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A Time to Travail Moving from Distress to Victory |
March 12, 2007
Dear Faithful PRAY-ERS:
In January when the Lord told me that we would be in 10 Days of Travail, I had no idea that Brian and Lori Kooiman, who work with me, would be having their third child on this day. Yesterday, Lori delivered a healthy 8 lbs., 14 oz. boy, Benjamin. Psalm 127:3 tells us that children are a heritage from the Lord, and the fruit of the womb is a reward. The Psalm goes on to say, “Happy is the man who has his quiver full of them; they shall not be ashamed, but shall speak with their enemies in the gate” (v. 5).
When it comes to bearing children, it’s an interesting fact
that there is a desperate, agonizing pain of the soul that comes with
barrenness. Equally true, however, is that there is a desperate, travailing
pain of the body that comes with giving birth. My wife, Pam, and I understand
the agony of barrenness as it was ten years before we were able to have
children. There were times of desperation in those years and times we agonized
before the Lord. But God heard the desperate cries of our heart for children
and brought a miraculous healing to Pam’s body that allowed her to conceive.
Since that time she has become familiar with the travailing pain of birth, having
given birth to six children.
Because what we experience in the natural often
mirrors that which we experience in the spiritual, we can see that there are
times when agony and travail are appropriate precursors and responses to
spiritual birth, just as they are to natural birth. We agonize when something
God intends to be has not yet manifested, and we travail as we birth God’s new
thing into the earth.
When the Lord first spoke this season of travail to me, I was very unclear as to what He was saying. Travail connotes that we are at a narrow transition. This transitional place is a life and death intersection. The transitional place is a place of “crossing over”. You can read about that in Possessing Your Inheritance and Releasing the Prophetic Destiny of a Nation. I believe we have entered a “Season of Travail”. Travail means that we are in a “distressed” moment.
I do believe that during this month there are ten days
specifically that the Lord will burden us for our future. Some of you are already
feeling that distress. This travail season could take us through July. I
sense that we are to pray specifically about Israel during March
and watch carefully until June. I will send an Israel update to the whole
list soon. I also think that the divorcing of the “Baal System of Worship”
for this nation is a key to our future. (Please get Dutch Sheet’s message from Starting
the Year Off Right).
I just came home from Oklahoma last night, where we
had an historic meeting with Native Leaders over the Baal system of worship.
John Benefiel and Jerry Mash, two of the apostolic prayer leaders in our nation,
located in Oklahoma, have written a legal decree of divorcement to release us
from Baal. I would encourage you to keep this prayer focus as a reference
point to use on and off through July as you establish the new thing in your
life. Especially through June, pray for Israel!
Apostle Barbara Yoder, a dear friend and wonderful
leader, defines TRAVAIL!
Travail is a specific type of prayer which both
births (Is. 66:7-9) as well as wars (Is. 42:12-14). When a person enters a
time, period or season of travail (birthing and/or warring), they will
experience it as a heaviness, weight, burden, deep penetrating concern or
unease over a situation or condition that they cannot shake. Sometimes travail
extends to weeks or months particularly when God burdens a person over a
nation.
Travail is defined as birthing, delivering; or to be disgusted, faint, grieved or weary, distressed, troubled. The old Latin word was used an instrument of torture composed of three stakes a person was tied to. To travail is to be troubled, sorrowful, in agony, intense pain or distress. In other words it is not a comfortable experience. Often times a person will initially interpret travail emotionally and become introspective, suspecting something is wrong with them. However it is not an emotion, it is the burden of the Lord, the voice of the Lord coming to a person as a burden to draw them into partnering with Him to birth and/or to war.
The only way travail will be released is through prayer.
The person will feel weighted down by a situation until it is released through
sustained prayer. It is during travail that people often experience a “Romans 8:22-26 time.” The Holy Spirit within the person knows how to pray under this type of
burden. As the person begins to pray, the Holy Spirit takes over and begins to
travail within and through them with groanings that cannot be expressed in English
words.
