10/05/2026
Not every leader is strong all the time.
Even Moses — the man chosen by God to confront Pharaoh, divide the sea, and lead a nation — reached a moment where his hands became weary. In the middle of battle, victory depended on whether his hands remained lifted before God. When his strength failed, Aaron and Hur stood beside him and held his arms up until the battle was won.
True leadership is not sustained by pride, talent, or popularity.
It is sustained by intercession.
A generation is dying because many leaders are fighting battles publicly while bleeding secretly. Some are preaching with exhausted souls, smiling with broken hearts, and carrying burdens too heavy to bear alone. God never designed His servants to stand without support. Even the strongest among us need people who will pray, encourage, and help carry the weight.
The Church does not only need gifted leaders.
It needs praying people.
People who will stand behind the ministry in prayer when nobody sees.
People who will hold up weary hands instead of criticizing tired hearts.
People who understand that spiritual victories are won first in the place of intercession.
Aaron and Hur did not take Moses’ position — they supported his mission.
That is the beauty of true ministry: not competition, but cooperation.
Not jealousy, but unity.
Not tearing down, but lifting up.
Some leaders today are one prayer away from giving up.
One encouragement away from quitting.
One faithful intercessor away from restoration.
May we become the kind of believers who strengthen others in prayer.
May we hold up the hands of those carrying spiritual responsibility.
And may every leader remember this truth: you are not meant to fight alone.
“Pray for one another, that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective.” — James 5:16
▪SPIRITUAL NOTES
▪SPIRITUAL GROWTH