Pray Like You Know Who You Are
Do you know any prayer warriors? The kind whose prayers seem to shake heaven and silence hell? I admire them deeply. To me, those intercessors who pray with boldness, passion, and precision are like spiritual weightlifters — built strong through intimacy with God and trained in the authority they've inherited in Christ.
They don't beg. They command.
They don’t doubt. They declare.
They don’t pray from fear. They pray from victory.
As @kittiejrose said, they are “deputized with Kingdom authority — legislators in the Spirit who speak on behalf of God, standing firm in the armor inherited through His Word.” Their declarations aren't just emotion; they’re based on an understanding of their position in Christ and the power they already possess. WOWZA!
Pastor @gregorydickow teaches powerfully on this truth: Prayer is not about our righteousness — it's about the righteousness we’ve received through Jesus. So, we pray without guilt, shame, or fear. We are children of the King of Kings — chosen, covered, and commissioned. That means we pray with boldness, because heaven backs us up.
Luke 10:19 reminds us: “I have given you authority… over all the power of the enemy…”
The enemy doesn’t want you to realize this. That’s why he tries to intimidate you during prayer — making you compare, hesitate, or feel unworthy. But once you understand your spiritual authority, the atmosphere shifts. Hell trembles when a believer recognizes the power they carry.
Look at Elijah.
He prayed for the rain to stop — and it did.
He prayed again — and the heavens opened.
What made his prayers powerful? His unwavering faith in God’s Word and his desire for God to be known. Elijah’s story in 1 Kings 18 shows us: the power wasn’t in Elijah — it was in his confidence that God would show up. Faith before the evidence is what unleashes the miraculous.
Faith prays like it already sees the answer.
Faith prays like God is already moving.
Faith prays with authority.
We have been called to the same ministry that Jesus declared in Luke 4:18 — to preach, to heal, to set the captives free. And today, God moves through His people — those who know their identity and stand in the authority of His name.
So what does praying with authority look like?
It’s not begging God to do what He’s already promised.
It’s speaking to the mountain.
It’s declaring the Word.
It’s using the name that causes every knee to bow.
The Power of the Name
Every Christian has the privilege of using the name of Jesus in prayer. And when we pray in His name, we don’t just close a sentence — we activate heaven’s authority.
Philippians 2:9–10:
“God also hath highly exalted Him, and given Him a name which is above every name: that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow — in heaven, on earth, and under the earth.”
The power of Jesus’ name is the power of God Himself. It’s an access to His throne and the right to petition Him — not just for ourselves, but for others. And He’s promised to respond.
“The prayers of the righteous are powerful and effective.” (James 5:16)
So now what?
Learn to pray with authority — and give God the opportunity to glorify Himself in your circumstances.
I'm working on it.
Have you ever learned to pray with authority? What changed when you started praying with confidence in your identity?
Share your journey. Let’s grow in this together!
So Rise up, mountain mover.
Get in the Word.
Let the Holy Spirit stir you.
Pray like you know who you are — because when you do, hell won’t know what hit it.