Sabbath School
Growing in a Relationship with God
How to Study The Bible
Lesson 6 - Thursday
The Power of Selfless Prayer
“Then Moses returned to the Lord and said, ‘Oh, these people have committed a great sin… Yet now, if You will forgive their sin—but if not, I pray, blot me out of Your book which You have written’ ” (Exodus 32:31–32, NKJV).
This is one of the most astonishing prayers in all of Scripture. Moses doesn’t minimize the sin of the people—he names it plainly. But then he does something even more striking: he offers himself in their place. That’s not casual prayer. That’s costly, self-giving intercession.
What does this teach us? Moses wasn’t just talking to God—he knew Him. When God later describes Himself as “merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abounding in goodness and truth,” Moses already believed that. His prayer reflects it. He appeals to God’s mercy because he trusts it is real.
Moses also shows us what bold, faithful prayer looks like in real life:
- He held on to God through chaos, frustration, and long delays. Faith didn’t mean ease—it meant endurance.
- He prayed with substance. He reminded God of His covenant, His promises, and His past leading—not because God forgets, but because Moses anchored his faith in what God had already revealed.
- He accepted God’s answers. Sometimes the answer was “yes,” sometimes “no,” but Moses stayed close to God either way.
- He persisted. Even when outcomes weren’t what he wanted, he kept praying.
Here’s the uncomfortable part: most people don’t struggle with knowing they should pray—they struggle with actually doing it. Moses didn’t wait for perfect conditions. He stepped into the gap when it mattered most.
So ask yourself honestly:
Who needs your intercessory prayers right now?
A struggling family member? A drifting friend? A discouraged coworker? Someone making destructive choices?
And then the harder question:
What’s stopping you?
Is it distraction? Busyness? Doubt that your prayers matter? Or have you just gotten used to letting concern stop at worry instead of turning into prayer?
Moses shows us that intercession isn’t about eloquence—it’s about love that refuses to stay silent. If you care, you pray. And if you really care, you keep praying.
Don’t overcomplicate this. Start today. Name the person. Bring them before God. And keep showing up.
Prayer:
Lord, You are merciful, gracious, and patient beyond what I deserve. Thank You for hearing my prayers, even when my faith feels small. Teach me to pray like Moses—with boldness, persistence, and a heart that truly cares for others. Show me who needs my prayers right now, and remove whatever is holding me back. Help me to trust Your character, lean on Your promises, and accept Your answers. Use my prayers to make a difference in the lives of others. In Jesus’ name, Amen.




