CHURCH: TIME IS RUNNING OUT! LET'S CONTINUE PRAYING FOR OUR FAMILY, FRIENDS, AND ALL WHO ARE LOST WHILE THE DOOR OF GRACE IS STILL OPEN! LET'S STAND IN THE GAP FOR THEM ONE MORE TIME!
Lord, we come before You in the name of Jesus—not in our own strength, but covered by the blood of the Lamb—and in holy urgency we declare that You are the God who seeks and saves the lost, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance and eternal life with You!
We come boldly before Your throne to lift every soul represented by this fire. This is not a metaphor, this is not our imagination, but the eternal end of every person who dies without Jesus!
This is where rebellion leads. This is where deception ends. This is where excuses are stripped away! So many today are walking toward this fire—unaware or unwilling to turn!
Father, we stand in the gap now—while there is still breath, while mercy is still available, while repentance is still possible!
We present before You our mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, nieces and nephews, cousins, aunts and uncles, friends, neighbors, and all who are deceived; all who are hardened; all who are wounded; all who are bound by sin, fear, pride, trauma, addictions, false beliefs, or false peace!
In the authority of Jesus Christ, we come against every work of the enemy assigned against their souls! We come against and bind every spirit of deception, confusion, blindness, rebellion, pride, unbelief, false doctrine, false religion, and false peace!
We bind every lie that exalts itself against the knowledge of God—every false identity and every argument raised against the truth!
We tear down every idol exalted above You: love of self, love of comfort, love of pleasure, love of money, love of the world, and every identity not rooted in Christ alone!
Pull them back from the edge! Rescue them from a destiny they were never created for! Let this be the moment where fear gives way to repentance, and repentance gives way to salvation!
Your arm is not too short to save, and that You leave the ninety-nine to go after the one! Even when we do not see it, even when nothing seems to change, we trust that You are working behind the scenes!
We place our loved ones fully into Your hands, refusing fear, despair, and hopelessness!
Cover them with the blood of Jesus. Protect them from deception and from taking the MARK OF THE BEAST! Preserve them until the moment You bring them home!
And Father, guard our hearts as we pray. Teach us to intercede without carrying burdens You never asked us to carry, teach us when to pray, when to wait, and when to trust You in silence.
We thank You in advance for what You are doing—even now. We give You all the glory!
We pray in the mighty Name of Jesus Christ! Amen. MARANATHA! COME, LORD JESUS, COME! (by Marantha777@X)
We do not accept that there is now, or has ever been a holy person. And that includes everyone. From Mother Teresa to Moses, to Jesus Christ – we call him J.C. Muhammed, his daughter Fatimah, the angel Moroni, the Pope, any Pope, all of the Popes, any oracles self-appointed or appointed by other persons or elected by strange men in long red dresses.
We do not accept that there is any efficacy in prayer. We don't care whether they're said by your legislator, George Bush, yourself, myself, a priest, a rabbi, a minister, a guru or even your momma.
– Madalyn Murray O'Hair
Telling this to nonbelievers is — honestly — asininely unhelpful. Yes, God cares. Yes, He listens. Yes, He can help anyone. But if someone doesn’t believe in Him, or only sees God as cruel, distant, or imaginary, then telling them to “just pray” isn’t comforting. It doesn’t bring them hope. It just sounds like you’re brushing them off with a religious catchphrase instead of actually caring.
“Just pray” or “Just say Jesus” might help some people, but there are others with pain so layered and complicated that three little words — no matter how sincere — aren’t enough.
So… what’s actually helpful?
1. Pray for them (and maybe with them — if they’re okay with it).
If prayer really is powerful (and it is), then don’t just assign it to someone who’s barely standing. Do it yourself. Pray for them privately, or gently ask if they’d want you to pray with them.
You don’t need to make it a public show. Quiet prayer done in love speaks louder than a hundred spiritual clichés. The most powerful witness is when someone later finds out, “They prayed for me. They cared. And God cared because they did.”
2. Practice Romans 12:15 — “Rejoice with those who rejoice, and weep with those who weep.”
You don’t need to fix their life, explain theology, or tie everything in a bow. Just listen. Let them speak. Let them cry. Let them be angry, confused, or quiet.
Sometimes people don’t need solutions. They need someone to sit in the ashes with them. Some people don’t need advice. They just need to be heard.
And if they aren’t Christians, this is where your "little light" shines — not through preaching, but through compassion. You might not be Jesus, but you reflect Him when you choose empathy over empty advice.
Why this matters:
Because prayer is powerful — but love is the soil where prayer takes root. Telling someone to “just pray” without offering help, presence, or compassion can feel like handing them a Bible while they’re bleeding and walking away. Prayer was never meant to replace action. It was meant to fuel it.
