Prayer & Intercession School

School of the Prophets • Summer 2026

Download Complete Syllabus PDF

Week 1 – Teach Me To Pray

Teach Me To Pray

Primary Text: Luke 11:1-13

One of Jesus' disciples came to Him after observing His prayer life and asked, "Lord, teach us to pray." This request reveals that prayer was one of the defining characteristics of Christ's ministry.

Instruction About Prayer

Jesus taught His disciples to pray:

  • Father, hallowed be Your name.
  • Your kingdom come.
  • Give us each day our daily bread.
  • Forgive us our sins.
  • Lead us not into temptation.

Prayer begins with relationship. God is our Father. Prayer is not merely presenting requests; it is communion with God.

The Principle of Persistence

Jesus illustrated persistence through the parable of the friend at midnight. The lesson is simple:

  • Ask and keep asking.
  • Seek and keep seeking.
  • Knock and keep knocking.

Persistence is not overcoming God's reluctance; it is positioning ourselves to receive His answer.

Developing a Prayer Life

Set specific times to pray every day. Prayer should become a daily discipline rather than an occasional activity.

  • Create a prayer schedule.
  • Maintain a prayer journal.
  • Read Scripture daily.
  • Record what God speaks to your heart.
  • Remove distractions during prayer.

The Role of the Holy Spirit

The Holy Spirit reveals the deep things of God. Through prayer we learn to hear His voice and receive His guidance.

1 Corinthians 2 teaches that the Spirit searches the deep things of God and reveals them to believers.

Fasting and Spiritual Growth

Biblical fasting is more than abstaining from food. It is a deliberate act of denying the flesh while seeking God.

Isaiah 58 teaches that true fasting produces spiritual freedom, deliverance, and transformation.

The Prayer Closet

Jesus often withdrew to solitary places to pray. Every believer needs a private place where distractions are removed and communion with God becomes the focus.

Cell phones, television, and daily interruptions should not dominate the time set aside for prayer.

The Cost of the Oil

Matthew 25:1-13 presents the Parable of the Ten Virgins. Five were wise and five were foolish. The difference was not their appearance, profession, or expectation. The difference was their oil.

Oil represents the ministry and presence of the Holy Spirit.

  • Prayer cannot be borrowed.
  • Consecration cannot be borrowed.
  • Hunger for God cannot be borrowed.
  • Intimacy with God cannot be borrowed.

The wise virgins prepared beforehand. The foolish waited until it was too late.

The Midnight Cry

The darkness revealed who possessed oil and who merely possessed a lamp. The coming days will reveal who has cultivated a genuine relationship with God.

The most heartbreaking words of the parable are: "I do not know you."

The issue was not activity. The issue was relationship.

Zechariah's Lampstand Vision

Zechariah 4 reveals a golden lampstand supplied continually by oil flowing from two olive trees.

God's message to Zerubbabel was:

Not by might, nor by power, but by My Spirit, says the Lord of hosts.

The lamp does not create its own oil. It simply receives what God provides.

  • Programs cannot replace oil.
  • Talent cannot replace oil.
  • Education cannot replace oil.
  • Position cannot replace oil.
  • Only the Holy Spirit can keep the lamp burning.

Key Lesson

The answer for this generation is not a better lamp. The answer is fresh oil.

Return to prayer. Return to surrender. Return to the Holy Spirit.

Reflection Questions

  1. How consistent is my personal prayer life?
  2. What distractions prevent me from spending time with God?
  3. What does the oil represent in the parable?
  4. How can I cultivate greater intimacy with the Holy Spirit?
  5. What practical changes can I make this week to strengthen my prayer life?

Week 2 – The Loss of Discernment

The Mysteries of the Altar: The Loss of Discernment

Primary Text: 1 Chronicles 21:1-27

One of the greatest dangers facing the Church is not persecution, opposition, or hardship. It is the gradual loss of spiritual discernment. The tragedy is not that God stops speaking, but that His people stop hearing.

David Numbers Israel

David commanded a census of Israel. On the surface, counting the people appeared harmless. However, God saw something deeper.

The issue was not numbers. The issue was dependence.

