Praying for Boldness (South City)
Trusting Who we are praying to and Who is in control, we should pray for boldness to do what He’s called us to do.

Trusting Who we are praying to and Who is in control, we should pray for boldness to do what He’s called us to do.
If we want God to give us whatever we ask for, we need to pray like Jesus.
We must fast and pray for holy ambitions and divine opportunities because they are essential to the mission of God.
God invites us to join Him on mission by praying and going with missionary purpose.
To fight the distractions of life, we must have a prayer-fueled pursuit of God.
Ask. Seek. Knock. Because God is a better gift giver than we could ever imagine.
When God answers prayer, we worship, we remember, and we ask for more.
There are two things we should do when we see evidence of God working in and among us: thank Him and ask for more.
Through the life of Moses and Jesus, we see and experience the glory of God in the labor of prayer.
Praying to the Lord regularly should cause our hearts to rejoice in Him because he's in control.
When we pray for all people, we grow in humility.
We pray with confidence because we have a competent and sympathetic Savior.
We can pray expecting God to move because he already has in the person and work Jesus.
We have the right to pray impossible prayers because we worship a God who has done the impossible.
Paul teaches us to pray for the Word to Win in here and out there, for God to deliver us from evil and guard us in the battle, to give us power to obey and to fuel that obedience with his steadfast love.
Because Christ has taken our curse and blessed us, we can have confidence that God will answer our prayers.
Because God’s love is better than life, we can cry out to Him in the wilderness.
Prayer should pull us together, not push us apart.
When God answers prayer, we worship, we remember, and we ask for more.
Following, a new "Romans Road", we can learn to pray in a gospel-centered way.
Worry steals our joy in Jesus, so if we want to fight for joy we have to fight for peace.
The first step in learning to pray, is understanding Who it is we are praying to.
Prayer should be a continual persistent conversation with a God who never tires from hearing from us.
Prayer is foundationally the worship of God.
As we look at Christ's example in prayer, we see his passion for truth, beauty, community, mission, progress, and love.
When we follow Jesus, new challenges require us to recommit to old wisdom.
Apart from Jesus, we can do nothing, so prayer is a vital part of fruitfullness. Listen in to hear the why and how of Abiding in Christ from John 15.
Jesus shows His love by meeting our deepest need himself.
God has more for us. And seeing that "more" accomplished is going to come through prayer. So August Gate is coming to Jesus to ask, "Lord, teach us to pray."
Our King to save, and salvation can only come through sacrifice.