It is better to pray with others

Dr. Roberto Miranda

Author

Dr. Roberto Miranda

Summary: King Jehoshaphat faced a great crisis and humbled himself before God, seeking wisdom and help. He also proclaimed a fast for all of Judah, involving the entire nation in prayer. This shows the power of prayer in community and the importance of having prayer partners to fight life's battles together. Individual prayer is important, but corporate prayer can give encouragement and strength to keep going. Joining people of faith can help us more effectively undertake the race of faith and build a great bonfire of faith together.

When King Jehoshaphat was confronted with the greatest crisis of his life, he recognized his great fear and his inability to deal with the situation adequately, and instead of trying to find his own solutions, he cried out to the Lord and appealed to the promises in his Word. .

Jehoshaphat's decision to humble himself and seek wisdom from God is inspiring and exemplary. But his personal search for divine help did not stop there. In addition, we are told that Jehoshaphat "made all Judah proclaim fasting" (2 Chron 20: 3). In a theocratic culture like Judah, the king functioned not only as a political leader, but also as a spiritual head. He possessed the authority to summon all the people to cry out and fast, and he did not hesitate to use it. He involved the entire nation in appealing to Jehovah for a miraculous intervention. The writer provides more detail, adding: “And those of Judah gathered to ask Jehovah for help; and also from all the cities of Judah they came to ask Jehovah for help.

What principle do we see here? Prayer, yes, but perhaps more importantly, we see a very significant principle: prayer in community. In prayer, the more committed people we have in the trench with us, the more powerful and effective we can be. The Lord Jesus Christ declared: "Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there I am in the midst of them." He also said, "If two of you agree on earth about anything they ask, it will be done for them by my Father who is in heaven" (Mat 18:19, 20). Through these images of plurality, the Lord wanted to underline the power that exists in unity, in the spiritual agreement between believers.

I believe in individual prayer, and I have always made it clear that corporate prayer is not a substitute for private prayer. But, beloved brother, there are situations in which you have to find yourself a friend, a partner in the trenches, and say, “Look, help me to pray because what I have ahead of me is so difficult and so great, that praying alone, the only thing I am going to to achieve is to decay in my spirit ”.

When we tie ourselves to two or three prayer partners, it gives us encouragement to keep going. So, pray with other brothers! Find yourself people of faith to fight life's battles together. Live life in community with believers of equal conviction. Don't try to fight the battle alone. Don't be like Elijah, who when the diabolical attack came, went alone to the desert, fell into a deep depression, and ended up wishing for death.

When we isolate ourselves and abandon the community of faith around us, the devil can deliver the final blow to us much more easily. Join people of faith to more effectively undertake the race of faith. Join your little spark of faith with that of your brothers, and together build a great bonfire that will catch the eye of heaven!