David began trusting what could be counted instead of trusting the Spirit of God. His confidence slowly shifted from God to visible strength.

  • He counted people.
  • He counted soldiers.
  • He counted resources.
  • He measured strength naturally rather than spiritually.

The danger for the modern Church is the same. We often measure attendance, finances, influence, and popularity while neglecting the presence of God.

When Discernment Begins to Fade

Joab immediately recognized that something was wrong. Even before judgment came, there were warnings.

When discernment fades:

  • Conviction decreases.
  • Prayer becomes optional.
  • The presence of God becomes secondary.
  • Spiritual sensitivity grows dull.
  • Activity replaces intimacy.

Many churches continue functioning while the Spirit is being grieved. That reality should terrify us.

The Example of Samson

Judges 16 tells us that Samson rose up to shake himself as before, but did not know that the Lord had departed from him.

The greatest danger is not losing strength. The greatest danger is not realizing it has been lost.

Authority vs Activity

In Acts 19, the sons of Sceva attempted to cast out demons using the name of Jesus. They had the correct words but lacked authority.

The demon answered:

Jesus I know. Paul I know. But who are you?

True authority does not come from titles, positions, or personalities. It comes from intimacy with God.

How Spiritual Authority Is Developed

  • Prayer
  • Fasting
  • Obedience
  • Suffering
  • Hidden surrender
  • Faithfulness

Every hidden act of obedience adds weight in the spirit. Every sacrifice made for God strengthens spiritual authority.

The Return to the Altar

After judgment began in Israel, David was instructed to build an altar on the threshing floor of Ornan.

When the altar was built and sacrifice was offered, the plague stopped.

The altar remains God's answer today.

  • The altar breaks pride.
  • The altar restores discernment.
  • The altar produces repentance.
  • The altar invites God's fire.

David declared:

I will not offer unto the Lord that which costs me nothing.

Real restoration always costs something.

The Importance of Prayer and Intercession

Discernment grows in the presence of God. The more time spent with Him, the more sensitive the heart becomes.

Intercessors often sense burdens before others see problems. Prophetic people frequently perceive spiritual realities before they become visible.

Discernment is born through communion with God.

Joel's Cry

Joel 2:17 calls for ministers to weep between the porch and the altar.

God is still searching for people who carry genuine burden, brokenness, and compassion for His people.

  • The same Spirit that rested on Noah still moves today.
  • The same Spirit that empowered Elijah still answers by fire.
  • The same Spirit that rested on Elisha still seeks yielded vessels.
  • The same Spirit that filled John the Baptist still calls people to repentance.

Fire Falls on Sacrifice

Revival does not come through better programs alone. Revival comes when surrendered people become living altars before God.

Throughout Scripture, fire always falls on sacrifice.

The Church does not need more performance. The Church needs the presence of God.

Ezekiel's Vision

Ezekiel 9 records a powerful vision. God instructed an angel to place a mark upon those who mourned and grieved over the sins of the nation.

The mark was placed upon those who:

  • Cried before God.
  • Carried spiritual burden.
  • Refused to become comfortable with sin.
  • Mourned over spiritual decline.

God was searching for mourners. God was searching for intercessors.

Where Are the Weepers?

The Church desperately needs men and women who will cry out before God once again.

This is not merely another sermon. It is a call to repentance. It is a call to prayer. It is a call to spiritual awakening.

Key Lesson

The answer for this generation remains unchanged:

  • Return to the altar.
  • Return to prayer.
  • Return to brokenness.
  • Return to the Holy Spirit.

When the fire falls again, discernment will return to the house of God.

Reflection Questions

  1. What are some signs that discernment is fading in a believer's life?
  2. Why was David's census such a serious issue before God?
  3. What is the difference between spiritual authority and natural ability?
  4. What does it mean to become a living altar?
  5. How can I cultivate greater discernment through prayer and intercession?

Week 3 – The Cross, The Spirit, and The Restoration of Fire

The Mysteries of the Altar: The Cross, the Spirit, and the Restoration of Fire

Primary Texts: Genesis 22, Romans 12:1, Acts 2, Revelation 8:3-4

There are mysteries in God that cannot be discovered through intellect alone. They are revealed through surrender. One of the greatest of these mysteries is the altar.

