Archive for July, 2014

Extraordinary Prayer for the Next Great Awakening: What is it? How do we do it?


prayer-blogWhat is extraordinary prayer? How do we practice extraordinary prayer? Is another Great Awakening even possible?

Each of these questions is absolutely worthy of an answer. Prayer, fasting, revival, spiritual awakening, evangelism, church planting, and the call to complete the Great Commission are not a new message for me. God first placed these messages deep within my life, then through my ministry, and later began to be expressed through the publishing of several books.

Therefore, my burden to pray for and see the Third Great Awakening in my lifetime is real. Since being elected as President of the Southern Baptist Convention, I have targeted my Monday blogs to my Southern Baptist family.

The Call to Columbus for June 16-17, 2015, is genuine and one that I pray each of you will respond to personally, not only in prayer, but with attendance. As stated again last week, I believe one of the most strategic things we can do is to cry out to God in extraordinary prayer, asking Him for the next Great Awakening.

What is extraordinary prayer?

Extraordinary prayer is experienced when you pray beyond your normal practice to pray. I realize this is an oversimplification of a deep subject, but in reality, that is what it is. For example, if a person is praying five minutes a day or an hour a day, anything beyond what is their “ordinary” becomes “extraordinary.”

Furthermore, I believe extraordinary prayer becomes even more defined when that prayer is uttered before the Father in Heaven for a specific item. For the last several months, I have been calling upon pastors, spiritual leaders, and churches to pray specifically for the next Great Awakening.

Practicing extraordinary prayer in our life can become extraordinary in several ways:

  • Extraordinary in Time: This is in relationship to the length of our praying.
  • Extraordinary in Days: This is in relationship to the number of days we focus our prayer on a need.
  • Extraordinary in Commitment: This is in relationship to the commitment of fasting, or the sacrifice of something you love to focus your prayer. Or perhaps even leaving your normal life, retreating to be with God alone, letting Him speak to you about it.

Personally, in recent months, there have two extended times of fasting, when most of my prayer has been focused on personal revival, spiritual revival in my church, and spiritual awakening in our nation; that I would see the Great Commission raised to its rightful priority, asking God to see it completed in our generation. Through these seasons as well as special days, God has placed this burden on my heart deeply, but at the same time, raising hope within me that this is the season when God wants to do something God-sized, extraordinary in our lives, churches, and nation.

Therefore, I believe it is incumbent upon me to call upon all of us to move into a year-long season of extraordinary prayer for the next Great Awakening.

Is a Great Awakening possible?

Without a doubt, another Great Awakening is possible because as recorded in Matthew 19:26, “With God, all things are possible.” While the skeptics doubt and the cynics mock, we need to pray. We need to believe God.

The Big Questions is: Are we as desperate to see God move in America as the times themselves are desperate in America? I believe firmly, God will move in our lives and churches to the level of our desperation. As Christ-followers, we need to be hungering for God to bring awakening to America.

In our Southern Baptist Convention, we need to be thirsty and hungry for the righteousness of God. We need to long for a move of God that will change our business as usual thinking and vision, igniting us into exploding churches and gospel acceleration that is unprecedented in history.

While some may doubt it is possible and others may mock it and say it cannot happen, our God can do anything, anytime, with anyone. He can do more in a moment than we can ever do in a lifetime. There has never been a great move of God that is not first preceded by the extraordinary prayer of God’s people.

In fact, Jonathan Edwards had some direct words to pastors. In Alvin Reid’s, The Narrative of Awakening, he records what Edwards did and wrote in “Some Thoughts” in “Complete Works.” He writes,

So it is God’s will that the prayers of His saints shall be great and the principal means of carrying on the designs of Christ’s Kingdom in the world. When God has something to accomplish for His church, it is with His will that there should precede it the extraordinary prayer of His people.

Yes, God is calling His people to rise up and call out to Him in extraordinary prayer for the next Great Awakening.

How can we practice extraordinary prayer in our churches?

As I bring this to closure, I want to give to you four ways we can practice extraordinary prayer in our churches. If you lead a Christian ministry of some kind, you could do something similar.

1. Set aside a specific time in your worship services to talk about a specific thing and pray together beyond the normal for God to do it. Last week in our worship services, moving in the flow of a song, I requested for our people to move into groups of five to seven for a focused time of prayer. I asked one person per group to pray, or they could all pray silently together, praying in agreement for our Student Camp. We had just at 500 high school students leaving that afternoon for our camp, and I listed several things related to the camp. Two of those things related to many students coming to Christ and several surrendering to the ministry.

