Home Pastors Pastor Blogs Pastors, Devote Yourselves to the Word and Prayer (Part 1)

Pastors, Devote Yourselves to the Word and Prayer (Part 1)

by Tim Kerr

In his profoundly helpful book Wisdom Words, Pastor Harold Burchett teaches us that praying is a lot like breathing. In order to have the strength to continue breathing, one needs to breathe. So also, the strength to pray comes from praying. Now if personal prayer is breathing for oneself, then intercession is like breathing for others.

In any church, there are several people barely breathing spiritually. Yes, we can teach them “to breathe” through solid exposition of Scripture. That is an essential part of the resuscitation process. But the other (often-missing) part is that they may need someone to breathe for them for a while.

This can easily become the overlooked and missing element of pastoral ministry—the priority of intercession. And like lifeguarding, one needs a working set of lungs before successfully engaging those lungs in the resuscitation of others. A wheezing asthmatic lifeguard is not particularly faith building.

I believe Paul’s prayer life may give us an insight into what the Apostles meant when they declared that their biblical priorities were to: “devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the Word.” (Acts 6:4) and communion with God (his own spiritual breathing). But it also clearly involved breathing for others. This is the life of intercession.

In Ephesians, we see Paul demonstrating the priorities of Acts 6:4).

We might say that if the logs on a fire pit are like the Scriptures being taught, and the fire is like the Spirit’s powerful ministry, then intercession is the means God uses to bring the two together in believers’ lives.

This is absolutely essential — as essential as the ministry of the Word. Why would we ever try to practice one without the other?

Tomorrow night we’ll look at the source of our intercession in Part 2.

Tim Kerr is the pastor of Sovereign Grace Church Toronto and author of Take Words with You (PDF). Tim grew up in India and lived in Japan as a church planter for 12 years with his wife, Joanne. They moved to Canada in 2000 where they currently live with their four children.