So pray. Yes. But also: Sit with them. Listen. Cry with them. Help carry the burden they’re too exhausted to lift alone.
Há momentos na vida em que nem a fé encontra palavras.
Você sente.
Você carrega.
Mas não consegue expressar.
E é exatamente nesse lugar que Romanos 8:26 entra:
📖 “Da mesma forma, o Espírito nos ajuda em nossa fraqueza; pois não sabemos orar como convém, mas o próprio Espírito intercede por nós com gemidos inexprimíveis.”
Paulo não está falando de um problema ocasional.
Ele está descrevendo uma realidade constante:
👉 “não sabemos orar como convém.”
Essa “fraqueza” envolve nossa limitação espiritual — não sabemos o que é melhor, nem como pedir corretamente, nem como alinhar nossas orações à vontade de Deus.
Ou seja:
às vezes pedimos errado
às vezes pedimos pouco
às vezes nem sabemos o que pedir
E, muitas vezes…
👉 simplesmente não conseguimos falar.
Mas o texto não termina na fraqueza.
Ele revela ajuda.
“O Espírito… nos ajuda.”
A palavra usada no original carrega a ideia de alguém que entra junto para carregar um peso — como duas pessoas sustentando a mesma carga.
Isso é profundo.
Porque Deus não apenas ouve suas orações…
👉 Ele participa delas.
E então vem uma das expressões mais intensas da Escritura:
“gemidos inexprimíveis”
Não são palavras faladas, mas movimentos profundos da alma — suspiros, dores, desejos que não cabem em linguagem humana.
E aqui está o ponto central:
quando você não consegue orar… o Espírito continua orando em você.
Não fora de você.
Não no lugar de você.
👉 Dentro de você.
Ele transforma:
confusão em clamor
dor em oração
silêncio em intercessão
E mais:
Essa intercessão não é aleatória.
Romanos 8.27 completa dizendo que o Espírito intercede segundo a vontade de Deus.
Ou seja:
👉 mesmo quando sua oração é imperfeita…
ela é conduzida à perfeição pela ação do Espírito.
Isso muda completamente a forma como vemos a oração.
Porque o peso não está mais em “orar certo”.
Está em não se afastar.
Talvez você esteja vivendo um momento em que não sabe o que dizer.
Sem palavras.
Sem direção.
Sem clareza.
Mas este texto te lembra:
o silêncio da sua boca não é o silêncio da sua alma diante de Deus.
Almighty and eternal God, who created us in Your image and bade us to seek after all that is good, true and beautiful, especially in the divine person of Your only-begotten Son, our Lord Jesus Christ,
Grant we beseech Thee that through the intercession of Saint Isidore, bishop and doctor, during our journeys through the internet we will direct our hands and eyes only to that which is pleasing to You, and treat with charity and patience all those souls whom we encounter.
Through Christ our Lord,
Amen
-intercessory prayer to st. isidore before using the internet
Someone asks Jesus to heal them. Jesus asks them if they believe that He can heal them. They say yes.
Then Jesus heals them because of their faith. Sometimes He even tells them as much.
It’s a pattern we see repeated in just about every healing story. Except today’s Gospel.
Jesus heals. As He always does. Only this time, it’s because of someone else’s faith.
There are four people who can’t get their paralyzed friend through the crowd around Jesus. So they open a hole in the roof. And lower their friend down to Jesus.
And that’s where things break from the pattern. Instead of waiting to be asked, Jesus responds to the faith of – the people who opened a hole in the roof. And heals the man.
Not because the man was a good person. Or because he deserved it. The Gospel doesn’t even tell us that he asked for it.
Jesus heals the man, because his friends asked for it.
Because of their faith, the reason for their actions. Because of their intercessory living.
If you’ve ever wondered what God wants from you, this is it.
God’s not looking for people who always know what to say and what to do. Who never make a mistake. Who always get it right.
God’s not looking for perfect people.
God’s looking for people who have a heart for Him. Who are grounded in prayer, because there’s no other way to have a heart for Him.
Who understand the importance of praying for others, of intercessory prayer.
Who aren’t worried about whether the people they are praying for deserve God’s grace and mercy.
God loves people who are grounded in prayer.
Who aren’t afraid to let their prayers spill over into action.
Whose intercessory prayers overflow. Into intercessory living.
Who aren’t worried about what people will think if they open a hole in the roof.
Have you ever learned the beautiful art of letting God take care of you and giving all your thought and strength to pray for others and for the kingdom of God? It will relieve you of a thousand cares.