

This chapter contains a prayer of Daniel, and the answer to it. The time, occasion, and manner of his prayer, or circumstances of it, are observed, Da 9:1-3, the parts of it, an address unto God, under various suitable epithets and characters, Da 9:4 confession of sin, of his own, of the inhabitants of the land, kings, princes, and people, which are largely dwelt upon and exaggerated, Da 9:5-15 and petitions for mercy, Da 9:16-19, then the answer follows; the time when it was ordered and given, and the person by whom it was sent, are expressed, Da 9:20-23 who delivered to him the vision of the seventy weeks to be considered by him; in which both the work of the Messiah, and the time of his coming, are clearly pointed out, Da 9:24-27.

Why do we want God’s blessings but resist His ways? Pastor Jeff Schreve uses Daniel’s prayer to expose the danger of seeking God’s hand without seeking His face. From national collapse to personal compromise, this episode connects ignored truth with spiritual decline—and calls believers to prayerful repentance. When God’s people get right, God is ready to respond.

When life drifts and hearts grow cold, what does it look like to return to God in prayer? Pastor Jeff Schreve points to Daniel as the poster child for prayer—steady, courageous, and uncompromising. From Daniel’s lion-den resolve to his heartfelt confession in Daniel 9, Pastor Jeff unpacks two critical moves that change everything: giving God your undivided attention and approaching Him with holy awe. If your prayer life feels distracted or stale, this episode is a reset.

If you’ll study revivals that have taken place over the centuries, you’ll find one common denominator: the revival did not come until the people started to cry out to God in brokenness, humility, repentance, and fervent prayer. Sadly, most Christians don’t do very well with the discipline of prayer. What does it look like when we return to God in prayer? In this convicting message from Pastor Jeff Schreve, learn afresh what a privilege we have as Christians to call on the Lord in prayer.

If you’ll study revivals that have taken place over the centuries, you’ll find one common denominator: the revival did not come until the people started to cry out to God in brokenness, humility, repentance, and fervent prayer. Sadly, most Christians don’t do very well with the discipline of prayer. What does it look like when we return to God in prayer? In this convicting message from Pastor Jeff Schreve, learn afresh what a privilege we have as Christians to call on the Lord in prayer.

If you’ll study revivals that have taken place over the centuries, you’ll find one common denominator: the revival did not come until the people started to cry out to God in brokenness, humility, repentance, and fervent prayer. Sadly, most Christians don’t do very well with the discipline of prayer. What does it look like when we return to God in prayer? In this convicting message from Pastor Jeff Schreve, learn afresh what a privilege we have as Christians to call on the Lord in prayer.

If you’ll study revivals that have taken place over the centuries, you’ll find one common denominator: the revival did not come until the people started to cry out to God in brokenness, humility, repentance, and fervent prayer. Sadly, most Christians don’t do very well with the discipline of prayer. What does it look like when we return to God in prayer? In this convicting message from Pastor Jeff Schreve, learn afresh what a privilege we have as Christians to call on the Lord in prayer.
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