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War Room: A 30-Day Boot Camp

This document provides a 30-day boot camp to help build a prayer strategy and strengthen one's prayer life after seeing the movie War Room. Each day provides prompts to help develop a personal prayer plan, including identifying areas to pray over, committing to regularly seek God, and adding prayers and scriptures to address specific issues or relationships. The goal is to be strategic and persistent in prayer in order to experience victory through developing an intimate relationship with God.

Uploaded by

Martha Shikle
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
981 views21 pages

War Room: A 30-Day Boot Camp

This document provides a 30-day boot camp to help build a prayer strategy and strengthen one's prayer life after seeing the movie War Room. Each day provides prompts to help develop a personal prayer plan, including identifying areas to pray over, committing to regularly seek God, and adding prayers and scriptures to address specific issues or relationships. The goal is to be strategic and persistent in prayer in order to experience victory through developing an intimate relationship with God.

Uploaded by

Martha Shikle
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

War Room: A 30-Day Boot Camp

War Room: A 30-Day Boot Camp

By Kathy Branzell

The following is a free resource to help you get started and


build on the motivation of wanting to grow and strengthen your
prayer life after viewing the War Room movie. You can also
purchase excellent resources written by Alex and Stephen
Kendrick from Lifeway ([Link]).

Day 1:

Elizabeth begins reading the papers taped to Clara’s closet


and asks Clara, “You wrote prayers for every area of your
life?”

Clara replies, “Yes! A prayer strategy!”

In a recent interview, Alex Kendrick said, “We have plans for


everything—careers, finances, health. But what about a
strategy for prayer for our lives, our spouses, and our
children?” This movie and that interview prompted me to put
together this 30-day prayer calendar of how to create your
personal prayer strategy and “War Room.”

The strategy begins by examining your circumstances right now,


and visualizing how things should be—and could be. As you pray
over these relationships and responsibilities, write down
plans and procedures for getting from here to there.
This means producing a prayer strategy so that God can take
you from where you are to where He wants you to be. Prayer
clears the path to God’s best for your life: His best plans,
best opportunities and blessings, His best path and provision
for His glory, and His Kingdom purpose in your life.

After seeing War Room, many people will want to immediately


pinpoint a place of prayer, a “War Room,” in their home, and
possibly even a secondary “War Room” in their church, school
campus, and workplace. Begin to pray about this and write down
your commitment to God to be more specific and strategic in
prayer. Ask Him to show you where you can start your prayer
closet/War Room.

It does not necessarily mean emptying your closet, but we all


have a space that we can repurpose, even if it is shared
space. Many times a “War Room” must be disguised as a mild-
mannered linen closet or storage closet. The Spirit will lead
you to pick a place to meet with God each day.

Sometimes we get to post our strategy and Scriptures on the


wall, and sometimes we have to keep them secured in a notebook
or box that we carry into prayer each day. The important thing
is to commit and be consistent; let prayer grow and guide you.

Each day of this calendar will add an opportunity to post


something new to grow and sow into your prayer strategy. The
devil does not have a fighting chance if you let God do your
fighting for you. Start today (Prov. 20:18).

Day 2:

Miss Clara cried out in her powerful prayer, “Lord, we need an


army of believers who will stand on Your Word above all else.
Lord, call us to battle! Raise them up, Lord! Raise them up!”

Before an army can be shipped into battle, they have to go


through boot camp or some sort of training. God needs to train
us up in order to raise us up, as we volunteer to be soldiers
in His army.

The old hymn “Onward Christian Soldiers” keeps running through


my mind as I type these battle plans. Worship music is a
strong motivator, but always remember your “sword”—the Word of
God. There may be times we are tempted to “lean on our own
understanding,” instead of standing on the Word of God.

uman experiences and education are good, but God’s Word is


best. God uses our education and experience to help us grow as
the branches abiding in Him, the Vine. His Word is the root
that keeps us steadfast and the sap that feeds and strengthens
us. We must look at our experiences and education through the
lens of God’s Word; it is our “Christian worldview.” Write
down a few things that you believe that determine the way you
behave; find them in Scripture and write down each verse that
is the foundation of this belief you stand on above all else.
If you cannot substantiate your belief with Scripture then you
need to replace it with truth. Be careful, Satan is sneaky. He
likes to twist and blur the Word to make it sound like
something else that appeals to our flesh. Write down the
Scriptures that give you clear wisdom about God’s will and
ways and do not waver! Then open your ears to hear Him calling
you to battle; be prepared and armor up, He is raising up an
army and you have just been recruited (Eph. 6:10–18).

