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Mike Bickle

Mike Bickle (1955 - ). American evangelical pastor, author, and founder of the International House of Prayer (IHOPKC), born in Kansas City, Missouri. Converted at 15 after hearing Dallas Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach at a 1970 Fellowship of Christian Athletes conference, he pastored several St. Louis churches before founding Kansas City Fellowship in 1982, later Metro Christian Fellowship. In 1999, he launched IHOPKC, pioneering 24/7 prayer and worship, growing to 2,500 staff and including a Bible college until its closure in 2024. Bickle authored books like Passion for Jesus (1994), emphasizing intimacy with God, eschatology, and Israel’s spiritual role. Associated with the Kansas City Prophets in the 1980s, he briefly aligned with John Wimber’s Vineyard movement until 1996. Married to Diane since 1973, they have two sons. His teachings, broadcast globally, focused on prayer and prophecy but faced criticism for controversial prophetic claims. In 2023, Bickle was dismissed from IHOPKC following allegations of misconduct, leading to his withdrawal from public ministry. His influence persists through archived sermons despite ongoing debates about his legacy
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Mike Bickle emphasizes the importance of setting our hearts to love God with 100-percent obedience, highlighting how pursuing the last 2 percent of obedience positions us to live with a vibrant heart and experience powerful dynamics in our emotions. He discusses the tendency to hold back 2 percent from God in areas like speech, time management, and desires, hindering us from fully obeying. Bickle encourages deliberate commitment to obey God in every aspect of life, seeking grace in prayer to pursue 100-percent obedience and renewing our resolve when we fall short, knowing we can confidently repent and recommit to God's ways.
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The Blessing of Setting Our Hearts on 100-Percent Obedience
It is empowering and satisfying to set our heart to love God with 100-percent obedience. The pursuit of 98-percent obedience has a limited blessing. The last 2 percent positions us to live with a vibrant heart. Powerful and surprising dynamics occur in our emotions as we pursue the last 2 percent. There is a “spark” of the Spirit in our heart as we “reach,” or aim, to live this way. For those who don’t want to obey God in the areas of that last 2 percent, the Spirit often speaks to them about their lack of agreement with Him instead of God’s beauty. It is easy to pursue God with an attitude of 98-percent obedience, keeping 2 percent to ourselves. That is when we tell the Holy Spirit that He can have everything, except a few things. For example, when He convicts us for talking in a slandering or gossiping way about someone else, and we ignore that sense of conviction. “I want to talk the way I want to talk. Leave that part alone.” Or He speaks to us about an activity in our life, how we are using our time. “Holy Spirit, I am totally Yours, but this amount of time, come on, come on, give me some room.” Remember, I am talking about seeking God to obey 100 percent, not attaining complete obedience—the setting of our hearts to obey. There is a difference between the two. I am talking about the desire in the secret place of our heart, where we say, “I am going to obey You with all my heart.” There is an emotional dynamic, a very powerful one that happens when you have brought everything in your life under this banner of obeying the Lord, everything. Aiming for 100-percent obedience includes bridling our speech (Jas. 3:2), making a covenant with our eyes and refusing to look at anything that stirs up lust (Job 31:1), disciplining our appetites, and managing our time (for service and prayer) and our money for the increase of God’s kingdom. This commitment is more than a casual commitment to obey God in a general way; it must be so deliberate that it becomes part of our daily dialogue with God in our prayer times, as we ask for grace to pursue 100-percent obedience. Sometimes, in our dullness, we do what we know is wrong—this is sin. But we can come to the Lord in repentance, with full confidence of His forgiveness because of the blood of Jesus, and renew our resolve to go after obedience again, saying, “My money, my time, my words, my eyes, my appetites—I am bringing them all back under Your leadership, I am recommitting now.” We don’t have to make big vows; we just tell Him, “Lord, this is how I want to live.” We push delete on our failure, live in the confidence that God enjoys us and delights in us, and we commit to follow God’s ways with all of our heart again.
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Mike Bickle (1955 - ). American evangelical pastor, author, and founder of the International House of Prayer (IHOPKC), born in Kansas City, Missouri. Converted at 15 after hearing Dallas Cowboys quarterback Roger Staubach at a 1970 Fellowship of Christian Athletes conference, he pastored several St. Louis churches before founding Kansas City Fellowship in 1982, later Metro Christian Fellowship. In 1999, he launched IHOPKC, pioneering 24/7 prayer and worship, growing to 2,500 staff and including a Bible college until its closure in 2024. Bickle authored books like Passion for Jesus (1994), emphasizing intimacy with God, eschatology, and Israel’s spiritual role. Associated with the Kansas City Prophets in the 1980s, he briefly aligned with John Wimber’s Vineyard movement until 1996. Married to Diane since 1973, they have two sons. His teachings, broadcast globally, focused on prayer and prophecy but faced criticism for controversial prophetic claims. In 2023, Bickle was dismissed from IHOPKC following allegations of misconduct, leading to his withdrawal from public ministry. His influence persists through archived sermons despite ongoing debates about his legacy