“We are helpless in the face of this large army that is attacking us. We do not know what to do, but we look to you for help.” 2 Chronicles 20:12 (GNT)
Breakthrough prayers are different from other prayers.
You likely often pray and ask God for his strength or wisdom to help you accomplish something. And there’s nothing wrong with those prayers!
But in a breakthrough prayer, you say, “God, I’m helpless. I can't possibly do this. It's beyond my ability. I need you to make it happen.” It's the prayer you pray when you feel powerless.
After King Jehoshaphat turned his focus to God, he said, “We are helpless in the face of this large army that is attacking us. We do not know what to do, but we look to you for help” (2 Chronicles 20:12 GNT).
You should do the same thing when you're praying for a breakthrough in your life. First, tell God exactly how you feel. Do you feel powerless, like you’ve been battling something constantly without any change? Tell God about it! Tell him it feels hopeless and admit your weakness.
You don't have to be powerful if you’re connected to God—because he's all powerful. You don’t have to know everything if you’re connected to God—because he's all knowing. You don't have to be in every place if you’re connected to God—because he is everywhere.
What should you do when you're in a situation that you can’t control, change, or manage? You should wait and trust in all the things you know to be true about God.
Like King Jehoshaphat, sometimes faith means doing nothing. You just stand still, wait, and trust. If you try to do something about it, it puts control back in your court.
Here’s what faith looked like in 2 Chronicles: “All the men of Judah, with their wives and children, were standing there at the Temple” (2 Chronicles 20:13 GNT). They might have stood before the Lord for hours. We don’t know how long they stood, but by simply standing, they were saying to God that what they were facing was too big for them. They were at the end of their rope, but they kept hanging on, because they trusted God to provide.
When you’re in need of a breakthrough, follow their example. Wait, watch, and trust.
Why do you tend to try to hold on to power, even when you know you can’t change something?
What has become unmanageable in your life?
What gets in the way of waiting patiently for God to do what you can’t do on your own?