to Jesus.

Takeaway: This is called prevailing prayer – it’s a gut-it-out, long-term commitment to doing the hard work of “moving the hand of God by prayer alone.” Commit to praying for the long-term.

  1. Nikolaus Zinzendorf

The good Count Ludwig opened his vast estate to a group of Moravian refugees, and allowed them to start a village on his German property. The village was called Herrnhut, meaning “the Lord’s Watch.” Before long, they started fighting about theology and it got so bad that Zinzendorf made them sign a vow of unity and commitment to prayer. One thing led to another, and that prayer meeting ran 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, for over over hundred years straight.

I’ve visited Herrnhut, the tiny town that fuelled a massive missions movement. It was so inspiring to see what a small group of people can do, when fully devoted to God. I love a quote by Zinzendorf that sums up his life: “Preach the gospel, die, and be forgotten.”

Takeaway: That’s our calling – more of Him, less of us. As you pray, focus on thinking less of yourself and more on Christ and others.

  1. You?

I’ve had the opportunity to meet dozens of amazing prayer warriors on my journey. It’s been said that “each and every one of us could pray a prayer that could change the course of history.”

I know it sounds cliche, but it really is true. I believe it, because many of my closest friends were won to Christ through prayer. Perhaps, someday, your name will be added to this list.

Back to the railroad track – and I’m sure you know where this is going – our work is like pushing a heavy cart down an old track. But prayer is the steam engine that gives it real power.

Rather than trying to do it ourselves, let’s stand on the shoulder of giants and become prayer warriors in our generation. Our calling, like Benedict, is simple: pray and work. And somewhere, somehow, at some unknown intersection between prayer and work, God indwells our humble offering—God indwells us—and turns human actions into spiritual awakenings.

Who knows how it might influence the future?

Thanks, Jared!
Let us pray!

Gracious God,
We thank you and praise you
for sending us so many prayer warriors.
Help us to believe in the power of prayer
and practice it like we mean it.
Empower us to be your partners here on earth.
Fill us with your Spirit
and use us according to your plan.
In Jesus’ name,
Amen

Q4U: Who is your favorite prayer warrior? Do you consider yourself as a prayer warrior? Why/why not?

Be blessed, my fellow pilgrim, as you believe and practice the power of prayer!

Image courtesy of Jared Brock, design Mari-Anna Stålnacke.  Linking up today with Dance with Jesus, Faith-filled Fridays, and Faith Barista.

22 thoughts on “10 Prayer Warriors Who Changed History

  1. I love the one about John Wesley and his prayer closet – and praying with the open Word. My favorite prayer warrior is my mom. She prays for everyone coming and going. She is known far and wide for her intercession and always asks each person she talks with about the request they shared with her. That’s how I want to be.
    Thanks for sharing on Dance with Jesus link up today! I’m your neighbor!

    1. This is an emergency I ask all of you to pray to God for a vision of myself because I am in great distress of loosing my salvation for I have the darkness looming over me

  2. I think American historians need to make research on African pastors mostly Nigeria. Apostle Joseph Ago Babalola was prayer himself. He prayed till one of his knees pierced rock.

    1. I KNOW RIGHTTTT!!! Apostle Joseph Ayo* Babalola was amazing. My dad said resurrection of dead people was nothing to him. God truly used him to work wonders

  3. Dear Blogger.
    I thank God for you and I pass my earnest prayers to God to bless your ministry. I am very happy to meet people like you. It is a great job to expose people who are searching the Heavenly Father in hidden situations; those have been rewarded in presence of all. your work inspires others to be involved in such a great task deserved by God ( 1 Timothy 2 :1-2) ,as the same time you are rewarding and giving credit those great warriors who are searching the Great king.
    I further, need to have attachment with your blog and I am ready to share evidence based prayers if you allow me, or I am happy to being touch with you. Again and again may God multiply you works and give you strength.
    In Jesus Mighty name
    MAMMO ASSEFA from Ethiopia.

  4. if God sees better than we do and farther than we do, then the names of most men who touched and shook the Throne Room are not there, they don’t need to be there anyways, ………….., am not interest in the number of hours they prayed or the answers they got but what was it that drove them, may we be driven by the same thing and even much more, need i say more be driven by what drove Christ the LORD to His knees. Thanks and Remain Prayerful

        1. Oh Lord God please give the grace to become a prayer warrior, so that your name oh lord will be glorified in me.

  5. this really inspired me, reading about great men, I pray at least 7hrs daily and want to be part of a revival to will further draw great souls to God.

  6. I am so happy to have had the opportunity to read this publication
    I pray to be a prayer warrior for my generation even though I don’t know how possible this can be but I believe it’s possible with prayer

  7. Iam so blessed i pray that what move this me should also move me i want to be a prayer mechine God bless u

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