Isaiah 42:13 says that God Himself “will go forth as a mighty man, He
will cry, yes, He will shout aloud, He will do mightily against His enemies.”
Verse 14 continues, “Thus says the Lord, ‘I have for a long time held My peace,
I have restrained Myself, now I will cry out like a woman in travail...’”
WHAT SHOULD WE DO NOW? Here are some keys that will help you to be victorious in this season:
Hannah’s Agony: Agonizing Produces Change!
One of the most poignant Biblical accounts of agonizing
before God is the story of Hannah. As the story opens, we see that Israel was
in its lowest moral condition as a nation. The priesthood had fallen into total
disarray. However, individuals kept coming to Shiloh to offer sacrifices and
worship to the Lord. As required by the Law, Elkanah took his entire family to
Shiloh to offer sacrifices. Hannah, one of Elkanah’s two wives, was barren
and unfulfilled. She was a desperate woman because she knew that the destiny
of her creation had not been fulfilled. This lack of fulfillment had led her
into grief and affliction of spirit, which the Bible calls “bitterness of
soul.” In 1 Samuel 1:10-18 we see how Hannah agonized before the Lord to give
her a child. Her agonizing gives us a great pattern to follow:
1. Pray to the Lord.2. Weep in anguish (agonized).3. Lift your affliction to the Lord.4. Cry out: “Remember why I was created!”5. Plead, “Fulfill my request and You can have my first fruit offering.”6. Go to the highest level authority in your life that can pray for you. (She told the priest her problem and expressed her emotion.)7. Ask for favor to come upon you.8. Press through and get up in victory.9. Birth the new thing in your life (and perhaps, your nation).10. Watch change take place!
Through her prayer of agony to the Lord, Hannah conceived and gave birth to Samuel. She then fulfilled her vow to the Lord by giving this child to the priest. This act changed the course of Israel. Samuel began to prophesy and the nation began to shift, although not everything went well. As the story progresses we see that Israel was defeated in war and, as a result, lost the Ark of the Covenant, which represented God’s presence among them. This defeat, however, set the nation of Israel on course to restore the presence of God in the land, which David did when he returned the Ark to its resting place in Jerusalem many years later.
Travailing Produces Birth
“Be in pain, and labor to bring forth, O daughter of Zion,
like a woman in birth pangs. For now you shall go forth from the city, you
shall dwell in the field, and to Babylon you shall go. There you
shall be delivered; there the LORD will redeem you from the hand of your
enemies” (Micah 4:10).
Travailing is defined as a painfully difficult or
burdensome work, particularly the anguish or suffering associated with the
labor of childbirth. You may be wondering, what does that have to do with
prayer? If we stop to consider the story of Hannah, we realize that when she
approached the Lord, she was in anguish over her circumstances. Her plea to
God came from the very depths of her being. Her agony before the Lord did not
come purely from the emotion of an unmet need or desire in her life. It rose
up out of her spirit because, as we mentioned before, the destiny for which she
had been created had gone unfulfilled. (At that time she did not know in the
natural that she had been chosen to give birth to Samuel, a great prophet and
judge of Israel.) But somewhere in her spirit she knew that she could not
settle for barrenness. She knew that was not God’s portion for her in life.
Before Hannah gave
physical birth to Samuel, she travailed for and birthed something spiritually
that overcame the curse of barrenness, not only in her own body, but ultimately
for the nation of Israel through Samuel. When we travail in prayer, what we
are doing is allowing the Holy Spirit to birth something through us.
In the
nineteenth century, when Charles Finney was pondering travailing prayer, he
wrote, “Why does God require such prayer—such strong desires, such agonizing
supplications? These strong desires mirror the strength of God’s feelings.
They are God’s real feeling for unrepentant sinners. How strong God’s desire
must be for His Spirit to produce in Christians such travail—God has chosen the
word to describe it—it is travail, torment of the soul.” [Charles G. Finney, Lectures
on Revival (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany, 1988), p. 46.]