Yesterday, I informed our people that God heard our prayers, as fifty-three students became followers of Jesus Christ and nineteen other students surrendered their lives to ministry or missions around the world. Together, we prayed extraordinarily and our God moved miraculously and extraordinarily. By the way, yesterday, we targeted our extraordinary prayer time asking God for the next Great Awakening. We prayed on our knees for this need personally, then I led a prayer for each of us to engage personally in the evangelization of our own Northwest Arkansas region.

2. Set aside a time of extraordinary prayer in your small group. Move beyond just praying for the sick, but for a mighty move of God. Pray for lost people by name in an extraordinary manner.

3. Set aside a night of praying together extraordinarily. In May, our worship team spent a Tuesday night in Dallas, leading the entire Prestonwood Staff Team and spouses (some 600 plus people) in four hours of prayer. This was a powerful, convicting, God-sized night of praying. Your church could set aside a night, just for praying for the next Great Awakening.

4. Set aside a Sunday morning worship service committed to extraordinary prayer. We did this in October of last year. My friends, Ted Traylor of Pensacola, Florida; Grant Etheridge of Hampton, Virginia; and Mac Brunson, of Jacksonville, Florida have all set aside a Sunday morning committed to praying as a church extraordinarily. Each have testified of the dynamic moving of God that occurred then and since in their churches. Yes, the entire service can be set aside for extraordinary prayer that is Bible-based, Jesus-centered, Spirit-led, and worshipped-expressed, targeting revival personally, revival in the church, awakening in America, and seeing the Great Commission finished in our generation.

There are many other ways I could share, but perhaps this may encourage you that you can find a way to personally and in your church, practice extraordinary prayer. The time is now.

Yours for the Great Commission,

Ronnie W. Floyd

Guest Post: Jeff Crawford: The Cross Church School of Ministry – Lessons Gleaned at the One-Year Mark

Jeff-BlogToday, RonnieFloyd.com welcomes guest writer, Dr. Jeff Crawford. Dr. Crawford is the President of Cross Church School of Ministry and a Teaching Pastor at Cross Church.

In just a few short weeks, we will graduate our first class of students from the Cross Church School of Ministry. Our one-year ministry residency is uniquely designed to prepare next generation leaders for life, ministry, and gospel advancement globally. As we approach the one-year mark, we are in evaluation mode, conducting exit interviews, and doing critical analysis, etc.

CCSMLogo-BlogPart of this process has led me to some serious self-reflection on the program that just a short 18 months ago was only a vision on a piece of paper between Dr. Ronnie Floyd and me. I say “serious self-reflection” because this is serious business – the business of training up God-called men and women. Our current model of training, which relies solely on our colleges and seminaries, is in near crisis mode with 50% of those called to ministry QUITTING within the first five years. We can do better. We must do better.

While the jury is still out on ministry retention rates for our Cross Church School of Ministry, I have observed the following in our first year:

  • The future is in excellent hands…with a generation of supremely engaged leaders who are called and ready to make a difference for the Kingdom. It has been my privilege to spend one year with ten of the finest men I have ever been around. They are passionate, humble, biblical, and godly. They are savvy to the culture and ready to go. In the coming weeks, you can meet them and hear a word about their experience with us on the Cross Church School of Ministry website.
  • The need for the Cross Church School of Ministry is REAL. We definitely hit a chord with the idea of a one-year ministry residency. A whole year of learning HOW to actually DO ministry by being part of one of the most dynamic churches in the United States – Cross Church. Our first class has echoed this sentiment. I’ve entertained numerous phone calls and even site visits from other churches seeking to learn more about what we are doing and how it can be duplicated. We have shared freely with all those wanting to talk and dream. I’ve lost count of the number of people inquiring about coming to us, even from around the world. And next year, we will nearly double our numbers. Some will be bringing whole families to us. Women will join our program for the first time, and we will even have international students with us.
  • Iron really does sharpen iron. Because the Cross Church School of Ministry utilizes the ministry residency approach, the caliber of our own ministries at Cross Church has gone up, even as we have taken this first class of students “up” in their calling and competency to ministry. I know that personally, I am a better minister of the Gospel for having these next gen leaders to rub shoulders with. They have encouraged, enlightened, and informed me. They have also accelerated the ministry of our church with their contribution. When they graduate next month, they will leave a massive hole. BUT…it’s a hole that will be filled just two weeks later by the next cohort coming in. They will be green and raw, but ready to go! And thus it will start all over again.

Our program was great in year one. And it’s going to be better in year two. If you know of a God-called man or woman who needs the unique experience of a ministry residency, send them to us. Let us pour the best of who we are into them for one year. Let them engage one of our many partnerships for academic credit toward a degree. Then, let us send them back to you to take you and your church “up”…all for the sake of the Kingdom!

Dr. Jeff Crawford

President, Cross Church School of Ministry
Teaching Pastor, Cross Church

@JeffCraw4d
@CCSchoolofMin