You don’t have to have a theology degree, you don’t have to be ordained, you don’t have to work at a church or ministry, you don’t have to leave your house, you don’t have to be young, you don’t have to be old, you don’t have to money, social media influence or special permission
to serve -to be of incalculable use- in one of the most desperately needed, deeply wanted & biblically sanctioned ways on earth: praying for people. Several years ago, we started opening the doors at living proof at the Tuesday noon hour for anyone who needed prayer. We literally
put out an old school sign “Need prayer?” on the side of the road by our building. And people came. Thus began one of the most grounding, holy things we’ve ever done in the existence of living proof ministries. We’ve had to go to phones and zooms during this pandemic but it only
served to broaden the number of people we could receive over that prayer hour. Every week at 1:15 as our prayer hour ends, I want to say on here what it has meant to us. How in touch it has kept us with people. What it has done for the ministry in such difficult times & differing
ideologies. No matter how we may vary on this issue or that, our hearts, minds & souls are utterly united in one purpose as we serve people in need of prayer in the great and holy and saving and healing and delivering and abundant life-giving name of Jesus. Talk about something
that will strip down some pettiness, competitiveness, cynicism about the church and the body of Christ, superficiality, quarreling over tertiary issues & a good bit of pride & meanness, start listening to people share their needs then pray for them. It doesn’t need to be fancy.
Your prayers aren’t heard based on their quality or quantity but based on the access you have to the very throne of grace by the blood of Jesus, our Great High Priest. My teenage friend, Hannah, who was fearfully and wonderfully made with Downs, started her own prayer ministry
based on ours. It started with a sign on her bedroom door: Need prayer? Her family members did. Then her ministry expanded to others by phone. Her ministry matters greatly. So does yours. People need prayer so badly. People are also incredibly lonely and they just want to know
someone cares and someone will listen and then that same someone, who knows it’s not often within her/his power to fix it, will take it to the Lord in prayer who loves & knows that precious one intimately. Though we may not receive the answer to prayer they & we so wanted, we
know God WILL be merciful and gracious and kind and loving to them and present with them. We can ask him to make his nearness and undying affection known to them.

We don’t have all the answers, saints. But we can pray. And make no mistake, prayer is ministry. To them. And to us.

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More from @BethMooreLPM

8 Feb
Started Leviticus in my morning reading yesterday. My habit is to read (not rush) through all 66 books, back & forth between old & new til done then I do it again. Only made it through Lev 4 so far but, if I start using the word entrails in my tweets, I just want you to know why.
If you’re curious about the approach, I don’t often go by a reading plan. I just choose what book to read next, hoping the Lord is leading. I certainly ask Him to. After I’ve read through a book in that particular Bible, I mark it off with highlighter. This Bible’s 2 years old. Image
All to say, as you can see, I put off Leviticus. That’s not to say it’s not great reading. Lots of treasures in it. And entrails. For today I’d like to offer my thoughts on my AM Bible reading in Leviticus in a record-breaking 7 words:

Thank
God
for
the
cross
of
Christ.
Read 5 tweets
5 Feb
I was thinking this morning about trauma. I was thinking about the after effects. The aftershocks. How you tell your mind to move on and that all is OK now but your body refuses to believe you. If you are in a particularly tender or easily triggered place, don’t read this thread.
We live on acreage that I walk with my dogs no less than two or three times a day. Before work, after work. If I work at home, we take a break at noon & also walk then. We live on these acres. No way to escape them and, truly, we don’t want to. We love it here. It’s our home.
But there is a spot I cannot avoid where, 2 years ago, our dearly loved, constantly coddled bird dog chased deer through a thicket to a neighbor’s property & was met by coyotes. It all happened in my and Melissa‘s hearing. It was terrifying. It never occurred to us it was her.
Read 11 tweets
3 Feb
People of Christ, place your faith in Christ. Take all that energy being burned up by fear & trade it for real, live gospel-taught, blood-bought FAITH. Faith is not some flimsy thing. It is no passive acquiescence to “there’s nothing we can do.” It is “having done all, to stand.”
It is “holding unswervingly to the hope we profess, for he who promised is faithful.” We’re swerving all over the road. Pull over on to the shoulder, stop the car & ask God to help you get a grip. Stop blaming everybody & start looking to Jesus.
Pore over 1 Peter 1:3-9 & see His objectives. “Such trials show the proven character of your faith which is much more valuable than gold—gold that is tested by fire, even though it is passing away—and will bring praise and glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed.” He means
Read 6 tweets
2 Feb
Ezekiel 47, the final & among the most fascinating visionary narratives given to the prophet.

“Then he brought me back to the entrance of the temple & there was water flowing from under the threshold of the temple toward the east, for the temple faced east. (always always East)
...He measured off a third of a mile & led me through the water. It came up to my ankles. Then he measured off a third of a mile and led me through the water. It came up to my knees. He measured off another third of a mile and led me through the water. It came up to my waist.
Again he measured off a third of a mile & it was a river that I could not cross on foot. For the water had risen; it was deep enough to swim in, a river that could not be crossed. He asked me, ‘Do you see this, son of man?’ ... I saw a very large number of trees along both sides
Read 8 tweets
1 Feb
Made it to Ezekiel 43 in my daily Bible reading today. Three chapters earlier, a lengthy visionary narrative regarding a new temple began with the hand of the Lord transporting the prophet to Jerusalem. He’s taken on a tour by “a man whose appearance was like bronze, with a linen
cord & a measuring rod in his hand.” The bronze-like man measures every inch of the structure—gates, walls, stairs, porches, rooms—& supplies the figures to the prophet to report to the exiles. Shows him every detail from the decorations on the jambs to the hooks for sacrifices.
It’s quite tedious reading but the significance is impossible to miss. Perhaps what I love most of all about the study of Scripture—besides the life & work of the Spirit within it—is the cohesion. The major themes continue throughout. Here Ezekiel is depicted as a Moses of sorts.
Read 10 tweets
31 Jan
It’s the most gorgeous morning in Houston. Blue and breezy and just a little bit chilly. As I walk my dogs before church this morning, I’m meditating on Phil 1. So I thought to remind you, “I am SURE of this: that He who started a good work in you will carry it on to completion
until the Day of Christ Jesus.” This is no mere hope I speak to you from Scripture this morning. It’s certainty. He’s not done. You’re not done. Not if you’re in Christ. He hasn’t forgotten. He hasn’t moved on without you. God finishes what he starts. When I’m filled with angst
or doubt, disappointment, frustration, failure of nerve, writer’s block or whatever & I need desperately to redirect my thoughts, I am greatly helped by making confessions straight from Scripture that are the antithesis of my natural, faithless thoughts. Phil 1:6 is one of them.
Read 5 tweets

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