The Leader As A Catalyst | Nehemiah 9:1–38 | Message 9

Filled with the Holy Spirit, you are a change agent! As you step into God’s calling as a leader, you become a catalyst for God to use you and move. All it takes is one Spirit-ignited Christian in a family, a church, or even a nation, and dynamic transformation will follow. There is an invisible, unstoppable power available in your life 24/7—the surpassing power of prayer!

When I became a Christian on the last night of youth camp as a teenager, no one in my family was born again. I did not know a single believer at my school. Reflecting on it now, it was nothing short of a miracle that I came to Christ. Broken and dejected, I sat in the back row at camp, just ten weeks after being discharged from a hospital where I had threatened to end my life. As a desperate last resort, my dad sent me to Windemere Camp at Lake of the Ozarks, MO. Looking back, I believe one of the reasons I found Christ was the prevailing prayers of my grandmother—a poor, godly woman in Ft. Scott, KS. Wearing dresses sewn from grain sacks, she was an old-fashioned, holy woman, relentless in prayer. I am convinced her intercession prayed me to salvation in Jesus Christ.

You can change your world through prayer! My ministry did not begin when I earned degrees in Bible college and seminary. It began as a high schooler in the prayer closet—the bedroom I shared with my brother, which we affectionately called the “Big D.” There, I pleaded with God to fill me with His Spirit and use my life for His glory. God gave me a burden to start a Bible club, and nearly 200 students came to faith in Christ that year. I joined a “preacher’s boy” club at Youth for Christ and began sharing the Gospel in YFC clubs, rallies, and churches. Crest Bible Church ordained me to the Gospel ministry when I was only 17. Walking with God, staying in prayer, and seeking the Lord have guided my ministry from the beginning. As a young man, God’s grace enabled me to become both a leader and a catalyst.

In our 9th message, we sit ringside at a historic move of God. The people of Israel stood for three hours listening to the Word of God and another three hours confessing their sins. The crescendo of this moment is a majestic prayer that exalts God’s provision, promises, watchful care, and sovereignty (Nehemiah 9:5–37). It is a prayer of praise (9:6), a confession of God’s patience (9:30), and a promise of renewed obedience (9:38), sealed in writing by the leaders and Levites. J. I. Packer described this event as “a National Day of Repentance and Recommitment.”

The grandeur of this God-moment in Israel’s history must not be forgotten! As we study Nehemiah 9, we will uncover six powerful takeaways from this unified prayer—principles we must never neglect in our own prayer lives. This is why Nobel Prize–winning surgeon and biologist Alexis Carrel (1873–1944) wrote:

“Prayer is the most powerful form of energy one can generate. The influence of prayer on the human mind and body is as demonstrable as that of the secreting glands. Prayer is a force as real as terrestrial gravity. It supplies us with a steady flow of sustaining power in our lives.”

 J. I. Packer, A Passion for Faithfulness (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 1995), pp. 160-161.

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A Leader’s Legacy | Nehemiah 7:1 – 8:18 | Message 8

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The Leader Who Challenges and PROMISES | Nehemiah 10:1–39 | Message 10