In her book Possessing the Gates of the Enemy, Cindy Jacobs says, “There are times when we are called by God to pray strong prayers and help to birth the will of God into an area. Usually there is a sense of wonder after the prayer, and a sense that God has done something through it. Here are four points to help you recognize the work of the Holy Spirit:
How Does Travailing Prayer Work?
There is a tremendous power in travailing prayer because, as
Cindy noted, it births the will of God into the earth. This type of prayer
always outwits the devil because he is so strongly opposed by the new thing God
is producing as a result of travail. We, therefore, need to have an
understanding of what God is wanting to birth through us. We, like Hannah,
need to be in tune with what God is ready to bring forth in that given hour.
That can only be done through intimacy with God and through a willingness to
allow Him to use us in travail.
Many times we have much that God has put in our spirits, but
we don’t have the strength to bring it to birth. Isaiah 60:1 says, “Arise,
shine for your light has come and the glory of the Lord is risen upon you.”
In the Amplified Version it says to arise from the depression and oppression
that has held you down, arise to new life. This is the time to call upon the
Lord to begin to break those things that have held down your spirit, for this
is the time for the Spirit of God to begin to arise within us.
The word arise
means to stand firm, to come from a lying down position to a stand. When we
begin to arise and allow God’s glory to arise through us, we will take our
stand against the powers and principalities that have resisted us. As we allow
the Spirit of the Lord to arise within us, we will find that He gives us the expectation
of new life and the strength to bring that life to birth.
Once this process begins and we identify what burden God wants us to pray over, we begin to agonize and feel the urgency of seeing the burden birthed. The burden becomes our own “baby” as God’s heart for seeing that thing brought forth begins to press down on our spirits. With it comes an oppression, but it’s not the oppression of the devil. If your assignment, for instance, is a travail to break an oppression over certain people on God’s heart, you can actually begin to feel the oppression they are under. That is the time to travail until the oppression breaks—until, as in natural childbirth, the heavenly opening is large enough so that God’s will can come forth on the earth.
Linda Heidler, who understands and leads many intercessors through their travail says: “One of the most interesting passages about wailing is Jeremiah 9:17-18 which says to call for the ‘skillful wailing women’. There are three words used for these women:
Jeremiah 9 describes a time of great national distress. These women were called to help the nation weep. These women were skilled in releasing the sound which would cause the nation to weep - to grieve over its condition, repent before God and willingly yield to Him again.” We must not fear travail. Men—do not think that travail is only a “woman” experience!
Prayer Focus: 10 Days to Move from Travail to
Overcoming!
Day 1. Read Genesis 31-35. Jacob moved from being a “supplanter” to a “contender with God.” Ask the Lord to reveal the areas where He wants you to contend and birth in a new way.
Day 2. Sanctify yourself. Cross over into the new. Allow the Lord to bring you to a new vulnerable place! Read Joshua 3-5.
Day 3. Go up against your “Jericho” by the Spirit. Read Joshua 6. Memorize Isaiah 30:15a.
Day 4. Study the story of Hannah. Embrace a day of conception, birthing, and jubilation! Read 1 Samuel 1-3.
Day 5. Fast and seek God for help on your road ahead! There comes a time for the Lord to cause you to wait. Read Ezra 8, especially verse 21. Do not go any further without a reevaluation of your path.
Day 6: Ask the Lord to teach you to legislate the heavenlies! Read 1 Kings 17-18. (Also, look at the first 10 verses of 1 Kings 19 and do not let the enemy push you out of your abiding place.)
Day 7: Receive new FAVOR! Read Isaiah 60-61. Read Luke 1. Sing or listen to a new song! Exalt the Lord!
Day 8: Embrace a day of desperation! Be like the woman who pressed through. Read Matthew 9 and Romans 8.
