The Prayer that Brings Birth”
Travail occurs 31 times in 30 verses
1. Eight Barren Desperate Women
In scripture eight barren women were specifically named who were healed from barrenness! They had several things in common. They were desperate. They cried out to the Lord. And each brought forth either a prophet or a deliverer of the nation. Let me list these eight women for you:
1. Sarah, who brought forth Isaac (Genesis 11:30; 16:1; 18:1–15; 21:1–8)
2. Rebekah, who brought forth Esau and Jacob (Genesis 25:21–26)
3. Rachel, who brought forth Joseph and Benjamin (Genesis 29:31; 30:1, 22–24; 35:16–18)
4. Manoah’s wife, who brought forth Samson (Judges 13:2–24)
5. Ruth, who brought forth Obed (Ruth 4:13)
6. Hannah, who brought forth Samuel (1 Samuel 1:2–20)
7. Elizabeth, who brought forth John the Baptist (Luke 1:7–13, 57)
I have listed only seven barren women thus far, while I told you I found eight examples. Who is the eighth?
Isaiah 66:8 portrays her vividly: “Who has heard such a thing? Who has seen such things? Can a land be born in one day? Can a nation be brought forth all at once? As soon as Zion travailed, she also brought forth her sons.”
Zion is the eighth barren woman. She will bring forth her precious fruit in the earth as soon as—when? As soon as Zion travails, she will bring forth sons.
What Is Travail? Defining Our Terms 3205: 1) to bear, bring forth, beget, gender, travail
1) to bear, bring forth, of child birth, of distress (simile). of wicked(behaviour)
2) to beget b) (Niphal) to be born
3) (Piel) to cause or help to bring forth, to assist or tend as a midwife, midwife (participle)
4) (Pual) to be born
5) (Hiphil) to beget (a child), to bear (fig. - of wicked bringing forth iniquity)
6) (Hophal) day of birth, birthday (infinitive)
7) (Hithpael) to declare one's birth (pedigree)
“What is travail?” As it is in the natural, so it is in the spiritual. Travail is a form of intense intercession given by the Holy Spirit whereby an individual or group is gripped by something that grips G-d’s heart. The individual or group labors with Him for an opening to be created so that the new life can come forth.The definition of travail from Webster’s New World Dictionary is simple: 1. Very hard work. 2. The pains of childbirth. 3. Intense pain; agony. v. 1. To toil. 2. To suffer the pains of childbirth.” I have found this definition describing physical travail to be correct in the spiritual realm as well.
Travail takes place after you have carried something in your heart for a period of time. But it comes on you suddenly. Travail can be associated with the prayer of tears but does not require it. It is preceded by nurturing the promise; later the strategic time comes to push that promise forth through the prayer canal. Finally you realize that the promise has been born, and you are greatly relieved when the delivery is over!The prayer of travail is G-d desiring to create an “opening” to bring forth a measure of life or growth. If the “opening” was already in place, there would not be the need for travail. Just as the “opening” of the natural womb is enlarged to bring forth the baby, so, travail creates an “opening or way,” whereas before the opening or way was closed. With travail, there is always a way opened for life, newness, change or growth.
3. Accounts of Agonizing and Wrestling in Prayer:
Different portions of the Body of Messiah use different terminology to describe similar or overlapping experiences. Associated with the prayer of travail throughout church history have often been accounts of “agonizing and wrestling” in prayer. Where are these holy wrestlers for our generation? Perhaps one reason that few wrestle in prayer today is that few have the understanding needed and the perseverance required for its strenuous demands. By revelation, you recognize what is at stake: the eternal destiny of an unsaved loved one; the success of an urgent endeavor; the life of a sick one; the honor of the name of G-d; the welfare of the Kingdom of G-d.Wrestling in prayer enlists all the capacities of your soul, marshals your deepest holy desire, and by the grace of G-d uses all the perseverance of your holy determination. You push through a host of difficulties. You push back the heavy, threatening clouds of darkness. You reach beyond the visible and natural to the very throne of G-d. With all your strength and stubbornness, you lay hold of G-d’s grace and power as it becomes a passion of your soul.Remember Jacob wrestling with the angel until he received the blessing? Let’s look at that passage again: “Jacob was left alone, and a man wrestled with him until daybreak. And when he saw that he had not prevailed against him, he touched the socket of his thigh; so the socket of Jacob’s thigh was dislocated while he wrestled with him. Then he said, ‘Let me go, for the dawn is breaking.’ But he said, ‘I will not let you go unless you bless me.’
Genesis 32:24–26As Jacob found out, stubborn, persevering prayer eventually pays off.
Additional Scriptural Accounts of Wrestling
We do not know for certain what Paul meant, but ponder the following passage from Colossians:
“Epaphras, who is one of your number, a bondslave of Y’Shua Messiah, sends you his greetings, always laboring earnestly for you in his prayers, that you may stand perfect and fully assured in all the will of G-d. For I bear him witness that he has a deep concern for you and for those who are in Laodicea and Hierapolis.”Colossians 4:12–13, The NIV says Epaphras was “always wrestling in prayer.” Wow! I wonder what his “deep concern,” which was expressed through laboring prayer, looked like. One thing we are assured of: It was intense!When Paul wrote that our struggle, or wrestling match, is against the forces of darkness, he had in mind the backdrop of the Olympic-style games in ancient Greece. Each wrestler sought to throw his opponent onto the ground and put his own foot on his opponent’s neck.
The Amplified Version renders the passage like this: “Put on G-d’s whole armor—the armor of a heavy-armed soldier, which G-d supplies—that you may be able successfully to stand up against all the strategies and the deceits of the devil. For we are not wrestling with flesh and blood—contending only with physical opponents—but against the despotisms, against the master spirits who are the world rulers of this present darkness, against the spirit forces of wickedness in the heavenly (supernatural) sphere.”
Ephesians 6:11–12 Clearly we are given pictures here of pinning or wrestling with the enemy, as well as with our heavenly Father in the divine interplay of prayer. One common thread is for certain in both accounts: Don’t give up! Continue in your wrestling match. It’s not over till it’s over! Continue in persevering, prevailing intercession.
The Epitome of Travail: The G-d of the universe is speaking; declaring that rain is coming to end the drought. Is anyone listening?Before a development ever appears in the natural, it must exist first in the heart of G-d. As recorded from the life of Elijah in I Kings 18, before the rain came to end the drought, Elijah heard the rain with his spiritual ears. Even today G-d speaks first. This creates a spark of faith within a man or woman. Remember, faith comes by “hearing . . . the word of Messiah” (Romans 10:17). But Elijah did not just go out and declare all he had heard. He prayed the promise into being. He literally knelt on the promise. He crouched on Mount Carmel as he put his face between his knees. He birthed end of one season and the beginning of another! The drought ended and the rain poured down!There are many lessons to grasp here—but let’s keep it simple. G-d speaks. Man hears. Faith is created. Man responds to the spark of faith and prays the promise into being. Stubbornness and endurance are required when the desired result seems to be delayed. Even when breakthrough starts to come, it takes eyes of discernment to recognize the day of visitation. We are not to “despise the day of small things” (Zechariah 4:10), as a cloud the size of a man’s hand grows and consumes the sky in a downpour of mercy, and the drought comes to an end.Yes, as we see in the encounter with Elijah, travail brings birth.
Travail is the posture of desperation. It expresses the urgent prayer of the heart. Could this be one of the missing keys to an authentic apostolic worldwide awakening?Join many other tenacious intercessors.
May we truly go forth kneeling on the promises—birthing G-d’s purposes through the power of prophetic intercession.
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