Day 3:

Miss Clara says, “There is not room for you and God on the
throne of your heart. It’s either Him or you. You have to step
down! If you want victory, you have to surrender first.”

Surrender seems backwards and counterproductive to our earthly


mindset of success and victory. But in Christ, the key to
success is to surrender, seek Him, and submit to Him daily.
Write down he “rights” and wrong thinking that you
need to surrender to God, and profess His Lordship over you.
Ask forgiveness where you have placed yourself on the throne
of your heart and life; as judge of others, or trying to
justifying the breaking of His Word to get what you thought
you “deserved” (Phil 2:1–11).

Day 4:

Miss Clara tells Elizabeth, “You need to plead with God to do


only what He can do; then you need to get out of the way and
let Him do it!”

After you surrender your life to the leadership and Lordship


of Jesus, you position yourself to listen and obey His
commands. Submission invites God into every area of your life
to both prune and protect so that we will bear much fruit to
His glory. Submission wants and waits for His Kingdom to come
and will be done. Submission also leaves room for God to move
in the areas/relationships that we might be tempted to
manipulate or mess up. Submission makes spaces for God’s wrath
or healing as He sees fit. Remember from the movie what Mandy
(Beth Moore) said was her “Mama’s definition of submission”?
It was, “Being willing to duck so God can. . . .”

So while you are ducking, just fall on down to those knees and
pray. Submit to His decisions and direction. Write down a
sentence or a declaration of submission and refer to it daily.
Pledge to obey, or to get out of His way, and always pray
(Matt 6:5–15).

Day 5:

In a recent interview Stephen Kendrick said, “Prayer is so


much more than people realize. It can powerfully affect every
problem and need in our lives if engaged from within a vibrant
relationship with God.”

So how “vibrant” is your relationship with God? Write down


some adjectives, characteristics, and evidences that describe
your current relationship with Jesus. Describe your daily
interaction and affection toward Him. How many times do you
think about Him during the day? How often do you talk with
Him, thank Him, or give Him credit for something good or
beautiful? Is prayer your first response or your last resort?

One of the biggest mistakes made in prayer is that we make it


about us. We think that we only need to talk to God when we
need something. But that is not how any successful
relationship communicates. If your write your spouse a love
note, or a friend a thank-you note, you do not fill it with
ways they can make your life better and easier. You thank them
for all they have done and the meaning that they have already
brought to your life.

Love expresses and affirms affection without attaching a


required expectation at the end of the sentence. We do not
say, “You bring so much joy to my life, so give me $50.”
Practice praying your day; a sentence here, a thought there
that just tells God how much you love and appreciate Him. Then
begin to practice making your requests in the mindset of His
will, so He receives glory and His Kingdom is impacted.

A happy marriage glorifies God, so does an addict who


recovers, a prodigal who repents and comes home, a bill that
gets paid, a church that is filled with people who have a
heart for prayer, worship and service, etc. Abiding in Him
teaches us to value what He values, not the other way around.
Write down ways to praise and thank Him as you see Him move in
your requests, and in your relationship (Isa. 55).

Day 6:
Miss Clara prays, “Raise up those who call upon Your Name, and
love you and trust You and will seek You!”

Write down, “Lord, in Your love and authority You beckon me to


call upon Your Name, thank You! Prayer is our time together in
conversation that makes our relationship stronger and more
intimate in my life. I love You because ____________; I trust
You because____________, and I will seek You first, every day
and in all circumstances.

Write down and pray all the ways that you commit to seek Him.
Seek Him first thing every morning; seek Him in the good and
worse of circumstances, in His creation, in crisis, in
decisions and the demands of life. Pledge to seek Him first,
instead of fear, worry, or selfish ambition (Ps. 31:1–8).