Day 9: The most incredible example of travail is Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane, “the Oil Press.” Press out everything that could keep you from completing your mission! Read Luke 9:51, John 18, and Luke 22:39
Day 10. Plead the blood of Jesus over what you are
bringing forth new in your life. Embrace a day of overcoming! Declare
that your enemy is overcome. Read Rev. 12.
Because travailing is such an intense and often misunderstood form of prayer, there are some cautions for us be aware of:
Moving into the Jubilee Season
“A woman, when she is in labor, has sorrow because her
hour has come; but as soon as she has given birth to the child, she no longer
remembers the anguish, for joy that a human being has been born into the
world. Therefore you now have sorrow; but I will see you again and your heart
will rejoice, and your joy no one will take from you” (John 16:21-22).
We have not been designed to stay in the place of travail either physically or spiritually. We have been designed to bring forth new birth and then move into the new season of life which that birth brings to us. After travail comes release. God has a jubilee season over every issue. For instance, if the issue you have been in travail for deals with financial supply, when release comes, God will give you or whomever you have been travailing for, incredible strategies over how to break debt structures to see increase and supply begin to flow. That usually includes two arenas.
During a year of jubilee, there is a suspension of labor. The difficult things that you have been travailing for in the past—those things that have been so hard and unyielding, and yet in which you have faithfully pressed through—suddenly come forth and you are released from your hard labor. It is then that you enter into a joy and a faith that you didn’t have, and many things start falling into place as a new order begins to come. As we agonize, travail, and labor for those things that God has laid on our hearts, remember there is a time when the birth comes and we are able to enter in our season of jubilee. (Excerpted from Prayers That Outwit the Enemy!)
During these ten days, remember that God has a covenant plan for Israel. Watch on behalf of Israel. Bless you! You will come through victoriously!

Chuck D. Pierce
MARCH FIRSTFRUITS WEEKEND – March 16-17
Speakers: Robert Stearns, Chuck Pierce, Robert
Heidler (with Robert Heidler bringing a special message
of impartation from the anointing released in Ireland during the days of St.
Patrick)
New Dimensions in Worship where we will experience going to a new
level in worship and sound
Ministry and Healing Teams
Sing to the Lord a New Song: A Firstfruits
Conference will be a vibrant weekend of praise, worship, prophecy
and healing! Robert Stearns will be joining me, Robert Heidler and the
Glory of Zion International Worship Team. We will begin this Friday at
7:30 PM, and then continue on Saturday morning at 9:00 AM through late afternoon. Pre-Worship will begin on Saturday morning at 8:00am. The registration donation is $20 per person. There will be Ministry
and Healing Teams available so we can minister to everyone who
attends.
Registration is required, so please confirm your plans to join
us for Sing to the Lord a New Song by calling (940) 382-7231 or
(888) 965-1099.
First WEBCAST of Firstfruits Weekend: We now are offering this conference by webcast!!! If you are interested in joining us online, simply visit www.gloryofzion.org and click on “webcast info” to learn more. The cost to register for the webcast is $20 per person.
Our March Firstfruits
Gathering will begin on Saturday evening (March 17) beginning
at 7:00 PM. We will be releasing the blessing of the Hebraic month
of Nisan. We will be preparing to enter the Hebrew month of
Nisan - the month of “Judah.” Come join us and make praise preeminent in
your life.
All are welcome to join us for this night at no cost even if you
are not able to attend the Sing to the Lord a New Song Firstfruits
Conference. This Saturday night gathering will also be available by webcast at
no charge. Go to our website for more details. If you cannot come and would
like to give, please go to https://www.glory-of-zion.org/secure/gift.asp
or call (888) 965-1099.
Resources to Assist you at this Time
![]() | Go Up Again! |
![]() | Prayers That Outwit the Enemy by Chuck D. Pierce
and Rebecca Wagner Sytsema |
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The
Breaker Anointing by Barbara J. Yoder |
You can always visit us online at www.glory-of-zion.org to order these and many other materials, or call us at (888) 965-1099 or (940) 382-7231. These specials expire on April 12, 2007.