Every student leader and youth worker who works regularly on high school campuses struggles time-to-time to maintain an optimistic outlook on the future of our schools. In many ways, our current model of youth ministry doesn't seem to make any difference when it comes to our schools. Across the country there are ridiculous new mandates and laws being laid out against God in our schools. Year after year, the schools tend to look worse and worse because our enemy is surprisingly intent on taking this ground.
Our failures, however, ought to point us in the direction of the solution. Whereas one youth ministry models fails, another springs to life. The age-old cry for a revival of prayer among the youth is growing louder and louder still. For 5 years I have prayed the dream of God over my alma mater, and for 4 years I have contended for an entire city of schools and have labored aggressively to take ground. After these beginning years it is easy to grow weary and be discouraged at the task still ahead. Yet we must not grow weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up (Galatians 6:9).
My point is this: God is raising up laborers who pray all the way through to the breakthrough. God never called anyone to a simple task that didn't require faith, and we must lay hold of the promises of God in faith. Having seen these promises from afar, this is our chance to lay hold of them in faith and begin to lay the foundation for an end-time harvest. Consider Abraham:
We need to have the faith of Abraham over our schools. The promises of God are nothing we can fully accomplish in our own strength, but we can partner with "the God who gives life to the dead and calls into being things that were not" (Romans 4:17). We serve an awesome God who has awesome plans for our schools, and I am fully persuaded that God has the power to do what he has spoken to me.
Years ago, the Lord spoke to me concerning a great youth movement that could happen in this generation. From an early age, my heart has been broken over American teenagers. As I sought the Lord in how I might contribute to this movement, He replied, "Can you raise up a prayer movement in the schools that contends with the plans of the enemy over this generation?" I realized, in that moment and through other confirmations, that the Lord had commissioned an assignment over my life, yet no only me, but many in our nation.
This invitation extends to anyone who shares this burden of the Lord over our schools. This generation needs fathers of faith. This is Malachi 4:5-6, when we turn our hearts to the children and the children turn their hearts to the fathers of their faith. We must not have another fatherless generation. I urge you, pray.
Or, in the old cliche, P.U.S.H.
Pray
Until
Something
Happens
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