The Great Adventure: It Pays to Pray

In his sermon "The Great Adventure: It Pays to Pray," Pastor Johnathan presents prayer as the cornerstone of Christian living, especially during the Christmas season which celebrates the ultimate answered prayer—Jesus coming to Earth. Drawing from Colossians 1:9-14, he warns against making prayer our last resort when we become too busy or independent, pointing to Jesus who, despite His packed ministry, always made time to pray before daybreak (Mark 1:35).

Pastor Johnathan outlines the benefits of relational prayer: letting God be God, deepening our relationship with Him, releasing pressure, and transferring burdens. He emphasizes that Christians are born into a battleground, not a playground, and prayer is how we enforce Christ's victory in our lives. The sermon concludes with a practical exercise where congregants write down prayer requests—whether strongholds needing to be broken or promises to hold onto—and bring them to the altar, encouraging everyone to "keep on asking, seeking, and knocking" as Matthew 7 instructs.

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