Day 7:

Miss Clara tells Elizabeth, “Just because you argue a lot,


does not mean that you fight well.”

If you find yourself doing the same wearisome or worrisome


thing over and over again without seeing any progress or
resolve; then you are definitely not doing it well! It is past
time for a prayer strategy over that issue or relationship.
Pray and then write down 1–3 situations in your life that
exhaust and exasperate you. Then write down and pray a
Scripture over each of those areas. As we progress through our
War Room strategy we continue to add prayers over each of
these topics (Isa. 40:21-31).

Day 8:

“Victory does not happen by accident.”

Victory can only happen with tenacious training, scrupulous


strategy and persistent practice. We do not stumble into
victory, we battle our way to victory. We are warriors, prayer
warriors—the most lethal and feared warriors in God’s army.
Satan shutters when we start to pray; he flees as the name of
Jesus rolls off our lips.

If you want victory to come to your life, your church, your


family, your community and nation then you have to be
deliberate in prayer. Prayer is a habit, not happenstance.
There is no such thing as a coincidence.

Write down the answers to the following questions: What does


victory look like? Where do you need to advance and from which
direction? Who is your enemy and how does your enemy fight?
How will you know when the battle is won—when the prayer is
answered?

You have already identified 1–3 areas that need a prayer


strategy; now write down your specific requests,
characteristics, changes, etc. that will define what “victory”
will look like in each of those areas. God may change your
heart or definition of success along the way, but as you pour
out the desires of your heart for the areas that need God’s
triumphal touch, and write down what victory looks like so you
will know when it is time to celebrate (Ps. 20).

Day 9:

The mission statement of the Kendrick Brothers Productions is


that they are “a company of brothers; Alex, Stephen and
Shannon Kendrick, that exists to honor Jesus Christ and make
His truth and love known among the nations through movies,
books, curriculum and speaking. By prayerfully blending
engaging stories with scriptural integrity, the Kendricks seek
to encourage and inspire viewers and readers with resources
that impact their daily lives and strengthen their families
and personal relationships.”
Think and pray about a personal and/or family mission
statement that could be used to direct you in decisions and
daily life. Over the next few days write down some ideas and
formulate a mission statement as part of your personal and
family prayer strategy (Rom. 12).

Day 10:

Every strategy includes identifying your strengths,


weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOT). It helps you to
take a critical and complete look at what you have and what is
needed for success (victory) to occur. God is your strength,
and He has given you many talents, gifts, resources, and
opportunities. Write down these strengths. Ask at least three
people who know you well to tell you what they have seen and
experienced as your strengths. Write down their responses and
keep them/post them with your list.

Be honest about your weaknesses; pray and seek guidance from


God and others when needed. Pray for opportunities to use but
not abuse your training. Never manipulate people or projects;
that is Satan’s game and gain. Know your threats—recognize the
real enemy, temptations, and tricks you tend for fall for.
Fortify your offense and defense in your War Room. We will
continue to build on each of these points throughout this
battle plan (2 Cor. 12:9–10).

Day 11:

Miss Clara points out to Elizabeth that Satan is the enemy,


not her husband—and that all of her complaining brings curses
and not blessing or healing to her marriage. Complaining is
the praise music of hell. Satan loves to hear us gripe and
grumble.
On the other hand, Satan hates to hear us pray. He can
deceive, distract, and discourage us all he wants until we
turn to God to fight for us—and then Satan is defeated! God
has no tolerance for complaining; it does not express faith.

If you want to fight the good fight, it is time to turn our


eyes on Jesus and profess our faith in Him. Praise expresses
the awe-inducing, unchanging, mighty attributes of God. As we
profess that He is Almighty, we perceive that our problems are
not big and bad after all.

Write down some attributes of God from Scripture and pray them
to remind yourself and the enemy that God is stronger and
sovereign. Write down blessings to pray over the people
connected to your prayer strategy. Remember, asking God to
reveal anything they are doing in deceit is a blessing as long
as you pray repentance and redemption over them as well (2
Tim. 2:22–26).