Throughout Scripture, the altar became the meeting place between God and man. Whenever something earthly was surrendered, something heavenly was released.

Altars Throughout Scripture

The altar appears repeatedly throughout the Bible. Each altar reveals an important spiritual truth.

  • Noah built an altar after the flood and God released covenant.
  • Abraham built an altar and discovered Jehovah-Jireh.
  • Elijah repaired the altar and fire fell from heaven.
  • David built an altar and judgment was stopped.

The altar was never merely a structure of stone. It represented surrender, sacrifice, worship, and communion with God.

Every Altar Points to the Cross

All Old Testament altars ultimately point to Jesus Christ.

Isaac carried wood up Mount Moriah. Centuries later Jesus carried the Cross to Calvary.

Abraham offered his beloved son figuratively. The Heavenly Father offered His only begotten Son literally.

The ram caught in the thicket pointed prophetically to Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.

The Cross is the fulfillment of every altar.

Christ Became the Sacrifice

At Calvary, Jesus became both the sacrifice and the altar.

Through His death, burial, and resurrection, humanity was given access back to God.

The altar is no longer simply a place we visit. The altar becomes a life we live.

Living Sacrifices

Romans 12:1 teaches:

Present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable unto God.

Under the New Covenant, believers become living sacrifices continually surrendered before God.

Christianity cannot survive on outward religion alone. It must be sustained by continual surrender.

The Mystery of Prayer

Prayer has always been connected to the altar.

In the Old Testament, incense continually ascended from the altar before the Lord.

The incense represented:

  • Prayer
  • Worship
  • Intercession
  • Communion with God

In Revelation, John saw bowls filled with incense, which represented the prayers of the saints ascending before God.

Prayer is altar language.

The Ministry of the Holy Spirit

The New Testament reveals an even deeper mystery.

The Holy Spirit enables believers to communicate with God beyond the limitations of natural understanding.

The Spirit intercedes. The Spirit guides. The Spirit teaches. The Spirit reveals.

The Church was never designed to function apart from the Holy Spirit.

The Upper Room

Acts 2 was more than a gathering. It was an altar.

The disciples waited before God in surrender and obedience. When the appointed time arrived, the Holy Spirit descended with power.

Fire fell because sacrifice was present.

Heaven spoke because hearts were surrendered.

Without the Holy Spirit

Without the Spirit:

  • Structure replaces glory.
  • Religion replaces life.
  • Programs replace power.
  • Activity replaces anointing.

The Church becomes a form without fire.

The Restoration of Fire

Many believers desire fire, but few understand how fire comes.

Throughout Scripture, fire never fell randomly.

Fire always responded to sacrifice.

  • Fire fell upon Elijah's altar.
  • Fire fell upon Solomon's dedication.
  • Fire fell in the Upper Room.

The pattern never changes.

Sacrifice first. Fire second.

What Must Be Placed on the Altar?

God is not asking merely for church attendance. He is asking for surrender.

Anything that resists God's purpose must be placed upon the altar.

  • Pride
  • Self-will
  • Bitterness
  • Fear
  • Unbelief
  • Worldliness
  • Disobedience

Whatever is surrendered becomes a candidate for transformation.

The Cost of Revival

Revival is not produced through human effort.

Revival begins when God's people return to the altar.

Every awakening in history has been preceded by:

  • Prayer
  • Repentance
  • Brokenness
  • Surrender

God still responds to sacrifice.

The Call of the Spirit

The Holy Spirit continues to call believers deeper.

Not merely to church attendance. Not merely to religious activity.

But to surrender.

The altar is God's invitation to intimacy.

The Cross opened the way. The Spirit empowers the journey. The fire confirms the sacrifice.

Key Lesson

The restoration of fire does not begin in a service. It begins on the altar.

Whenever believers surrender themselves completely to God, He responds with power, presence, and fire.

