FAITH
		
		
              It's Moving Day 
		
		
              By Shannon Kubiak Primicerio 
		
		       
               
              CBN.com  We think God needs big people to do big things--famous people like Billy   Graham and Elisabeth Elliot. After all, why would He use us when He could use   them, right? Wrong. God wants to move among the nations and across this country,   and He also wants to move among the people in your sphere of influence. But many   times we simply do not let Him--not because we are strong enough to stop Him,   but because He patiently waits for us to grant Him permission to work through   us. A lot of times He works in us without our consent, but it is not very   often that He uses us to do something incredible until we have agreed to obey,   no matter the costs.               
              When I think about God moving through the life of one individual, a man named   Bob comes to mind. He was an insurance salesman, unconnected with government   social circles in any way. His friend Doug, though, had a ministry in   Washington, D.C. And Doug challenged Bob to pray and ask the Lord to move in one   particular place every day for six months. Bob selected Kenya--although he had   never been there and didn't know anyone who lived there--and this is what   happened:   
               
                  Bob began to pray, and for a long while nothing happened. Then one night he   was at a dinner in Washington. The people around the table explained what they   did for a living. One woman said she helped run an orphanage in Kenya--the   largest of its kind ... Bob roared to life. He had not said much up until that   point, and now he pounded her relentlessly with question after question.  
                  "You're obviously very interested in my country," the woman said to Bob,   overwhelmed by his sudden barrage of questions. "You've been to Kenya before?"   
                 "No."   
                 "You know someone in Kenya?"   
                 "No."   
                 "Then how do you happen to be so curious?"   
                 [Bob explained his deal with Doug to pray for God to move in one place.] She   asked Bob if he would like to come visit Kenya and tour the orphanage. Bob was   so eager to go he would have left that very night if he could.   
                 When Bob arrived in Kenya, he was appalled by the poverty and the lack of   basic health care. Upon returning to Washington, he couldn't get the place out   of his mind. He began to write large pharmaceutical companies, describing to   them the vast need he had seen. He reminded them that every year they would   throw away large amounts of medical supplies that went unsold. "Why not send   them to this place in Kenya?" he asked.   
                 And some of them did. The orphanage received more than a million dollars'   worth of medical supplies.   
                 The woman called Bob up and said, "Bob, this is amazing! We've had the most   phenomenal gifts because of the letters you wrote. We would like to fly you back   over and have a big party. Will you come?"   
                 So Bob flew back to Kenya. While he was there, the president of Kenya came to   the celebration because it was the largest orphanage in the country, and offered   to take Bob on a tour of Nairobi, the capital city. In the course of the tour   they saw a prison. Bob asked about a group of prisoners there.   
                 "They're political prisoners," he was told.   
                 "That's a bad idea," Bob said brightly. "You should let them out." Bob   finished the tour and flew back home. Sometime later, Bob received a phone call   from the State Department of the United States government:   
                 "Is this Bob?"   
                 "Yes."   
                 "Were you just in Kenya?"   
                 "Yes."   
                 "Did you make any statements to the president about any political prisoners?"     
                 "Yes."   
                 "What did you say?"   
                 "I told him he should let them out."   
                 The State Department official explained that the department had been working   for years to get the release of these prisoners, to no avail. Normal diplomatic   channels and political maneuverings had led to a dead end. But now the prisoners   had been released, and the State Department was told it had been largely because   of ... Bob. So the government was calling to say thanks.   
                 Several months later, the president of Kenya made a phone call to Bob. He was   going to rearrange his government and select a new cabinet. Would Bob be willing   to fly over and pray for him for three days while he worked on this very   important task?   
                 So Bob--who was not politically connected at all--boarded a plane once more   and flew back to Kenya, where he prayed and asked God to give wisdom for the   leader of the nation as he selected his government. (footnote 1)  
               
              All of this happened because one man asked God to move and was willing to   move with Him. Sometimes the call to go is preceded by the call to pray. There   came a time when Michael (my husband) and I asked the Lord to "give us the   nations" and broaden our horizons. And within a few short months we had been   invited to speak internationally and two of my books were translated into   another language and sold halfway across the world. Our call to go, much like   Bob's, began with a call to pray.   
               Perhaps you have sensed lately that God has been burdening you to pray for   some type of movement somewhere. Be ready--He just might ask you to be part of   that movement! Take the "Bob challenge" and pray every day for six months that   God would move in one particular place--or person--and see what happens.   
               If you have absolutely no clue about how God might want to use you, then ask   Him for direction. After all, He does promise countless times in Scripture to   guide us and direct us. Psalm 32:8 says, "I will instruct you and teach you in   the way which you should go; I will counsel you with My eye upon you." That   means God will not only tell us where He would have us go, but He will also keep   His watchful and protective eye on us as we boldly move forward in faith. What a   comfort that can be when the places He asks us to venture into seem scary and   intimidating!
                
              
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              Excerpted from Being a Girl Who Serves  by Shannon Kubiak Primicerio, copyright © 2006; ISBN   0764200909. 
Published by Bethany House   Publishers. 
Used by permission. Unauthorized duplication   prohibited. 
              Notes   
              1. John Ortberg, If You Want to Walk on Water You've Got to Get Out of   the Boat (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2001), 91–93.  
                 
              
              
               
              
 
 
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