Day 12:

Elizabeth realizes that she needs to kick Satan out of her


house. She quotes James 4:7, “Submit to God, resist the devil
and he will flee.” It is a procedure with a promise. Jesus
quoted Scripture against Satan’s temptations in the wilderness
and Satan’s schemes were unsuccessful.

What tricks, threats, or treats has Satan used to tempt you?


Ask God to forgive you if you have followed the tempter or
even fallen into a pit of sin and destruction. Ask God to lift
you up and set you firmly back on His path for His glory.
Choose and write down verses you will use to deflect and
defeat the devil next time he comes prowling around your life
(Rom. 4).
Day 13:

Satan does not give up. Even in Jesus’ ministry after the
three temptations in the wilderness, Satan continued to use
demons and other people to be a distraction or disruption—or
even try to detour Jesus from God’s plan by the people’s
desire to make Jesus their earthly King. Jesus as an earthly
king sounds like a good idea that could yield some good,
temporary benefits to the Jews in the first century; yet God’s
plan was best—the eternal defeat of sin and death and
redemption of the created with their Creator for all eternity.

Write down ways that you have been detoured or distracted into
settling for “good” instead of God’s best. Pray for God to
show you areas of your life that you need to release in order
to have open hands (and time) to receive what He wants to give
you and where He wants to grow you (1 Peter 5:6–9).

Day 14:

In a recent interview, Pricilla Shirer said, “Prayer is the


most powerful weapon the church has to unlock the activity of
heaven on earth.”

It is important to write out a prayer strategy for every area


of your life, but there is nothing powerful about writing them
and taping them to a wall. No strategy will ever be successful
without a leader that is devoted to its success, and your
devotion is expressed through your consistent, faith-filled
prayers.

Prayer moves the hands that move the universe. Prayer invites
God to glorify Himself in our needs and weakness. Prayer
confesses desperation for God and sets our attention on His
ability and authority make things right and make people
righteous. God not only heals, He restores, redeems, and can
make things even greater than you can imagine or dream if you
set your heart on His will.

Write down Pricilla’s quote and post it in your War Room.


Prepare and commit to using this weapon frequently throughout
the day and night, to not only unlock the door, but to usher
in the activity of heaven into your relationships and
circumstances (Luke 11:9–13).

Day 15:

Beth Moore recently said, “God waits to see a generation that


will take Him at His Word. Let’s be that generation.”

Is there a part of God’s Word that you have not believed? Is


there a promise that you disbelieve? A command you disregard
or something you do or say that regularly disrespects God? It
is vital that you believe God’s Word from beginning to end;
you do not get to pick and choose through the stories and
verses.

If you have any questions make an appointment with your


pastor, and read some Christian books on the reliability of
the Bible such as The Case for the Bible by Lee Strobel. Read,
pray, and write down a strategy that professes your faith and
commitment to God’s Word. Believe it! Memorize it! Write down
verses and post them in your War Room. Let it guide and guard
your heart and life (Ps. 112).

Day 16:

Miss Clara prays, “Raise up those who will worship you with
their whole heart, that we may proclaim You King of kings and
Lord of lords!”

We divide up our time, our energy, our attention, and our


resources but we cannot give God divided heart. His Word
promises that we will find Him when we seek Him with our whole
heart. Psychology 101 teaches that we behave as we believe. If
our lives do not worship Him whole-heartedly, we are not an
effective witness to proclaim God as King. Half-hearted
Christians are not ready for the frontline of warfare. The
most dangerous soldier is one who is distracted or ready to
retreat at the first sign of danger.

Only God is worthy of our worship but we are distracted and


attracted to so many other things that take His place; our
self, our stuff, our schedules that overflow—and we leave God
with a sliver of our heart, time, and worship. When you go
into your War Room, or prayer time leave your cell phone in
another room. Give Him your undivided attention.