Reflection Questions

  1. Why do all biblical altars ultimately point to Jesus Christ?
  2. What does it mean to become a living sacrifice?
  3. Why is prayer called altar language?
  4. How does the Holy Spirit help believers commune with God?
  5. What areas of my life still need to be placed upon the altar?

Week 4 – The Offering of Isaac

The Mysteries of the Altar: The Offering of Isaac

Primary Text: Genesis 22:1-18

The story of Abraham offering Isaac is one of the greatest pictures of surrender in all of Scripture. It is not merely a story about sacrifice. It is a story about trust, obedience, faith, and complete surrender to God.

The Test of Abraham

After years of waiting for God's promise, Abraham finally received the son he had long desired. Isaac was the miracle child. He represented God's promise, God's blessing, and Abraham's future.

Then God gave an unexpected command:

Take now your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and offer him there as a burnt offering.

God was not interested in destroying Isaac. God was testing Abraham's heart.

Why God Tests His People

God already knows what is in our hearts. Tests reveal what is in us.

Trials often expose:

  • Faith
  • Trust
  • Motives
  • Priorities
  • Dependence upon God

Faith that is never tested is faith that is never proven.

The Journey to Moriah

Abraham's journey to Mount Moriah lasted three days. Every step toward the mountain required trust.

Abraham did not fully understand God's plan, but he obeyed anyway.

True faith obeys even when complete understanding is absent.

Delayed Understanding

Many believers want explanations before obedience.

God often works differently.

Obedience comes first. Understanding follows later.

Abraham obeyed before he saw the provision.

Isaac Carries the Wood

One of the most remarkable details in the story is that Isaac carried the wood for the sacrifice.

This points prophetically to Jesus Christ, who would later carry the Cross to Calvary.

Throughout Genesis 22, God was painting a picture of redemption.

The Altar Is Built

When Abraham arrived at the appointed place, he built an altar.

The altar represents:

  • Surrender
  • Worship
  • Obedience
  • Faith
  • Submission

Before fire can fall, an altar must first be built.

Placing Isaac on the Altar

Isaac represented Abraham's greatest treasure.

God was asking:

Do you love the promise more than the Promiser?

Many people desire God's blessings, but God desires first place in their hearts.

Whatever occupies God's place becomes an idol.

What Is Your Isaac?

Every believer eventually faces this question.

An Isaac may be:

  • A dream
  • A relationship
  • A career
  • A ministry
  • A possession
  • A personal ambition

God is not asking everyone to give these things away. He is asking whether they are fully surrendered.

The Moment of Obedience

As Abraham stretched forth his hand, God stopped him.

The purpose of the test was never Isaac's death. The purpose was Abraham's surrender.

God saw a man whose heart was fully yielded.

Jehovah-Jireh

At the moment of obedience, God provided a ram caught in a thicket.

Abraham named the place:

Jehovah-Jireh (The Lord Will Provide)

Provision appeared after obedience.

Many believers seek provision first. Scripture repeatedly shows obedience first and provision second.

The Prophetic Picture of Christ

Genesis 22 points directly to Jesus Christ.

  • Isaac was the beloved son.
  • Jesus is the beloved Son.
  • Isaac carried the wood.
  • Jesus carried the Cross.
  • A sacrifice was required.
  • Christ became the sacrifice.

The entire story points toward Calvary.

Faith Beyond Understanding

Hebrews teaches that Abraham believed God could even raise Isaac from the dead.

Faith trusts God's character when circumstances make no sense.

Abraham's confidence was not in the situation. His confidence was in God.

The Blessing of Surrender

After Abraham passed the test, God reaffirmed His covenant promises.

Surrender never produces loss in God's Kingdom.

What is surrendered to God is always safer in His hands than ours.

Lessons from Mount Moriah

  • God tests His people.
  • Faith obeys before understanding.
  • True worship requires surrender.
  • Provision often follows obedience.
  • Every altar points to Christ.
  • God desires complete devotion.

The Call to Surrender

The story of Abraham and Isaac continues to challenge believers today.

God still asks His people to place everything on the altar.

The altar is not a place of loss. It is a place of trust.

The altar is where faith grows, where obedience is proven, and where God's provision is revealed.

