Make no mistake. Prayer is miraculous.
During the Christmas season, we celebrate and remember several miracles from the narratives around the birth of Jesus. Angels appeared to people. Elizabeth was too old to have a baby but conceived John the Baptist with her husband, Zachariah. And we can’t forget the virgin birth.
But are these merely stories? Do we believe miracles still happen?
We may not see them often, but God is still in the business of performing miracles from his love and grace.
People all around us face seemingly hopeless situations. They are discouraged. They need God to intervene. God gives us a miraculous gift with prayer.
We are welcome to stand before the throne room of God and petition him for those we love. In prayer, we participate in a miracle to ask for God’s supernatural power to manifest in our lives and those around us.
With that in mind, here are seven heartfelt prayers for healing and hope as we celebrate Christmas.
Many people deal with physical ailments. Christmas occurs within the winter season for people of the northern hemisphere, and around this time, we get sick from the flu or even worse.
Beyond common viruses, individuals deal with other physical issues. Injuries can keep some stuck indoors, unable to leave the house or participate in Christmas events.
Others struggle with cancer or other serious illnesses. These physical problems cause pain and keep people from being able to fully enjoy the joy of the season.
God is able to heal every disease and illness, no matter how hopeless it may feel. Think of those you know with physical issues this season and pray for them, using the following as an example.
Heavenly Father, source of all comfort and healing, we humbly come before you, seeking your merciful touch upon our bodies. As we face the challenges of physical ailment, we surrender our infirmities to your compassionate care. Pour forth your healing power upon us, Lord, and grant strength to our weakened bodies.
May your divine presence bring restoration to every cell, renewing us in body, mind, and spirit. In faith, we trust your promise of healing, and we thank you for the grace to endure. In Jesus’ name, we pray. Amen.
Just as people deal with physical ailments, we find others who have serious emotional problems.
Those who are more isolated, whether single or divorced or the elderly, can begin to have problems with energy and mood around the holidays, as well. Many are grieving the absence of a family member during the holidays. Others have long-term mental health disorders.
Just as we seek doctors for physical ailments, we should seek counseling and other practical ways to address emotional problems. However, God is also able to bring supernatural healing to our emotional states. He brings us joy and peace beyond the understanding of this world.
Think of people in your life who deal with various emotional problems around Christmas. Then pray for God’s power and presence to do real work in their hearts and minds this Christmas.
Gracious Lord, in the depths of our emotions, we seek your soothing presence. Heal the wounds within our hearts, calming the storms of sorrow, anxiety, and despair.
Pour your balm of comfort over the scars of past hurts, restoring joy and peace. Light the path to emotional healing, Lord, that we may find solace in your love.
Lift the burdens of grief and grant strength to face each day with renewed hope. May your gentle touch mend the brokenness within, allowing us to walk in the radiance of your grace. In Jesus' compassionate name, we entrust our emotional healing to you. Amen.
The ideal Christmas for every person includes big family events, extensive dinners, and opening presents.
However, many families deal with division. Divorced parents fight over who gets the kids when. Harsh words were spoken between different siblings. These family divisions often have very serious and legitimate issues at the root.
God is a god of reconciliation. Through Jesus’ death on the cross, all division and enmity was ended within Christ. God forgives the worst sinners and redeems them. And he requires us to forgive others as he’s forgiven us.
For us, perhaps the moment isn’t right, or reconciliation doesn’t seem possible. But God can change hearts, beginning with our own, to birth love, repentance, and reconciliation.
Think of people within your family or others you may know who need God’s reconciliation in their lives, and pray for them.
Heavenly Father, author of reconciliation, we come before you, seeking the healing of fractured relationships. Soften our hearts with your love and grant us the courage to extend forgiveness and seek forgiveness in turn.
Pour your grace upon us, fostering understanding and unity. May the spirit of reconciliation prevail, bridging divides and restoring harmony. In moments of discord, let your wisdom guide our words, and may humility pave the way to restoration.
Lord, mend broken bonds and inspire us to reflect your grace in our relationships. In Jesus' reconciling name, we pray. Amen.
Along with the need for reconciliation, many people have a child who has left their faith in God. Parents desire the best for their kids, and even though they aren’t perfect, they want their sons and daughters to have the greatest joy and reward possible in following Jesus.
When those same children turn away from God, from the truth, and rush headlong into a life of sin in a number of different ways, this leaves parents in grief and confusion, asking God what they did wrong or why their child has made these choices. Many parents and other family members weep for their prodigal children.
