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A Prayer Plan for Pastors Based on the Prayers of Christ

As goes the pastor, so goes the church. As goes the church, so goes the nation … and the world. Church revitalization begins with pastoral revitalization. Our spiritual health will directly affect the health of our ministries.

There is no historic record of revival or revitalization apart from intentional prayer. Jesus modeled for us how church leaders can and should pray in John 17. He starts off praying for Himself, then for His disciples, then future believers and leaders like us. This is a simple and effective model that we can use in our own prayer lives … especially if we are hoping for revival in our own lives and churches.

1. JESUS PRAYED FOR HIMSELF FIRST

Praying for ourselves may seem counterintuitive, like putting the oxygen mask over your own face before you share it with a passenger in greater need. We all know that there is no such thing as a healthy church without a healthy pastor. Neglecting your own spiritual, physical and emotional needs will end up robbing your own family and church in the long run.

Jesus prayed for strength to finish the work God had called Him to do (vv 1-5). That was a smart thing to do because Jesus didn’t want to blow His assignment. Nor do we. The success of His mission, and ours, is to bring glory to the Father and grace to our brothers and neighbors.

In Matthew 6, Jesus also encouraged us to pray for our practical needs like direction (God’s will), resources (bread), forgiveness, and strength to fight temptation and evil. Don’t let the prosperity-gospel weirdos completely turn you off from praying for yourself. Jesus started with His own needs, but the direction soon turned outward in the primary part of His prayer.

2. JESUS PRAYED FOR HIS LEADERS

The largest part of Jesus’ prayer (vv 6-19) is spent interceding for His Disciples. Jesus had an inner circle for whom He was responsible. So do you and I. Of course, the closest in your inner circle is your family, so I would encourage you to start with them and work out from there.

Whether paid or volunteers, and regardless of titles, we all have a leadership circle that we need to be praying for and with regularity.

Your leaders are targets! Pray daily that your leaders “(do) not fall into disgrace and the Devil’s trap” (1 Timothy 3:7). Pastors, elders, deacons, teachers, committees and teams—all form a front line with you in an invisible war. Jesus prayed for the Father to “protect them by Your name” (v11) from the world who hates them (v14) and the Devil who plots against them (v15).

When I pray, my own family and life come first, then my staff, then other leaders. Jesus modeled this stewardship of His prayer time for us well.

3. JESUS PRAYED FOR FUTURE CHURCH LEADERS

In verses 20-26, Jesus changes the direction of His prayer from an exclusive small group of leaders to an inclusive group of future followers. This paradigm shift is an intentional prayer shift that I am convinced very few Christians make.

I pray not only for these, but also for those who believe in Me through their message (v20).