Write down anything that distracts you, pray over it, and keep
your whole focus on Him the whole time. If you think about
something that happened earlier, write it down and pray over
it. If you think of something you need at the store, write it
down and thank Him for His provision. If you think of
something you need to do, write it down and pray for guidance
and for Him to be glorified in it. If you think of people you
need to call, write their names down and pray for them. Keep
your heart, mind, and attention wholly holy for Him (Ps.
119:1–10).

Day 17:

Miss Clara begins her powerful prayer at the end of the movie
by saying, “Lord, You are good, You are Mighty and You are
Merciful—Praise You, Jesus!

You will notice a pattern in the prayers written in the Bible


and spoken by Miss Clara—most begin with praise. Praise is the
professing and blessing of God’s unchanging attributes.
Focusing on His attributes gives us courage and confidence to
lay down any of our challenges, crisis, or concerns into the
hands of our God who knows and does what is best.

Get into the habit of starting every prayer, even if it is


only a sentence or two, with words of praise and adoration.
Enter His gates with thanksgiving and His courts with praise
before you proceed any further in your conversation with Him.
Finish each prayer by telling Him that you love and trust Him.
For each of your prayer strategies write down three or more
attributes of God that you will focus on in awe, affection,
and affirmation of His authority and power in all things (Ps.
34:1–8).

Day 18:

Michael tells Tony, “Marriage is not some buffet where you get
to pick and choose what you want; you married her junk and
all.”

Life, commitment, marriage, parenting, career, etc. are not a


buffet where we get to pick what we enjoy and leave the rest
behind. We are in a covenant with Christ; in marriage and in
life as the Bride of Christ, for richer, poorer, better or
worse, sickness and in health, rested, tired, happy, sad, and
so forth. The blessing is that we do life together, guided and
guarded by the hand and heart of God when we pray.

The best thing you can do together as a couple, as a family,


as friends, as neighbors, as co-workers, is pray together and
pray for one another. Nothing leaves a blessing like hearing
someone pray over you, nothing brings unity like two or more
praying together, locking their prayer shields and taking
ground away from the enemy.

Examine your attitude about some of your relationships and


responsibilities. Write down anything that you have ignored
because you just “did not want to deal with it.” If you have
had a “buffet mentality,” write down some of the areas you
have been turning a blind eye or hard heart toward. Remember
who the real enemy is—it is not your spouse, your children,
your pastor, your boss, or any of the people you are praying
for! Ask God to examine your heart and point out the areas you
need to address in prayer and compassion. Be brave; ask Him to
shine His light in the dark places that you would rather not
deal with, but know that you can because of Him. Ignoring even
one area of your life gives Satan a place to hide and harbor.

Write down a Scripture or prayer for each of these areas as


they come to mind. Give grace and mercy in these areas as God
heals and restores (Heb. 4:12–16).

Day 19:

Clara continues in prayer, “Raise up warriors who will fight


on their knees.”

Sometimes the most difficult part of the fight is to stay on


our knees. In our impatience or pride, we may think that we
have diagnosed the problem and know just how to fix things.
But the truth is that we don’t know what we don’t know. Only
God knows every detail—the past, present, and even the future.
Only God knows the intention the heart and mind behind the
decision and situation, who the victim is and where the fault
really belongs.

Staying on our knees keeps us from charging in and making the


situation worse in our ignorance. Write down your prayer
requests and ask God to give you insight and instructions. In
situations where you feel anger, frustration, or other
negative feelings, ask God to deal with your emotions and
attitudes. Stay on your knees and ask the questions, “What
does love require? Are my desires self-serving or God-
serving?”

Write down how you would want to be treated if the tables were
turned. Would you be willing to change the tire of the man who
wanted you thrown in jail? God can only raise you up if you
are willing to stay down on your knees in humble prayer (Ps.
69:13).

Day 20:

Michael tells Tony, “Yeah, I’m a paramedic. But I’m also a


Christian, which means I help people while I am helping
people.”

Pray about how you can live out being a Christian where ever
your work, whatever the circumstances, however hard it may be
to speak the truth with love. Write down some positions/
titles you hold and profess: “I’m a mom/dad, CEO, nurse, IT
expert, executive, grandparent, educator, coach, etc., but
most importantly, I’m a Christian, which means I
______________ while I am __________.