Just with the prayer for reconciliation, we must remember God is able to change hearts and call people back to Himself. He is an expert in bringing dead hearts of stone to life. Pray for those prodigals in your life.
Merciful Father, we lift the prodigals before you, those who have strayed from your embrace. We intercede for their return to the loving shelter of your grace. Pour out your relentless love upon them, drawing them back into the warmth of your forgiveness.
Illuminate their paths with the light of your truth, that they may find their way home. Grant them discernment, Lord, to recognize the richness of your mercy.&
May their hearts be softened, and may they be restored to the joyous fellowship of your family. In Jesus' name, we entrust the prodigals to your unwavering love. Amen.
All have sinned and fallen short of God’s standard. Because of our rebellion and sin, we chose a path of destruction and death.
And yet God didn’t leave us there. Through his immense love, he sent his Son as a way for people to escape death and have eternal life. We celebrate this sending during Christmas.
First, we must remember our only salvation was God’s forgiveness and grace. From that place of humility, we can extend God’s grace and forgiveness to others. Even then, we require God’s power through his Holy Spirit to love as he does.
We are called to show this forgiveness and grace to everyone, but perhaps there is someone specific whom you have hurt and for whom you need to ask forgiveness. And there may be others who have hurt you who need your grace.
Heavenly Father, we humbly seek your boundless grace and forgiveness. Forgive us, Lord, for the times we have fallen short, and grant us the strength to forgive others as you have forgiven us.
In moments of weakness, fill our hearts with your mercy so that we may extend compassion to those who have wronged us. Let your grace be a balm for wounded spirits, fostering reconciliation and healing.
May forgiveness reign in our lives, reflecting the profound love and mercy we receive from you. In the name of Jesus, our redeemer and source of unending grace, we offer this prayer. Amen.
We are called to pray for individuals and ourselves. At the same time, we should pray beyond our local context to the world whom God so loved.
Mary’s prophetic praise in the Christmas story includes both the joy of how God blessed her individually and the universal salvation and redemption God was bringing to all people and Israel.
We live in a world of wars and rumors of wars, but God desires peace and love between all peoples. With headlines of people groups saying awful things and doing awful things to one another, it can be overwhelming.
But God loves everyone and died for every person and nation, so let us learn from the blessed Mary and pray for the healing and peace of all nations.
Almighty God, healer of nations, we bow before you, lifting the brokenness of our world to your throne. Pour out your healing touch upon the wounds that afflict nations, mending divisions with the thread of unity. Grant wisdom to leaders so that they may seek justice and promote peace.
Illuminate the hearts of all people with compassion and understanding, erasing the lines that divide. May your transformative love bring healing to the deepest scars, and may the nations stand together in harmony. In the name of Jesus, the Prince of Peace, we pray for the healing of our world. Amen.
The disciples asked Jesus to teach them how to pray. Being Jews, they surely had been taught to pray by priests and rabbis. But Jesus prayed differently, and they wanted to know his secret.
Jesus followed with what we call the Lord’s Prayer, which is full of lessons for us, but here, we will focus on the broad request upon which all others are based.
“Your Kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”
As we stand before the throne in prayer, we ask for the Kingdom of God to come to earth. In the Kingdom, all physical and emotional illnesses are gone. All division is ended. All prodigals come home. All nations live in harmony. All is restored.
This is what we pray for when we ask the Kingdom to come, for all to be as God wills it in peace and love.
Heavenly Father, we earnestly pray for the swift arrival of Your Kingdom on Earth. Let Your reign of justice, mercy, and love manifest in every heart and nation. May Your divine light dispel darkness, and Your peace prevail over discord.
Empower us to be ambassadors of Your Kingdom, spreading grace and reconciliation. Let the Kingdom's transformative power bring healing to the broken, comfort to the grieving, and hope to the despairing.
With anticipation, we pray for the day when Your Kingdom fully dawns and Your will is done on Earth as it is in heaven. In Jesus’ name, amen.
Pray for miracles today. God can do amazing things. Remember the miracles he’s done for you before. With humanity, these are impossible. But with God, all things are possible.
Let us go to the throne of grace to call upon the God of love to come in power and transformation so all will praise him this Christmas.
Peace.
For further reading:
7 Ways Christians Can Keep Christmas Visitors
5 Ways to Stay Focused on the Reason for the Season
3 Ways to Prepare Your Heart for a Meaningful Christmas
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