I am overwhelmed by the support that we Parisians have
received over the past few days. My Facebook, Twitter, and email have been
filled with messages affirming that people are mourning with us and praying for
us. Thankfulness does not even begin to describe my sentiment. One of the
greatest things about being a Christian is being part of the Church global.
This universal Church has actively joined with us in bearing the burdens that
this past weekend has brought to Paris and it’s local churches.
I have had many requests from people who want to help us and
pray for us, so I decided to write this blog post in an effort to write a well
thought-out response to that. My church is Emmanuel International Church (www.eicparis.org). Feel free to learn a bit
about us there, and we could certainly use any help from anyone who would be
willing to give. For the purpose of this blog, however, I will try highlight
some prayer requests that would be common for all of the Christians living here
and the churches that they belong to.
First, pray that Christians (including the pastors, like
myself) will believe the gospel right now. I know this request may not seem
exciting, as this would have been my same prayer request for the church even before
the attacks. But this is the most important thing. Every witness that will be
given must come from gospel-centered reasoning. If Christians let themselves
forget the gospel for a little while, they will be tempted to respond with
hatred, judgment, and legalism rather than with humility before God concerning
their own sin. This is important not only for the sanctification of the
believers here but also for the witness they will have to a lost world. Only
when the gospel shows us the seriousness of our own sin can we be genuinely
empathetic for a world that includes terrorists. The world needs this empathy
now.
Second, pray that Christians will intentionally make
themselves available for tough conversations with non-believers. Hard questions
surround this event, and believers here must be ready to respond in a confident
humility. How could a good God let this happen? Is this event not proof that
the world would be better off without religion? What do I do with my fear and
hate? Aren’t all religions pretty much the same? These questions will need to
be responded to in all of the relationships that these believers have, and many
Christians feel inadequate to answer them. Yet the gospel addresses these
questions and makes sense of them. Pray that these Christians will be willing
to enter in these conversations and trust that the Holy Spirit will give them
the answers that they need.
Third, pray that our churches will be united. There is
nothing more ugly than a fighting church, and no better witness than a church
who loves each other. Let us love each other. Pray that whatever would divide
Christ’s body would be seen as secondary before our corporate repentance and
witness of the gospel.
Fourth, pray that God will bring people to faith in Christ
through the church’s witness. Us Parisian Christians have been praying for
Paris for a long time, and the Lord has been moving. In recent years there has
been many new churches started by gospel-centered planters and the kingdom has
been growing here. While percentage-wise the number of evangelicals is still
small, there has been much growth, both in numbers and in reputation, since I
moved here 7 years ago. Pray that the Lord will use the past faithful witness
of the church in the lives of non-believers to call to mind the present need
and the answers that Christ gives.
Fifth, pray that this event will bring more Christians to
intentionally move to Paris. We need more churches and church planters, but we
also need more Christian businessmen, teachers, engineers, accountants, and any
other types of workers to choose to live here for the sake of the gospel. More
churches could be started here if there were more Christians to fill them and
help them in service and in giving. Someone once asked me what I thought Paris
needs the most. I thought for a second, and I responded with just one word:
Christians. Why was that my response? Because Christ lives in Christians. Pray
that God sends us more.
Thank you for these powerful words. I will continue to pray for your church, that your light will shine brightly in the City of Light.
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