Ask God to permeate every relationship and responsibility in


your life. Write down and pray about specific situations where
it is difficult to be a Christian. Ask God to give you
courage, strength and steadfastness do His will, no matter
what (Ps. 31:1–5).

Day 21:

Miss Clara prayed and asked God to, “Guide me to who You want
me to help.”

Her hurts and past lessons gave her a testimony and teaching
strategy to share with others so that they did not have to go
through the pain she had suffered. Write down lessons God has
taught you through past experiences. Write down your testimony
and always be ready to share it with others. Ask God to guide
you to someone He wants you to help. Write down a name as He
shows you opportunity to share His love.

Pray for clarity so that you do not hesitate nor manipulate


the situation. Ask for wisdom. Remember Miss Clara’s profound
prayer, “Lord, do not let me push too hard; I know I have a
big mouth!” Write down a prayer for a specific area where you
already know you will need God’s hand to move as you reach out
to the one He guides you to help. Remember that He may guide
you to someone who is not at all like you had hoped or
imagined. Be obedient no matter who He leads you to (John
13:34–35).

Day 22:

Every strategy includes “keeping score.” This is not keeping a


score of rights and wrongs between you and another person, or
even the wrong theology that if our right behavior outweighs
our sin.

In business, employees/employers write goals that are


measurable and timely targets. This is often called a
scorecard, which acts as an instrument panel guiding your
people and company toward achieving your vision. With the
scorecard, you can actively track your progress on a monthly
basis.

One of the best ways to see God’s faithfulness is to keep a


record of our answered prayers. Miss Clara had framed a list
of “Answered Prayers” on her hallway wall. As you ask God to
move or meet a need, write it down on a list or keep a
journal. Make written notes when you see God’s hand moving,
circumstances changing, and, finally, when the prayer is
answered (Ps. 138).

Day 23:
Michael tells Tony, “I’d like to see the church in you, Bro!”

Write down what you think it means for others to “see the
church in you.” Write down a couple of Scriptures that teach
or touch that topic. Pray about what the lost see when they
look at you, and when they look at the church.

How much time have you spent on your knees for the lost? For
the sinner? Ask God to show you if you have had a judgmental
attitude instead of a prayerful attitude toward those whose
lifestyles reflect the depravity of their souls. Write down a
prayer that asks God to bring His presence into their lives,
to reveal Himself in a way that they cannot deny Him. Ask God
to draw the lost, to fill and heal the hurt in their lives, to
give you an opportunity to love them in His grace and truth,
and to bring them to a place of repentance and salvation in
Him. Pray that they will know His salvation and not His
judgement. Let this be your strategy so that you are prepared
to pull them from the fire, to free them from the captivity of
the enemy (2 Peter 3:7–10).

Day 24:

Miss Clara asks Elizabeth, “Do you deserve grace?”

Clara continues as Elizabeth squirms, “God gives us grace and


He helps us to give it to others even when they do not deserve
it.”

Do you deserve grace? Think about the times that our Holy God
has given you grace instead of the judgement you deserve. Do
not write them down, because if you have asked for forgiveness
they are gone—wiped away—as far as the east is from the west!
He has erased them, so do not dare re-write them. Just praise
and thank Him for His grace and mercy.

Write down names and ways you need to give grace to others,
even though they have not asked for it or deserve it (Eph.
2:1–10).

Day 25:

During Elizabeth’s fierce stand against Satan as she throws


him out of her life, marriage, and home, she promptly fills
the space where Satan’s schemes and lies had filled her mind
with truth from God’s Word. “My joy does not come from my
friends . . . my job, or even my husband,” She declares. “My
joy is found in Jesus!” Then she reminds the devil—“in case he
had forgotten”—that Jesus has defeated him!

It is vital to kick Satan and his wrong thinking out of our


thoughts, but we must replace that space with Truth. Take
every thought captive! Write down scriptural truth in the
areas that Satan had you believing lies (2 Cor. 10:3–5).

Day 26:

Miss Clara has a big celebration in her kitchen, shouting,


“Ooooh, devil, you just got your butt kicked!”