Key Lesson

God is not after your Isaac. God is after your heart.

When the heart is fully surrendered, God can trust us with His promises.

Reflection Questions

  1. Why did God test Abraham?
  2. What does Isaac represent in the life of a believer?
  3. Why is obedience often required before understanding?
  4. What areas of my life have not yet been placed upon the altar?
  5. How does Genesis 22 point to Jesus Christ?

Bonus Lesson – The Nightmare of Darkness

The Nightmare of Darkness

Bonus Lesson

Throughout Scripture, darkness is often used to represent spiritual blindness, deception, confusion, and separation from God.

The greatest danger facing the Church is not external opposition. The greatest danger is becoming comfortable in spiritual darkness.

The Midnight Cry

Jesus taught the Parable of the Ten Virgins to prepare believers for His return.

All ten virgins:

  • Had lamps.
  • Expected the bridegroom.
  • Waited for His coming.
  • Fell asleep during the delay.

Yet only five were prepared when the bridegroom arrived.

The difference was oil.

The Meaning of the Oil

Throughout Scripture, oil frequently represents the ministry and presence of the Holy Spirit.

The wise virgins carried an extra supply. The foolish virgins carried only enough for the moment.

When the midnight cry came, the foolish discovered that yesterday's experience could not meet today's demand.

What Cannot Be Borrowed

The foolish asked the wise for oil.

The answer was no.

Some things cannot be borrowed:

  • Prayer
  • Consecration
  • Obedience
  • Intimacy with God
  • Personal relationship with Christ

Each believer must develop these personally.

Darkness Reveals Reality

When darkness increases, what is truly inside us becomes visible.

Dark seasons reveal:

  • Faith
  • Character
  • Commitment
  • Dependence upon God

Darkness exposes the difference between appearance and reality.

Why the Midnight Hour Matters

God often moves powerfully during difficult seasons.

  • Paul and Silas prayed at midnight.
  • The Passover deliverance came at midnight.
  • The cry of the bridegroom came at midnight.

The darkest moments often become the stage for God's greatest demonstrations of power.

The Tragedy of Empty Lamps

An empty lamp may look impressive, but it cannot provide light.

Many people focus on appearance while neglecting spiritual depth.

The wise virgins understood that preparation must happen before the crisis arrives.

The Importance of Intimacy

The most sobering words in the parable are:

"I do not know you."

The issue was not church attendance. The issue was relationship.

The bridegroom was looking for intimacy, not merely activity.

The Church's Greatest Need

The answer for this generation is not better programs.

The answer is fresh oil.

The answer is a renewed relationship with the Holy Spirit.

The answer is prayer, surrender, and daily fellowship with God.

Buying Oil

The oil is costly.

It is purchased through:

  • Prayer
  • Surrender
  • Obedience
  • Faithfulness
  • Time spent in God's presence

The price is high, but the reward is priceless.

Living Ready

Jesus repeatedly warned believers to watch and be ready.

Readiness is not fear. Readiness is living in continual fellowship with God.

Prepared people do not panic when darkness comes. Prepared people keep their lamps burning.

The Call of the Spirit

The Holy Spirit is still calling believers deeper.

The invitation remains:

  • Return to prayer.
  • Return to the altar.
  • Return to surrender.
  • Return to intimacy.

The Bridegroom is coming. The question is not whether He will arrive. The question is whether our lamps will still be burning when He does.

Key Lesson

The wise did not simply carry lamps. They carried oil.

A relationship with God cannot be borrowed, transferred, or inherited. It must be cultivated personally.

Course Conclusion

Prayer produces intimacy.

Intimacy produces discernment.

Discernment leads us to the altar.

The altar produces surrender.

Surrender invites the fire of God.

And the fire keeps the lamp burning until the Bridegroom comes.

Final Reflection Questions

  1. What does the oil represent in my daily walk with God?
  2. Am I relying on past experiences or maintaining a fresh relationship with God?
  3. What areas of my life need greater surrender?
  4. How can I keep my lamp burning consistently?
  5. What is the Holy Spirit speaking to me through this course?

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading…
HOLLAND PCG