Having a clear vision as Christ’s church is essential. For Bible Community Church, this vision guides members to live out the church’s core commitments, which are rooted in Scripture and intended to bear fruit. In last week’s message, Pastor Paul addressed the first two visions: to be mighty in the Word and mighty in worship. In this week’s message, the remaining visions are covered: to be mighty in prayer and mighty in evangelism.
Mighty in Prayer
Prayer is a means of grace given by our Heavenly Father and reflects a genuine relationship with Him who lovingly calls us His children. Prayer is not primarily about gaining something from God, but about communion between God and the believer. The Father has bestowed upon us a great love and calls us His children (1 Jn. 3:1). Therefore, our first response in every circumstance must be prayer—coming before our Father in dependence, as enabled by the Spirit. To be mighty in prayer is to be a man of prayer.
E.M. Bounds and George Müller, who were praying men, have defined prayer as follows.
- “Prayer is the believer’s intense, persistent, dependent, and Spirit-empowered communion with God, through Christ, seeking God’s will and power for life and ministry” (E.M. Bounds).
- “Prayer is the believer’s simple, earnest, and faith-filled communication with God—asking, trusting, and depending on Him for every need, while seeking His will above all” (George Müller).
Prayer is the normal posture of a believer’s relationship with God. The Christian understands that apart from the Lord, they can do nothing. As faith increases, prayer deepens. Our intimacy with the Father grows as our reverence for Him and recognition of who He is increase. The health of our relationship with God is revealed by whether we are characterized as men of prayer.
Prayer is commanded by the Lord. It is as vital as breathing. When we cease to pray, we spiritually collapse. Prayerlessness is a rejection of God’s authority and a reliance on self or something other than Him.
“The worst sin is prayerlessness. Overt sin, or crime, or the glaring inconsistencies which often surprise us in Christian people, are the effect of this, or its punishment. We are left by God for lack of seeking Him” (P.T. Forsyth).
Prayer is the hallmark of dependence on God and a channel of His grace. The Father graciously grants His children direct access to Him. Prayer does not earn grace; it receives grace. Life on this side of glory is often difficult, yet our gracious God has provided prayer as a sustaining means of grace.
To examine whether we are men of prayer, we can ask ourselves these questions:
- Do we pray daily, voluntarily, and privately?
- Do we intercede for others?
- Do we pray in all circumstances, according to God’s will, when the Spirit prompts us, and even when we do not feel like praying?
Mighty in Evangelism
Evangelism is the proclamation of the gospel so that sinners would repent of their sins and believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. Evangelism is the seed, prayer is the root, and discipleship is the fruit. A sinner cannot come to Christ apart from hearing the gospel through evangelism. “How will they believe in Him whom they have not heard? And how will they hear without a preacher?” (Rom. 10:14).
Evangelism is possible because of our identity in Christ Jesus. God calls us to Himself as Christians and then calls us to call others to follow Christ as His disciples. A common misconception among believers is that evangelism is reserved for pastors, missionaries, or church leaders. This could not be further from the truth. All Christians are qualified and called to evangelize and must always be ready to give an answer (1 Pet. 3:15). The distinction is not between trained and untrained, but between qualified and disqualified. The disqualified are unbelievers and believers living in deliberate sin. Since our new identity in Christ is a gift of grace, our primary purpose is to proclaim who Jesus Christ is and that He alone is the way of salvation.
God commands all Christians to evangelize. This is one of the clearest commands in Scripture. In the Great Commission, Jesus—who possesses all authority in heaven and on earth—commands us to go and make disciples of all nations (Matt. 28:18–19).
The Christian life is simple:
- Do all things for the glory of God (1 Cor. 10:31)
- Winning the souls of sinners to Christ (Matt. 28:19-20; Acts 1:8)
The goal of the Christian life is to become more like the Lord Jesus Christ. We come to know Christ by reading the Word and living as He lived. Everything Jesus did in His earthly ministry was for the redemption of sinners.
We must examine our own hearts to determine whether we are merely theoretical Christians or men of action who live in genuine obedience to the Lord. The Apostle Paul bore on his body the marks of Christ (Gal. 6:17) and declared that he had the mind of Christ, having been shaped by the cross. Are we content to be armchair Christians or theologians only in theory? May it never be so.
The health of a local church is determined by its members’ passion for sharing the gospel of Christ. When a church lacks a heart for evangelism, it becomes ingrown. Growth without outward expression leads only to internal pain. Paul warns of this in 2 Timothy 3:7: “Always learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth.” Evangelism is ultimately a matter of the heart and sanctification. When we possess a heart for evangelism, God opens doors of opportunity.
Our readiness for evangelism begins with prayer. We must pray for the salvation of sinners and ask the Lord to awaken their hearts to repentance and faith.
Mighty in Discipleship
Discipleship is the fruit of evangelism. Christians plant the seed through evangelism and wait upon God to bring forth fruit through prayer and faithful labor. It is important to distinguish between a Christian and a disciple. Christians receive a new identity in Christ at conversion. Disciples enter through the narrow gate, following Jesus and living as He lived. Genuine salvation naturally bears the fruit of discipleship. Being a disciple is the expected stage of growth for every believer and involves far more than merely knowing or believing facts.
Jesus said, “If anyone wishes to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily and follow Me” (Lk. 9:23).
If Bible Community Church is filled with genuine Christian disciples, then disciple-making will naturally follow. Biblical discipleship is not a program but a way of life cultivated by the Holy Spirit. To be a disciple is to live under Christ in a lifelong process of learning from Him, bearing His fruit, and making other disciples.
Below are four marks of a true disciple:
- Seriously considers their identity and calling as one chosen by Christ
- Abides in Jesus by abiding in the Word of God, with prayer central to that abiding
- Values faithfulness over quick results
- Does not fear failure
We do not make disciples by being perfect, but by walking daily with Christ and being sanctified through that walk. A church that emphasizes evangelism without discipleship is ultimately dead.
As members of Bible Community Church, we must continually remind ourselves of the church’s vision: to be mighty in the Word, worship, prayer, and evangelism (discipleship). As we grow closer to the Lord and mature in Him, we will be able to fulfill the vision and purpose God has given us as a church. Let us labor together faithfully and seek to build Christ’s church for His glory alone.