Go ahead and smile. I am sure Jesus did! Many times we forget


to have a good celebration of joy and thankfulness over our
answered prayers. Sadly, we may even give the answer a passing
glance as we start a new list of requests.

Write down some past answered prayers: victories, needs met,


problems solved, things you asked protection from that never
even got to make an appearance in your life. Now, celebrate
these answers, these gifts, blessings, and victories! Shout,
dance, fist pump, twirl, jump up and down—make a big deal out
of your appreciation in response to God’s answers and
affection (Ps. 9:1–2).
Day 27:

Part of living out a strategy is to remember where you came


from and where you are going. We are all sinners in need of a
Savior. Once upon a time, we were on our way to eternal
despair and punishment in view of God’s holy wrath. But Jesus
came, and now those who believe and trust in Him as Lord and
Savior have eternal life! You are a child of God, created in
love and with amazing purpose!

Write down your answered prayers. Look at your list of


answered prayers when you lose sight of God’s faithfulness and
write down promises about your future from Scripture. Rejoice
always! (Ps. 32).

Day 28:

On Day 5 I asked, “So how ‘vibrant’ is your relationship with


God?” I also asked you to examine and write down some
adjectives, characteristics, and evidences that described your
current relationship with Jesus. You also described your daily
interaction and affection toward Him, how many times you think
about Him during the day, and how often you talk with Him,
thank Him, or give Him credit for something good or beautiful.

I asked the question, “Is prayer your first response or your


last resort?” To quote Miss Clara, “Would you say your prayer
life is hot or cold?”

You have been on a very intense prayer journey! This month has
been about writing a strategic battle plan for specific areas
of your life. I am sure the enemy has fired back at you more
than once; I know it has been difficult to build a habit of
planned prayer time as well as writing down all of the
tactical parts of your strategy. I know you have been
challenged. No battle is easy, and I pray you have seen God’s
hand move as you have sought His face each day.

Now, 23 days later, I want to ask you again, “How ‘vibrant’ is


your relationship with God?” Write down how your relationship
with Him has changed and thank Him for the growth and
guidance. I pray this has been a time of deep discipleship and
that you have developed new and profound disciplines in
prayer. Think about all that you have posted on your War Room
wall/ notebook, and all the prayers you have prayed.

The battle is not over as long as we are still breathing, so


be as bold as Moses and ask God for more of Him and His
blessings (Ex. 33:12–23).

Day 29:

Michael tells Tony, “Look, Tony, you can fight against your
wife and maybe hold your own. But if God is fighting for her,
you can hit the gym all you want, Bro. It’s not looking good
for you!”

Please do not think that every one of your prayers will be


answered and your life will be perfect in 30 days of battle.
Some strategies and prayer requests take years to gain ground.
But don’t give up! If God is fighting for you, it is not
looking good for the enemy. Never stop praying. Never stop
following God’s battle plan. Always do what you are called to
do and never do anything that could get in the way of what God
is doing to answer your prayers and bring His plan and process
to pass.

Celebrate the little victories as well as the big ones. Write


down prayers that profess your confidence in the Lord.
Remember that praise adjusts our view to how big God is and
how small our challenges, crises, and concerns are in His
hands. Seek God’s face throughout the fight. Let joy and peace
profess your confidence in Him even in the chaos of combat
(Ex. 15:2–3).

Day 30:

As we end the 30 days, there may be sections you skipped, days


you skimmed, or strategies that need more structure and
Scripture. We must persevere in prayer! The battles are waged
all around us for marriages, our children and grandchildren,
our church, and the souls of the sinners as well as the
attention and testimony of the saints.

As God answers your prayers, begin to write down new


strategies for other areas of your life. Surely you had more
than 1-3 prayer requests or areas that need God’s touch! Begin
the process again. Continue to cover the walls and doorframes
of your War Room. “Bake prayer in” to that space in your home
and in your heart (2 Cor. 4:7–18).

KATHY BRANZELL is the founder and CEO/president of Fellowship


and Christian Encouragement (FACE) for Educators. She is also
a member of the National Day of Prayer Task Force and
America’s National Prayer Committee.

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